Panoan languages
Pánoan | |
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Geographic distribution: |
southwestern Amazon |
Linguistic classification: | Pano–Tacanan?
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Glottolog: | pano1256[1] |
Panoan languages (dark green) and Takanan languages (light green). Spots indicate documented locations.
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Panoan (also Pánoan, Panoano, Panoana, Páno) is a family of languages spoken in Peru, western Brazil, and Bolivia. It is a branch of the larger Pano–Tacanan family.
Contents
Languages
There are some 18 extant and 14 extinct Panoan languages.[2] In the list, (†) means extinct, and (*) obsolescent (no longer spoken daily). Dialects are listed in parentheses.
- Mayoruna
- Tabatinga Mayoruna† [most divergent]
- Mayo
- Matses
- Matses (Peruvian Matses, Brazilian Matses, Paud Usunkid†)
- Kulino (of Curuça)* (Kapishtana*, Mawi*, Chema*)
- Demushbo†
- Korubo (Korubo, Chankueshbo*)
- Matis
- Matis
- Jandiatuba Mayoruna†
- Amazon Mayoruna† (two dialects)
- Matses
- Mainline Panoan
- Kasharari [most divergent]
- Kashibo (Kashibo, Rubo/Isunbo, Kakataibo, Nokaman)
- Nawa branch (from least to most divergent)
- Bolivian
- Madre de Dios†
- Atsawaka-Yamiaka† (Atsawaka†, Yamiaka†)
- Arazaire†
- Blanco River Remo†
- Tarauacá Kashinawa†
- Marubo
- Marubo [of the Javari Basin]
- Katukina (or Waninawa: Katukina of Olinda, Katukina of Sete Estrelas, Kanamari†)
- Olivença Kulina
- Poyanawa*
- Poyanawa*
- Iskonawa*
- Nukini*
- ?Môa Nawa* [tentative due to lack of data]
- Jaquirana Remo†
- Chama
- Headwaters
- Ibuaçu Kashinawa (Brazilian Kashinawa, Peruvian Kashinawa, Juruá Kapanawa†, Parannawa†)
- Yaminawa (Brazilian Yaminawa dialects, Peruvian Yaminawa, Chaninawa, Chitonawa, Mastanawa, Parkenawa (= Yora), Shanenawa, Sharanawa/Marinawa, Shawannawa (= Arara), Yawanawa, Yaminawa-arara*, Nehanawa†)
- Amawaka (Peruvian Amawaka, Nishinawa†, Yumanawa†)
- Môa Remo† (resembles Amawaka)
- Tuchinawa† (resembles Yaminawa dialects)
Boundaries between the Poyanawa, Chama, and Headwaters groups are somewhat blurred. Karipuna and Môa River Nawa may not be distinct languages, and Chiriba may not be Panoan at all.
Hundreds of other Panoan "languages" (such as Kontanawa)[3] have been reported in the literature. These are names of groups that may have been ethnically Panoan, but sometimes are assumed to be Panoan on no other evidence than that they end in -nawa or -bo. A few, such as Maya (Pisabo), are unattested but reported to be mutually intelligible with a known Panoan language (in this case Matsés).[citation needed]
Homonyms
Much of the confusion surrounding Panoan languages is the number of homonyms among different languages. The principal ambiguous names are as follows:[2]
Name | Location or other name | Language |
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Kapanawa | on the Tapiche | dialect of Shipibo-Konibo |
on the Juruá | dialect of Ibuaçu Kashinawa | |
Kashinawa | on the Ibuaçu | Headwaters group |
on the Tarauacá | Mainline branch | |
Kulina | on the Curuçá | Mayoruna branch |
of São Paulo de Olivençá | Mainline branch | |
Marubo | in the Javari Basin | Mainline branch |
of Maucallacta [no data] | Mayoruna branch | |
Remo | on the Blanco | Nawa group |
on the Môa | Headwaters group | |
on the Jaquirana | Poyanawa group | |
Southern Remo [no data] | Chama group | |
Sinabo | of the Mamoré | Bolivian group |
of the Ucayali Basin | Chama group | |
Katukina | Waninawa | Marubo group |
of Feijo' (Shanenawa) | dialect of Yaminawa | |
Nawa | on the Môa [little data] | Poyanawa group |
Parkenawa | dialect of Yaminawa | |
Maroyuna | (various) | three languages in list above |
Mates | Mates | |
Barbudo [no data] | Chama group | |
Demushbo | Matses group | |
Chema | dialect of Curuçá Kulina |
Neighboring languages of other families may also share the names of Panoan language. The table below ignores other homonyms further afield:
Family | Language |
---|---|
Arawakan | Kanamari, Kasharari, Kunibo, Mayoruna, Pakaguara |
Takanan | Chama, Arasa, Atsahuaca, Yamiaka |
Katukinan | Katukina, Kanamari |
Tupian | Karipuna, Katukinarú |
Arawan | Kulina, Arawá |
Harakmbut | Arasairi |
Genetic relations
The Panoan family is generally believed to be related to the Tacanan family, forming with it Pano–Tacanan, though this has not yet been established (Loos 1999).
