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Enawene Nawe language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromEnawené-Nawé language)
Arawakan language of Brazil
Not to be confused withSalumá language.
Enawene Nawe
Salumã
Native toBrazil
RegionMato Grosso
EthnicityEnawene Nawe people
Native speakers
570 (2014)[1]
Arawakan
Language codes
ISO 639-3unk
Glottologenaw1238
ELPEnawené-Nawé

Enawene Nawe (Enawené-Nawé, Enawenê-Nawê, Eneuene-Mare), also known asSalumã, is anArawakan language ofBrazil spoken by about 570 people living in theJuruena River basin area, and more specifically along theIquê river in the state ofMato Grosso.

Classification

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Aikhenvald (1999) classifies Enawene Nawe as a South Arawak language together withTerena,Lapachu andMoxo.[1] However, more recent works by both Fabre (2005) and Brandão & Facundes (2007) consider the language to form a subgroup withParesi in theParesi–Xingu branch of Arawakan languages.[1]

Comparison of personal pronouns betweenParesi and Enawene Nawe[2]
PersonParesiEnawene Nawe
1SGnatyonato
2SGhitsohixo
3SGezeere
1PLwitsowixo
2PLxitsodexo
3PLezenaeerenaha
Comparison of numbers[1][3]
NumberParesiEnawene Nawe
onehatitaxoxola
twohinamainitini
threehanamakoytala
fourzalakakoanoxi
Comparison of other vocabulary[1][3]
WordParesiEnawene Nawe
to fallezoaedoa
itchmare, maliwera
drinkera, terawesera
cornkozetokorito
eyezotseedose
househati, hanahakolo
vultureolohoolohõ
nightmakamikya
stonetsehalisairi
unclekokokokore
sourkatyalakatala
basketkohotohe
bathekoahanakohã
arrivekaokatakwa

Phonology

[edit]

Consonants

[edit]

Enawene Nawe is described by Zorthêa (2006) as having 15 contrastive consonants.[3]

Consonant inventory
LabialAlveolarPost-alv./
Palatal
VelarGlottal
Plosivevoiceless⟨kw⟩t⟨t⟩⟨ky⟩k⟨k⟩
voicedd⟨d⟩
Nasalm⟨m⟩n⟨n⟩ɲ⟨ñ⟩
Flapɾ⟨r⟩
Fricatives⟨s⟩ʃ⟨x⟩h⟨h⟩
Approximantw⟨w⟩l⟨l⟩j⟨y⟩

Among these, the following allophonic variations are reported:[3][4]

Consonant variations
TypeExamples
⟨w⟩varies between[w] and[b] in word-initial position before the front vowels/e/ and/i/
  • ⟨wesera⟩ "to drink":[weseɾa~beseɾa]
  • ⟨wera⟩ "itch":[weɾa~beɾa]
⟨m⟩varies between[m] and[w]
  • ⟨datamare⟩ "(mythical character)":[datamaɾe~datawaɾe]
  • ⟨Alame⟩ "(proper noun)":[alame~alawe]
⟨d⟩varies between[d],[s],[ɾ] and[l]
  • ⟨datowa⟩ "tomorrow":[datowa~latowa]
  • ⟨derohi⟩ "ritual step":[deɾohi~leɾohi]
  • ⟨edoa⟩ "to fall":[edoa~eɾoa]
⟨r⟩varies between[ɾ] and[l]
  • ⟨Kawari⟩ "(proper noun)":[kawaɾi~kawali]
  • ⟨korito⟩ "corn":[koɾito~kolito]
⟨k⟩varies between[k] and[g] between vowels⟨nawenekota⟩ "I think":[nawenekota~nawenegota]
⟨ky⟩varies between[] and[] between vowels
⟨t⟩varies between[t] and[d] between vowels
  • ⟨atana⟩ "thunder":[atana~adana]
  • ⟨meta⟩ "tickle":[meta~meda]

Vowels

[edit]

Enawene Nawe is described by Zorthêa (2006) as having 4oral vowels and 4nasal vowels.[3]

Oral
FrontBack
Near-Closei⟨i⟩o~u⟨o⟩
Mide~ɪ⟨e⟩
Opena⟨a⟩
Nasal
FrontBack
Near-Closeĩ⟨ĩ⟩õ~ũ⟨õ⟩
Mid~ĩ⟨ẽ⟩
Openʌ̃⟨ã⟩

Grammar

[edit]

Pronouns

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Independent personal pronouns[2]
PersonSingularPlural
1stnatowixo
2ndhixodexo
3rdereerenaha

Numerals

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The first eleven numbers in Enawene Nawe are as follows:[3]

NumberEnawene Nawe
1xoxola
2initini
3koytala
4noxi
5monarese,

eswe

6lolokwate
7lolate
8hoxiro
9mamalakari
10ketera
11darayti

Zorthêa (2006) notes that all numbers exceptinitini (2) andmonarese (5) can be preceded and followed by affixes.[3]

Affixes

[edit]

Enawene Nawe makes use of a variety of suffixes and prefixes to derive different meanings from root words.

Gender suffixes

[edit]

Zorthêa (2006) describes Enawene Nawe as having two suffixes to explicitly mark gender:-lo for the feminine gender and-re for the masculine.[3] De Almeida (2015), however, notes four suffixes:-nero and-lo mark the feminine gender, while-nere and-li mark the masculine.[4]

Examples from de Almeida (2015):[4]

  • Towalinero "a Towali woman"
  • Towalinere "a Towali man"
  • Iyakaloti "a female spirit"
  • Iyakaliti "a male spirit"

Place suffix

[edit]

The suffix-kwa is used to mark places and is commonly found in village names. For example, the name of the Enawene Nawe villageMatokodakwa is ultimately derived frommatokoda, meaning "container for transporting liquids", and-kwa "place".[4]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdeBrandão, Ana Paula Barros (2014)."A reference grammar of Paresi-Haliti (Arawak)"(PDF). pp. 6–7.Archived(PDF) from the original on 2020-11-30. Retrieved2021-01-21.
  2. ^abBrandão, Ana Paula Barros (2018)."A documentação participativa: o caso das línguas Paresi-Haliti e Enawene Nawe" [The participatory documentation: the case of the Paresi-Haliti and Enawene Nawe languages] (in Portuguese). p. 101.Archived from the original on 2019-04-30. Retrieved2021-01-21.
  3. ^abcdefghZorthêa, Kátia Silene (2006)."Daraiti Ahã: Escrita alfabética entre os Enawene Nawe" [Daraiti Ahã: Alphabetical writing among Enawene Nawe](PDF) (in Portuguese). Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso.Archived(PDF) from the original on 2015-05-12. Retrieved2021-01-21.
  4. ^abcdde Almeida, Juliana (2015)."Enawene-Nawe Wixo: Diferença e convivialidade na gestão sociopolítica do cosmos" [Enawene-Nawe Wixo: Difference and user-friendliness in the socio-political management of the cosmos](PDF) (in Portuguese). Universidade federal do Amazonas.Archived(PDF) from the original on 2021-01-28. Retrieved2021-01-21.
Arawakan (Maipurean) languages
Caribbean
Amapá
Central
Bahuanaic
Pidjanan
Rio Negro
Upper Amazon
Japurá-Colômbia
Upper Orinoco
Lower Ucayalí
Pozuzo
Mato Grosso
Xaray
Xingú
Purus
Bolivia
Preandine
Italics indicateextinct languages
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