Avane language

Extinct Arawakan language of Venezuela From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Avane (Abane), one of several languages called Baniwa, also known as Baniva Yavitero,[1] was an Arawakan language of Venezuela. It is believed to have become extinct by the late 20th century, and is only attested in a short word-list from the late 18th century.[1]

NativetoVenezuela
RegionColombian border
Extinctby late 20th century
attested c.1780
Arawakan
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Avane
Baniwa, Abane
Native toVenezuela
RegionColombian border
Extinctby late 20th century
attested c.1780
Arawakan
Dialects
  • Quirruba
  • Baniva-Avani
Language codes
ISO 639-3bvv
Glottologbani1254
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History

It was primarily spoken in the Amazonas region of Venezuela and along the Colombian border, and had dialects called Quirruba[1] and Baniva-Avani.[2]

The language likely began deteriorating with the arrival of the Jesuits in the late 18th century.

The Avane language included a colloquial name to refer to the neighboring indigenous Maipure people, Metimetichini, which may be humorously alluding to the polysyllabic nature of many Maipure words and contains two sounds not usually found in Avane.[3] The language also shares some words with others in the same family, including Maipure and Guipunave, but is clearly phonetically distinct.[3]

Phonology

Avane is characterized phonetically in comparison to Maipure, showing some large differences. Avane uses the dental stop [d], which is not seen in Maipure but is native to Yavitero and Baniva. It uses the glottal fricative [h] ([x]) before [i] and/or [a], where Maipure would use [t], [k], and [j]. Also unlike Maipure, the Avane diphthongs [ai] and [au] do not appear to be contracted in stressed syllables.[3] Ethnographer Gilij described the Avane pronunciation as "rude, guttural" compared to the Maipure's "gentle, beautiful" version.[4]

Morphology

In morphology, Avane is seen as close to Maipure, with both using the "empty morph" suffix "-cà" for certain active and mainly intransitive verbs.[3]

Vocabulary

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Attested Avane words[3]
Avane Gloss
javaxì axe
pussi manioc bread
casimeje a dance
Diòsu God
ada grater
tamàu he went
nuxa I
nuxacàu I go
nujutuà I smoke
quaxixì (quajijì) jaguar
Metimetichinì Maipure
napài my father
unè skin disease
Purrùnaminàri supreme being
yema tobacco
inioxì woman
saje, ja yes
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References

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