Wanano language

Tucanoan language spoken in Brazil and Colombia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Guanano (Wanano) is a Tucanoan language spoken in the northwest part of Amazonas in Brazil and in Vaupés in Colombia. It is spoken by the Wanano. The Wanano and the closely related Pira-tapuya do not intermarry, but their languages are 75% lexically similar.[2]

NativetoBrazil, Colombia
EthnicityWanano
Native speakers
(2,600 cited 1998–2007)[1]
Tucanoan
  • Eastern
    • North
      • Guanano
Quick facts Guanano, Native to ...
Guanano
Wanano
Native toBrazil, Colombia
EthnicityWanano
Native speakers
(2,600 cited 1998–2007)[1]
Tucanoan
  • Eastern
    • North
      • Guanano
Language codes
ISO 639-3gvc
Glottologguan1269
ELPWanano
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Classification

Wanano is a member of the Tucanoan language family, which is found in northwest Amazonia.[3] The Tukanoan family can be sub-categorized into two groups: Western Tukanoan Languages and Eastern Tucanoan Languages, Wanano belonging to the Eastern Tucanoan family.[3] The Eastern Tukanoan group is much larger than the Western Tukanoan family with 16 languages and around 28,000 speakers, while the Western Tucanoan family has 4 languages with around 3,000 speakers.[3]

Wanano belongs to the Northern branch of the Eastern Tucanoan languages, along with Tucano.

Documentation

The first known work on the Wanano language was a grammatical outline recorded by a Salesian missionary named Antônio Giacone in 1967.[4] Since then a lot of work has been conducted by Nathan and Carolyn Waltz who have worked with the SIL organization in Colombia from 1963 to 1996.[4] They have published a pedagogical grammar (Waltz 1976), papers on the aspects of Wanano phonology (Waltz and Waltz 1967, Waltz 1982, Waltz 2002), a volume containing a study of Wanano kinship terms, a grammatical sketch of the language and a long interlinearized text (Waltz and Waltz 1997) and the grammatical overview of Wanano found in the Caro y Cuervo collection (Waltz and Waltz 2000).[5] In 2007, Nathan Waltz published a Wanano – Spanish dictionary (Waltz 2007). More research has been done on the Wanano language by Dr. Kristine Stenzel who has been conducting research in the Upper Rio Negro area since 2000. She has published a book on the grammar of Kotiria (Wanano) that discusses the morphology and syntax of the language (Stenzel 2015).[citation needed] Along with this book she has written many articles about different aspects of the Wanano language and people (Stenzel 2005a, 2005b, 2006, 2007, 2008a, 2008b, 2008c, 2009a, 2009b, 2009c, 2010, 2012, 2014) (Stenzel 2015).

Wanano was described in a language documentation project funded by Programa de Documentação de Línguas e Culturas Indígenas (ProDocLin) at the Museu do Índio. The project was coordinated by Dr. Kristine Stenzel and was a teaching workshop of Kotiria pedagogical grammar (Saltarelli 2014).

Phonology

Consonants

More information Bilabial, Alveolar ...
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Nasalization is carried on vowels. Voiced plosives and /j/ may surface as the nasal consonants [m], [n], [ŋ], and [ɲ] in the environment of nasal vowels.

Vowels

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Suprasegmentals

Syllables may be marked with either a high or low stress accent. Nasalization is suprasegmental and moves from left to right through a word.

Morphology

Wanano is a nominative accusative language with an SOV sentence structure that contains the following grammatical categories: nouns, verbs, particles, pronouns, and interrogatives. These are outlined in Stenzel’s Reference Grammar of Wanano (2004). Under nouns Stenzel goes into further detail regarding the animates: human vs non-human animates and inanimates: mass nouns vs count nouns (xi). Stenzel discusses the pronouns which will be examined further below. For verbs Wanano have suffix morphemes that indicate evidentiality, as well as imperative, interrogative and irregular morphemes. While there are adverbial morphemes in Wanano, there are no adjectives.

Pronouns

Pronouns in Wanano are categorized by personal, possessive, interrogative and demonstrative. A like English, gender is seen in 3rd person pronouns only. The pronouns are categorized into deictic for 1st and 2nd person and anaphoric for 3rd person.

