Irantxe language
Indigenous language of Mato Grosso, Brazil
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Irántxe (Irántxe, Iranxe, Iranshe) /iˈrɑːntʃeɪ/, also known as Mỹky (Münkü) or still as Irántxe-Münkü, is an indigenous language spoken by the Irántxe (Iránxe, Iranche, Manoki, Munku) and Mỹky (Mynky, Münkü, Munku, Menku, Kenku, Myy) peoples in the state of Mato Grosso in Brazil. Recent descriptions of the language analyze it as a language isolate, in that it "bears no similarity with other language families".[3] Monserrat (2010) is a well-reviewed grammar of the language.
| Irántxe | |
|---|---|
| Irántxe-Mỹky | |
| Manoki, Mỹky | |
| Native to | Brazil |
| Region | Mato Grosso |
| Ethnicity | 280 Irántxe and 80 Münkü (2012)[1] |
Native speakers | 90, including 10 Irántxe proper (2012)[1] |
| Dialects |
|
| Latin (Mỹky) | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | irn |
| Glottolog | iran1263 |
| ELP | Irantxe |
Iranxe is classified as Critically Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger. | |
Vitality
According to the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger, Irántxe-Mỹky is currently not thriving. While the Mỹky dialect is considered "vulnerable", the Irántxe variety is deemed "considerably endangered", with only 10 fluent speakers out of the 356 ethnic Irántxe-Mỹky in the 2006 report. As of 2011, the 280 Irántxe have largely assimilated to Brazilian culture. Most are monolingual in Portuguese, and the remaining Irántxe speakers are over 50 years old. A splinter group, the Mỹky, however, moved to escape assimilation, and were isolated until 1971. As of 2011, there were 80 ethnic Mỹky, all of whom spoke the language.
Dialects
Dialects and location:[4]
- Irántxe dialect: spoken in Cravari village, on the Cravari River (a tributary of the Do Sangue River) in the municipality of Diamantino, Mato Grosso.
- Mỹky dialect: spoken at an isolated village at the headwaters of the Escondido Creek, in the municipality of Brasnorte, Mato Grosso state.
Language contact
Jolkesky (2016) notes that there are lexical similarities with languages from the Arawak, Tupi, Chapakura-Wañam, Nambikwara, and Yanomami families, likely due to contact.[5]
An automated computational analysis (ASJP 4) by Müller et al. (2013)[6] also found lexical similarities between Irántxe-Mỹky and Nambikwaran.
Phonology
No instrumental phonetic data pertaining to the Irántxe-Mỹky language is available. The phonological description of Inrátxe-Mỹky is based on auditory analyses by the authors cited.
Consonants
Irántxe-Mỹky has a small consonant inventory. Voicing is not contrastive for any consonant. In the Monserrat analysis shown in the table, there is a series of palatalized stops /pʲ tʲ kʲ/ and nasals /mʲ nʲ/, which reviewer D’Angelis (2011) analyzes as /Cj/ sequences. In Monserrat's analysis, /ʃ/ is a separate phoneme from /sʲ/.
Allophonic variation
- The bilabial /m/ may occur as [mb] word initially, especially among the Irántxe: muhu [mbuhu], mjehy [mbʲɛhɨ].
- The sibilant /s/ is pronounced [ʃ] before /j/.
- The trill /r/ may also occur as [l].
- The palatal approximant /j/ occurs as [ɲ] before nasal vowels.[7]
Vowels
The vowel inventory of Irántxe-Mỹky is large, with 21 phonemic vowels. Vowel length and nasalization are contrastive in the language. The role of tone is not clear.
In many words, /ə/ alternates with /ɛ/.
The maximal syllable shape may be CVC or CjVC word-medially, depending on the analysis. Word-finally, only CV ~ CʲV syllables occur.
Orthography
Lexicon
Words in the Irántxe dialect are taken from Loukotka (1968)[8] and Holanda's (1960) larger vocabulary list.[9] The Mỹky words derive from the dictionary compiled by Monserrat.[4]
gloss Irántxe[8][9] Mỹky[4] one yamachí kỹtapy two numá numã head pemã rem tongue akirente jakirẽti eye kutakecí kutaka̱hy nose kamínxí kjamĩhĩ hand mimãchxi mimã woman ekipu namyʼi man miʔá mía old person naripú miptosohu water manaː manã maize kuratu kuratu cassava mãinʔin mỹʼĩ fish miaxtapá miatapa sun ileheː irehy rain muhú muhu day máʔá maʼa white nakatá nakata