| Mura | |
|---|---|
| bhũrai-ada,bohuarai-arasé | |
| Native to | Brazil |
| Region | Amazonas |
| Ethnicity | 1,500Mura people (1995)[1] |
Native speakers | (360 cited 2000)[1] mostly monolingual[1] |
Mura–Matanawi ?
| |
| Dialects |
|
| Latin script | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | myp Pirahã (Mura) |
| Glottolog | pira1253 |
Mura is a language ofAmazonas, Brazil. It is most famous forPirahã, its sole surviving dialect. Linguistically, it is typified byagglutinativity, a very smallphoneme inventory (around 11 compared to around 44 in English),whistled speech, and the use oftone. In the 19th century, there were an estimated 30,000–60,000 Mura speakers. It is now spoken by only 300 Pirahã people in eight villages.
Mura is often proposed to be related toMatanawí.[by whom?] Kaufman (1994) also suggests a connection withHuarpe in hisMacro-Warpean proposal.
Since at least Barboza Rodrigues (1892), there have been three ethnic names commonly listed as dialects of Mura, or even as Muran languages.[2] The names are:[3]
On the basis of a minuscule amount of data, it would appear that Bohurá (Mura proper) wasmutually intelligible with Pirahã; however, for Yahahí there exists only ethnographic information, and it can be assumed they spoke the same language as other Mura.Rodrigues describes the Yahahí as having come from the Branco river, a tributary of the right bank of the upperMarmelos river. The last Yahahí are said to have joined the Pirahã.[5]
The Mura/Bohurá endonym isBuhuraen, according to Barboza Rodrigues (1892),[5] orBuxivaray ~Buxwarahay, according to Tastevin (1923).[5] This was pronouncedMurá by their neighbors, theTorá andMatanawi. In his vocabulary, Rodrigues listsBohura for the people andbhũrai-ada "Mura language" for the language, from the Mura of the Manicoré River; Tastevin hasBohurai andbohuarai-arasé for the same.[5] They also record,[5]
Loukotka (1968) lists the following basic vocabulary items for Mura language varieties.[4]
| gloss | Múra | Bohurá | Pirahã |
|---|---|---|---|
| one | huyiː | ||
| two | mukui | ||
| head | a-pái | hana-pai | a-paixi |
| ear | ku-pái | hane-apue | apu-pay |
| tooth | aro-pái | haine-tué | atu-pay |
| hand | upa | hane-uí | upai |
| woman | yúehẽ | kairi | yuéhe |
| water | pé | ipé | pé |
| fire | foai | huai | wái |
| stone | atí | atí | begé |
| maize | chihuha | tihoʔahai | chifuä |
| tapir | kabachí | kabatí | kauátei |
Below is a comparison of Mura and Pirahã words from Salles (2023):[6]: 959
| English gloss | Mura | Pirahã |
|---|---|---|
| long | peissí | piiʔi |
| short | kutjúhi | koihí |
| big | itokúi | itohí |
| male foreigner | auí | aooí |
| female foreigner | aurí | aogí |
| wild pig | bahúis | bahóisi |
| louse | tihyhí | tihíihi |
| flour | arais | ágaísi |
| tobacco | itíhi | tíhi |
| leaf | itai | tai |
| fire | uái | hoái |
| blood | bê | bií |
| bone | ái | aí |
| sleep | aitáhus | aitáhoi |
| die | kwoabís | koabaipí |
| drink | pitaissa | pitáipí |
| stay | abaái | abí |
| say | aihyahá | ahoái |
| sun | huisí | hisó |
| moon | kaãnhê | kaháíʔái |
| cold | arí | agí |
| feisty | aupís | aáopí |
| far | kái | kaáo |
| bad | babihí | baábi(hi) |