Personal pronouns

More information Singular, Plural ...
[6]
Singular Plural
Deictic 1st Person EXCL yʉ'ʉ ~sa
INCL ~badi
2nd Person ~bʉ'ʉ ~bʉ-sa
Anaphoric 3rd Person F ti-ko-ro ti ~dubia
M ti-ro ti-~da
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ti-ro

ANPH-SG

yoa-ro-pʉ

be.long-PART-LOC

wa’a-ra

go-VIS.PERF.NON.1

ti-ro yoa-ro-pʉ wa’a-ra

ANPH-SG be.long-PART-LOC go-VIS.PERF.NON.1

He went far away. [7]

Possessive pronouns

More information Singular, Plural ...
[8]
Singular Plural
1st Person EXCL ~sa
INCL ~bari
2nd Person ~bʉ ~bʉ'sa
3rd Person to ti
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1SG

phʉ-kʉ

parent-MASC

yʉ phʉ-kʉ

1SG parent-MASC

my father [8]

Interrogative pronouns

More information English ...
[9]
English Wanano
How much ~do'o-puru
How many ~do'o-pe
What Yaba
Who ~doa
Where ~do'o-i
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~doa

who

hi-hari

INT.IMPERF

ti-ko-ro

ANPH-FEM-SG

~doa hi-hari ti-ko-ro

who INT.IMPERF ANPH-FEM-SG

Who is she? [10]

Demonstrative pronouns

[11]
This These That Those Here There (distal) There (remote) Other
Deictic a'ri a'ri-~da Si si-~da (animate)
si-re (inanimate)
To
Anaphoric ti To Pa
Distance ~o ~so'o To

a’ri-ro

DEM:PROX-SG

a’ri-ro

DEM:PROX-SG

This man [12]

si-ro

DEM:PROX-SG

si-ro

DEM:PROX-SG

That man [13]

~o-i

DEIC:PROX-LOC

~o-i

DEIC:PROX-LOC

Here [13]

~so’o-pʉ

DEIC:DIST-LOC

~so’o-pʉ

DEIC:DIST-LOC

There (distal) [13]

to-pʉ

REM-LOC

to-pʉ

REM-LOC

There (remote) [13]

pa-iro

other-NOM:SG

pa-iro

other-NOM:SG

another one [13]

Other

Gender coding of nouns is a morphological aspect discussed in the grammar of Wanano. Nouns with human referents are obligatorily marked for gender, most noun roots with human referents are masculine, otherwise feminine if marked by morpho-phonological means.[14] The gender coding suffix -ko that appears at the end of the noun is feminine while -kʉ is masculine, for example phʉ-ko-ro (mother) and phʉ-kʉ-ro (father).[12] Sometimes these endings can be reduced to o for feminine and ʉ for masculine. Examples of this are ~ducho-ro (grandmother) and ~duchʉ-ro (grandfather).[15]

A mass noun is a noun that has no plural form, not meaning singular but that it is an uncountable referent. For example, you cannot count water however you can weigh it to measure its mass. By adding the morpheme –ro to the root of a mass noun or verb in Wanano, it changes into a count noun.[16] Some examples of this are: ko (water) is turned into ko-ro (rainstorm) by adding –ro; tha (grass) is turned into tha-ro (field).[16]

Syntax

Wanano is a nominative-accusative case system, this means that the subject of the transitive and intransitive verbs are marked the same way.

Intransitive

Intransitive verbs are verbs that require a single nominal argument. Below are some examples.

1)

yʉ’ʉ

1SG

hi-ha

COP-VIS.IMPERF.1

ko-iro

relative-NOM:SG

yʉ’ʉ hi-ha ko-iro

1SG COP-VIS.IMPERF.1 relative-NOM:SG

I am your/a relative.[17]

2)

~dubi-a

woman-PL

da’ra

work

wa’a-ra

go-VIS.IMPERF.NON.1

wese-pʉ

garden-LOC

~dubi-a da’ra wa’a-ra wese-pʉ

woman-PL work go-VIS.IMPERF.NON.1 garden-LOC

Women go to work in the garden.[17]

3)

to

3SG.POSS

~badu-ro

husband-SG

pase-pʉ

far.away.-LOC

wa’a-a

go-ASSERT.PERF

to ~badu-ro pase-pʉ wa’a-a

3SG.POSS husband-SG far.away.-LOC go-ASSERT.PERF

Her husband left.[17]

Transitive

Transitive verbs are verbs that require two core nominal arguments.