Grammatical features
Body-part prefixation
Exceptional to Panoan languages’ predominantly suffixal morphology are sets of approximately 30 morphemes primarily referring to parts or features of prototypical human and animal bodies (and, by analogical extension, of botanicals, manufactures, landscapes, and abstract space) which have been found to occur in almost all attested languages of the family (Fleck 2006: 59; Ferreira 2007, 2008; Amarante Ribeiro and Cândido 2008; Zariquiey and Fleck 2012: 385–386).
That these monosyllabic forms are productively affixed to the front of verbal, nominal, or adjectival roots has led many Panoanists to describe them as prefixes (e.g. Prost 1967 and Zingg 1998 [for Chakobo]; Faust 1973, Loriot et al. 1993, and Valenzuela 2003 [for Shipibo-Konibo]; Hyde 1980 [for Amawaka]; Eakin 1991[for Yaminawa]), while the forms’ resemblance and loose semantic correspondence to unbound, polysyllabic ‘body-part terms’ has led others to describe them as incorporated nouns (e.g. Loos 1999). More recent and detailed analyses of this feature in Matses (Fleck 2006) and Kashibo-Kakataibo (Zariquiey and Fleck 2012) have demonstrated that most body-part prefixes in these languages are not readily analyzable as synchronic allomorphs of the nouns they resemble.
Many Panoan body-part prefixes semantically encompass a range of denotata beyond the strictly 'corporeal' by means of analogical extension. In Matses, for example, the prefix an- corresponds to the nouns ana ‘mouth, tongue, palm (of hand), sole (of foot), (arm)pit’; anmaëşh ‘gill slits (of fish)’; and anşhantuk ‘swampy depression in the ground’; but can itself be glossed also as ‘cavity, concave surface, interior, underside’; and ‘center (of path of stream)’ (Fleck 2006: 64). In the examples below, the prefix an- with the verb root kiad ‘learn’ expresses the learning of a specifically ‘oral activity’ while the prefix më- ‘hand, mortar, forearm, wrist, projecting carpal bones, elbow, finger, knuckles, fingernail, branch’ expresses the learning of a specifically ‘manual’ one:
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an-kiad-o-bi mouth-learn-PAST-1S ‘I learned with respect to (my) mouth’, i.e., ‘I learned an oral activity’ (a language, to speak, a song, to sing, to recite the alphabet, to whistle, to eat a type of food, etc.) (Fleck 2006: 78)
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më-kiad-o-bi hand-learn-PAST-1S ‘I learned to weave, write, do math problems, fire shotgun, fletch arrows, or other manual tasks’ (Fleck 2006: 78)
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The following example illustrates how an- can express locative information in non-corporeal, topographical space:
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nëid-ø an-san-aşh we-ta ø ke-pa-ak ka-denne-k ke-onda-şh this.one-ABS center-put:PL.O-after:S/A>S lie-IMPER 3ABS say-TOP.CONT-NARR.PAST tell-REM.PAST.INDIC tell-DIST.PAST-3
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- '"Put this one in the middle [of the path] and then lie down!" he [the moon] said, they used to tell, I was told' (Fleck 2006: 80).
While body-part prefixes in Kashibo-Kakataibo, as in Matses, are highly productive with verbs, they are used regularly with only a modest array of adjectives and nouns (Fleck 2006: 72; Zariquiey and Fleck 2012: 394–5). Zariquiey and Fleck (2012: 394) note that the Kashibo-Kakataibo "words for 'skin', 'hair', and 'flesh'" are regularly prefixed:
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kapë të-şhaka mëra-aşh ... caiman neck-skin.ABS find-S/A>S
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- 'finding the caiman's neck skin ...' (Zariquiey and Fleck 2012: 395).
Due to the paucity of detailed studies of Panoan body-part prefixes, explanations of their grammaticalization remain largely speculative. Fleck has hypothesized that "Panoan (verb) prefixation evolved from past noun incorporation that co-existed with noun-noun and noun-adjective compounding that involved synchronic reduction of body-part roots" (2006: 92). In light of their analysis of Kashibo-Kakataibo prefixation, Zariquiey and Fleck present two diachronic scenarios to orient future comparative work: "(1) prefixation evolved from productive noun incorporation (prefixes have come from longer body-part nouns); or (2) Proto-Panoan body-part terms were monosyllabic forms that became bound, and most of the current body-part terms were later built up from these" (2012: 408).
