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Proto-Uto-Aztecan language

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Reconstructed ancestor of the Uto-Aztecan languages
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Proto-Uto-Aztecan
PUA
Reconstruction ofUto-Aztecan languages
RegionAridoamerica
Era3,000 BCE
Lower-order reconstructions

Proto-Uto-Aztecan is thehypothetical common ancestor of theUto-Aztecan languages. Authorities on the history of the language group have usually placed the Proto-Uto-Aztecanhomeland in the border region between the United States and Mexico, namely the upland regions of Arizona and New Mexico and the adjacent areas of the Mexican states of Sonora and Chihuahua, roughly corresponding to theSonoran Desert and the western part of theChihuahuan Desert. It would have been spoken byMesolithic foragers inAridoamerica, about 5,000 years ago.

Homeland

[edit]

Reconstructions of the botanical vocabulary offer clues to the ecological niche inhabited by the Proto-Uto-Aztecans. Fowler placed the center of Proto-Uto-Aztecan in Central Arizona with northern dialects extending into Nevada and theMojave desert and southern dialects extending south through the Tepiman corridor into Mexico.[1] The homeland of theNumic languages has been placed in Southern California nearDeath Valley, and the homeland of the proposed Southern Uto-Aztecan group has been placed on the coast ofSonora.[2]

A contrary proposal suggests the homeland of Proto-Uto-Aztecan to have been much farther to the south; it was published in 2001 byJane H. Hill, based on her reconstruction of maize-related vocabulary in Proto-Uto-Aztecan. By her theory, the assumed speakers of Proto-Uto-Aztecan weremaize cultivators inMesoamerica, who gradually moved north, bringing maize cultivation with them, during the period of roughly 4,500 to 3,000 years ago. The geographic diffusion of speakers corresponded to the breakup of linguistic unity.[3][4] The hypothesis has been criticized on several grounds, and it is not generally accepted by Uto-Aztecanists.[5][6][7][8][9] Usingcomputational phylogenetic methods, Wheeler & Whiteley (2014) also suggest a southern homeland for Proto-Uto-Aztecan in or near the area occupied by historical Cora and some Nahua.[10]Nahuatl forms the most basal clade in Wheeler & Whiteley's (2014) Uto-Aztecanphylogram. A survey of agriculture-related vocabulary by Merrill (2012) found that the agricultural vocabulary can be reconstructed for only Southern Uto-Aztecan. That supports a conclusion that the Proto-Uto-Aztecan speech community did not practice agriculture but adopted it only after entering Mesoamerica from the north.[11]

A more recent proposal from 2014, by David L. Shaul, presents evidence suggesting contact between Proto-Uto-Aztecan and languages of central California, such asEsselen and theYokutsan languages. That leads Shaul to suggest that Proto-Uto-Aztecan was spoken inCalifornia's Central Valley area, and it formed part of an ancient Californianlinguistic area.[12]

Phonology

[edit]

Vowels

[edit]

Proto-Uto-Aztecan is reconstructed as having an unusual vowel inventory:*i*a*u*o. Langacker (1970) demonstrated that the fifth vowel should be reconstructed as as opposed to*e, and there has been a long-running dispute over the proper reconstruction.[13][14][15]

Consonants

[edit]
BilabialCoronalPalatalVelarLabialized
velar
Glottal
Stop*p*t*k*kʷ
Affricate*ts
Fricative*s*h
Nasal*m*n
Rhotic*r
Semivowel*j*w

*n and may have actually been*l and*n.

References

[edit]
Wiktionary has a list of reconstructed forms atAppendix:Proto-Uto-Aztecan reconstructions
  1. ^Fowler 1983.
  2. ^Campbell 1997, p. 137.
  3. ^Hill 2001.
  4. ^Hill 2010.
  5. ^Kemp et al. 2010.
  6. ^Merrill et al. 2010.
  7. ^Brown 2010.
  8. ^Campbell 2003.
  9. ^Campbell & Poser 2008, pp. 346–350.
  10. ^Wheeler & Whiteley 2014.
  11. ^Merrill 2012.
  12. ^Shaul 2014.
  13. ^Langacker 1970.
  14. ^Dakin 1996.
  15. ^Campbell 1997, p. 136.

Sources

[edit]
Northern
Numic
Western
Central
Southern
Takic
Serran
Cupan
Other
Southern
Tepiman
Pimic
Tepehuan
Tarahumaran
Opatan
Cahita
Corachol
Aztecan
Nahuatl
Central
Huasteca
Western
Eastern
Other
History
Italics indicateextinct languages
Demonstrated families
Isolates
Proposed macrofamilies
Linguistic areas
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