Cholón language

Language of Peru From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cholón (Spanish: lengua cholona), natively known as Seeptsá and Tsinganes, is a language of Peru. It was spoken near Uchiza,[2][3] from Tingo María to Valle in the Huallaga River valley of Huanuco and San Martín regions.[4]

NativetoPeru
RegionHuallaga River valley
EthnicityCholones
Extinct1993[1]
>2 rememberers (2021)
Quick facts Native to, Region ...
Cholón
Seeptsá
Native toPeru
RegionHuallaga River valley
EthnicityCholones
Extinct1993[1]
>2 rememberers (2021)
Hibito–Cholon ?
  • Cholón
Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-3cht
Glottologchol1284
  Cholón
Cholon is classified as Extinct by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger.
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The language was previously thought to be extinct but a native speaker was discovered in 2021, in the city of Juanjuí. Martha Pérez Valderrama is believed to be the last remaining speaker of Cholón.[5] However, her cousin Clemente also speaks Cholón, and she reports that there are more speakers in the area. Despite the last fully fluent speakers dying in the 1990s, the current speakers can produce brief texts, not being limited to basic words and phrases.[6][7]

Phonology

Due to the amateur Spanish pronunciation spellings used to transcribe Cholon, its sound inventory is uncertain. The following is an attempt at interpreting them.[8]

Consonants

More information Labial, Alveolar ...
Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m n ɲ ŋ
Stop voiceless p t k ʔ
voiced (b~β) (d) g
Affricate ts
Fricative (f) s ʃ x h
Vibrant (r)
Lateral l ʎ
Approximant w j
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Consonants in (brackets) are only found in loanwords. /g/ is exclusive to one word, pangala 'forest turkey'.

[h] and [ʃ] are analyzed as allophones of /x/ and /s/, respectively.

Vowels

The vowels appear to be similar to Spanish [a e~ɪ i o~ʊ u].

Grammar

Cholon distinguishes masculine and feminine grammatical gender in the second person. That is, one uses different forms for "you" depending on whether one is speaking to a man or a woman:

katsok'house'
aktsok'my house'
miktsok'your house' (speaking to a man)
piktsok'your house' (speaking to a woman)
intʃamma'what did you say?' (speaking to a man)
intʃampa'what did you say?' (speaking to a woman)

References

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