References
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- ↑ 2.0 2.1 David Fleck, 2013, Panoan Languages and Linguistics, Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History #99
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External links
- Panoan (ethnicity) at DMOZ
- Proel: Familia Panoana
- Pacahuara and Yaminahua dictionaries online from IDS (select simple or advanced browsing)
- Lenguas de Bolivia (online edition)
Bibliography
- Amarante Ribeiro, Lincoln Almir, and Gláucia Viera Cândido. (2008). "A formação de palavras a partir de morfemas monossilábicos nominais e bases verbais em línguas indígenas da família Pano: Prefixação ou incorporação nominal?" Veredas On Line (UFJF) 1:129–45.
- Campbell, Lyle. (1997). American Indian languages: The historical linguistics of Native America. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-509427-1.
- Eakin, Lucille. (1991). "Lecciones Para el Aprendizaje del Idioma Yaminahua. Documento de Trabajo no. 22. Yarinacocha, Peru: Instituto Lingüístico de Verano.
- Faust, Norma. (1973). "Lecciones Para el Aprendizaje del Idioma Shipibo-Conibo." Documento de Trabajo no. 1. Yarinacocha, Peru: Instituto Lingüístico de Verano.
- Ferreira, Rogério Vincente. (2007). "Afixos verbais em uma lingua da familia Pano." V Congreso Internacional de Investigaciones Lingüísticos-Filológicas: La Enseñanza de la Lengua en el Tercer Milenio. Lima: Universidad Ricardo Palma.
- Ferreira, Rogério Vincente. (2008). "Morfemas “partes do corpo” em Matis e algumas línguas da família Pano." Raído (Universidade Federal da Grande Dourados) 2, no. 4:35–39.
- Fleck, David. (2006). "Body-part prefixes in Matses: Derivation or noun incorporation?" IJAL 72:59–96.
- Hyde, Sylvia. (1980). "Diccionario Amahuaca" (Edición Preliminar). Serie Lingüística Peruana no. 7. Yarinacocha, Peru: Instituto Lingüístico Peruano.
- Kaufman, Terrence. (1990). "Language history in South America: What we know and how to know more." In D. L. Payne (Ed.), Amazonian linguistics: Studies in lowland South American languages (pp. 13–67). Austin: University of Texas Press. ISBN 0-292-70414-3.
- Kaufman, Terrence. (1994). "The native languages of South America." In C. Mosley & R. E. Asher (Eds.), Atlas of the world's languages (pp. 46–76). London: Routledge.
- Loos, Eugene E. (1999). "Pano." The Amazonian Languages, ed. R. M. W. Dixon and Alexandra Y. Aikhenvald, pp. 227–49. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Loriot, James; Erwin Lauriault; and Dwight Day. (1993). "Diccionario Shipibo–Castellano." Serie Lingüística Peruana no. 31. Yarinacocha, Peru: Instituto Lingüístico de Verano.
- Migliazza, Ernest C.; & Campbell, Lyle. (1988). "Panorama general de las lenguas indígenas en América". Historia general de América (Vol. 10). Caracas: Instituto Panamericano de Geografía e Historia.
- Prost, Gilbert R. (1967). "Chacobo." Bolivian Indian Grammars: 1, ed. Esther Matteson, pp. 285–359. Norman: Summer Institute of Linguistics and the University of Oklahoma.
- Rodrigues, Aryon. (1986). Linguas brasileiras: Para o conhecimento das linguas indígenas. São Paulo: Edições Loyola.
- Shell, Olive A. (1975). "Las lenguas pano y su reconstrucción". Serie lingüística Peruana (No. 12). Yarinacocha, Peru: Instituto Lingüístico de Verano.
- Valenzuela, Pilar M. (2003). "Transitivity in Shipibo-Konibo grammar." Ph.D. dissertation, University of Oregon, Eugene.
- Zariquiey Biondi, Roberto and David W. Fleck. (2012). "Body-Part Prefixation in Kashibo-Kakataibo: Synchronic or Diachronic Derivation?" IJAL 78(3):385–409.
- Zingg, Philipp. (1998). Diccionario Chácobo–Castellano Castellano–Chácobo con Bosquejo de la Gramática Chacobo y con Apuntes Culturales. La Paz, Bolivia: Ministerio de Desarrollo Sostenible y Planificación Viceministro de Asuntos Indígenas y Pueblos Originarios.
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