Classification
The Maléku Jaíka language is a member of the Votic branch of the Chibchan language family. Maléku, or 'the speech of our people', is considered to be endangered according to ''The Endangered Languages Project''. According to the 2011 National Population Census, 67.5% of the population that lives in the official Maléku territory declared that they speak the language; however, the state of vitality varies from one village to another and even among families (Sánchez 2011). In any case, following the parameters of UNESCO, the language can be classified as definitively endangered (Sánchez 2013).History
The Maleku people (usually called "Guatusos" in historical documents, travel chronicles of the 19th and 20th centuries, and in multiple academic studies) constitute one of the original peoples of the Costa Rican territory. While their contact with the Hispanic language and culture was extremely sporadic and limited at least until the second mid-nineteenth century (Constenla, 1988; Castillo, 2004), it can be assumed that this contact was intensified in the middle of the twentieth century.Geographic distribution
Official status
Maléku is an indigenous language of north-centralDialects/Varieties
The speakers of these three communities have declared that there are differences between the variety spoken by the communities of Margarita and El Sol and the one that is spoken by the people of Tonjibe (Avendaño 2018). Corobicí is possibly a dialect.History of scholarship
As pointed out by Constenla 1998:3, little documentation of Maléku was recorded before the latter half of the 19th century. All records from that period are included in Walter Lehmann's 1920 volume on Central American languages. The first scholar modern linguist to deeply study the Maléku language, aside from sources reproduced by Lehmann, was Adolfo Constenla Umaña, in collaboration with many members of the Maléku community, including especially among many others Eustaquio Castro Castro. A major dictionary of Maléku was published in 2023.Phonology
Vowels
Maleku has five phonemic vowel qualities, all of which occur in two different lengths, short and long, totalling 10 vowelVowel notes
Sánchez (1984) affirms that the vowel system of the Maleku is similar to Spanish (apart from length contrast); he cites some words with unlike VV sequences but is unclear if these are single nuclei or V.V. Smith Sharp (1979) argues for V.V with an optional desyllabification of high vowels to approximants , j in agreement with Costenla Umaña (1983).Stress
Sánchez (1984) argues that stress is contrastive. The examples given suggest there may be role for morphological structure and vowel length in predicting stress placement. Smith Sharp (1979: 42) states ''En maleku, hay una sola oposición de acento. Cada palabra tiene por los menos un acento primario que no es predecible en palabras de dos o más sílabas.'' "In Maleku, there is only one accent opposition. Every word has at least one primary accent, which is not predictable in words of two or more syllables."Consonants
The traditional consonant system of the Maleku includes fifteen phonemes:Consonant notes
Sánchez (1984) reports /t/ as 'dental-alveolar' and other coronals as 'alveolar'. Contrast between /ɬ, x/ appears to be in process of being lost in favor of /x/ (Costenla Umaña 1983). Influence from Spanish has added voiced stops and /ɲ/ to the modern colloquial language; these are not included in the inventories of Sánchez (1984), Smith Sharp (1983) or in the text counts of Krohn (2017). Costenla Umaña (1983) excludes them from his 'heritage inventory'.Syllabic notes
(C)V(ː)(C) seems to be the basic pattern, with no clusters, as suggested by Smith Sharp (1983: 44). Any C can occur in onset (except rhotics word-initially); any C except affricates, fricatives and /ɾ/ in coda. Sánchez (1984) gives 2 examples of word-internal CC codas /rɸ, rp/ in /irp-tʃia, irɸ-laŋ/ "drink it, eat it" and suggests CVCC as max syllable, but such examples are described as the result of an optional loss of a vowel in the 2nd person ergative prefix /riɸa/ by Costenla Umaña (1983: 18) Canonical Form: (C)V(ː)(C) Syllabic Restriction: (C)V(ː)(C)Grammar
Word order
The basic order of the elements is variable in transitive and in intransitive clauses. In intransitive clauses the common order is SV, but it is also possible to find VS order.Subjects and objects
Maleku possesses an ergative–absolutive alignment system.Subject of an intransitive verb
In intransitive clauses the subject is expressed in absolutive case. The affixes that appear in the verb establish a concordance of the person with the subject. These are:Subject of a transitive verb
In transitive clauses Maleku distinguishes between complete and incomplete transitive clauses. The affixes that appear in the verb are common in both constructions. These areNumber
Maleku distinguishes between singular and plural in common nouns. The plural is expressed in two ways.Personal pronouns
There are four personal pronouns in Maleku. These are:Writing system
The alphabet of Maleku was proposed by the linguist Adolfo Constenla, and it was adopted as official by the ''Asesoría de Educación Indígena del Ministerio de Educación Publica de Costa Rica''.Vowels
Consonants
Vocabulary
*kapi kapi = hello (with a knocking gesture on your partner's shoulder) *afekapian = Thank you *w-ay = yes *hebet = no *fufu = morpho butterfly *niskak = bird *pili = toucan *pek-pen = frog *gnou-ek = red-eye frog *ti-fakara = waterfall *irri miotem? = what is your name? * = my name is ... * = I would like a cup of coffee *errekeki kerakou = let's go (to a place) *erreke malehila =let's go swimmingNumbers
Source:Native Languages of the AmericasCommon Nouns
Source: *Ochápaká= Man *Kuríjurí= Woman *Toji= Sun *Tlijii= Moon *Laká= Earth *Oktara= Stone *Koora= Tree *Uu= HouseReferences
Further reading
*Barrantes, R., Smouse, P. E., Mohrenweiser, H. W., Gershowitz, H., Azofeifa, J., Arias, T. D., & Neel, J. V. (1990). Microevolution in lower Central America: genetic characterization of the Chibcha-speaking groups of Costa Rica and Panama, and a consensus taxonomy based on genetic and linguistic affinity. American Journal of Human Genetics, 46(1), 63–84. *Brinton, Daniel G. 1891. The American Race: A Linguistic Classification and Ethnographic Description of the Native Tribes of North and South America. New York: N. D. C. Hodges Publisher *Madrigal Cordero, P., & Solís Rivera, V. (2012). Recognition and Support of ICCAs in Costa Rica. Kothari et al. *Maleku Indian Language (Guatuso, Jaika). (2016). Retrieved from http://www.native-languages.org/maleku.htm *Herrera Miranda, Roberto E. 2017. Valency classes in Maleku. (MA thesis, Universität Leipzig; 178pp.) *Herrera Miranda, Roberto. Endangered Languages Documentation Programme (sponsor). n.d. Endangered Languages Archive. *Pache, Matthias. Morphosyntactic Properties of Chibchan Verbal Person Marking. Retrieved from http://journals.dartmouth.edu/cgibin/WebObjects/Journals.woa/1/xmlpage/1/article/462?htmlAlways=yes *Ryan, James. Maleku Jaika. N.p., 1 Mar. 2013. Web. 1 May 2016.External links
*https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o6RHVMC0YNA *https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oNLxEcmgFGg *https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_QKhqaxYiG0 *https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3tJvxJzhsHM *https://www.culturalsurvival.org/news/life-health-purity-and-survival-maleku-costa-rica-struggle-regain-lost-landsBibliography
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