4)

a’ri

DEM:PROX

thu-re

CLS:stacked-OBJ

hoa-ha

write-VIS.IMPERF.1

~sa

1PL:EXC

kooti-ri-a

Wanano-NOM-PL

a’ri thu-re hoa-ha ~sa kooti-ri-a

DEM:PROX CLS:stacked-OBJ write-VIS.IMPERF.1 1PL:EXC Wanano-NOM-PL

We Wananos are writing this book. [18]

5)

ti-ro

ANPH-SG

tia-ro

three-PART

ka-ya-re

black.monkey-PL-OBJ

~waha-a

kill-ASSERT.PERF

ti-ro tia-ro ka-ya-re ~waha-a

ANPH-SG three-PART black.monkey-PL-OBJ kill-ASSERT.PERF

He killed three monkeys. [18]

6)

ti-ro

ANPH-SG

~yabi-re

night-TMP

~tidi-ra

walk-VIS.IMPERF.NON.1

ti-ro ~yabi-re ~tidi-ra

ANPH-SG night-TMP walk-VIS.IMPERF.NON.1

A firefly comes out at night. [19]

7)

ti-ro

ANPH-SG

~da-ra

bring/take-VIS.IMPERF.NON.1

ti-re

ANPH-CLS:generic

ti-~phi-re

ANPH-CLS:bladelike-OBJ

wese-pʉ-re

garden-LOC-OBJ

ti-ro ~da-ra ti-re ti-~phi-re wese-pʉ-re

ANPH-SG bring/take-VIS.IMPERF.NON.1 ANPH-CLS:generic ANPH-CLS:bladelike-OBJ garden-LOC-OBJ

He always takes the machete to the garden. [20]

8)

~bʉ’ʉ

2SG(POSS)

yahiri~pho’da-re

heart-OBJ

yʉ’ʉ-re

1SG-OBJ

wa-ga

give-IMPER

~bʉ’ʉ yahiri~pho’da-re yʉ’ʉ-re wa-ga

2SG(POSS) heart-OBJ 1SG-OBJ give-IMPER

Give me your heart. [21]

9)

to

3SG.POSS

~ba-kʉ-ro-~ka-re

child-MASC-SG-DIM.-OBJ

~da-wʉa-rʉka-ga

bring/take-pick.up-INCEP-ASSERT.PERF

to ~ba-kʉ-ro-~ka-re ~da-wʉa-rʉka-ga

3SG.POSS child-MASC-SG-DIM.-OBJ bring/take-pick.up-INCEP-ASSERT.PERF

She picked up her little boy [22]

As we can see from the examples above, Wanano is a nominative accusative language. For example, in example 1, 1SG yʉˈʉ is the same as in example 8. In example 9, the 3SG to is the same as in example 3. As well as in example 6 ANPH-SG ti is the same as in example 5.

Transitive motion verbs

Transitive motion verbs frequently occur with adjunct expressions coded only by the locative -pʉ and there are certain motion verbs in Wanano which can be syntactically transitive. In other words, they take a second, oblique argument coded by -pʉ-re.[23]

1)

~ayo

so/then

~o-pʉ-re

DEIC:PROX-LOC-OBJ

yʉ’ʉ

1SG

kho’a-wi’i-kʉ-ka

return-COMPL-NON.3.MASC-PREDICT.

~ayo ~o-pʉ-re yʉ’ʉ kho’a-wi’i-kʉ-ka

so/then DEIC:PROX-LOC-OBJ 1SG return-COMPL-NON.3.MASC-PREDICT.

That’s how I’ll get back here. [24]

2)

ku’tu-~ka-pʉ-re

clearing-DIM-LOC-OBJ

phi’a-sʉ-’a

MOV.out.into-COMPL-ASSERT.PERF

ku’tu-~ka-pʉ-re phi’a-sʉ-’a

clearing-DIM-LOC-OBJ MOV.out.into-COMPL-ASSERT.PERF

(He) went out into a little clearing. [24]

Wanano is typologically nominative-accusative, and that it codes the grammatical rather than the semantic roles of core arguments.[25]

Semantics

Plural morphemes in Wanano

The most common plural morpheme used in Wanano is -a/ ̴da. The alternation between the two is still unclear however there is a tendency for ̴da to be used for animates with human referents, for example pho’da (children), while –a is used for other animates.[26] When pluralizing male or females the morphemes - ̴sʉba (male) and ̴sa ̴dubia (female) are used. Some examples of this are:

More information female, male ...
female male

~dubi-a

female-PL

~dubi-a

female-PL

'females' or 'women'

~bʉ-a

male-PL

~bʉ-a

male-PL

'males' or 'men'

~yucho

grandmother

~sa

1.EXC.POSS

~dubi-a

woman-PL

~yucho ~sa ~dubi-a

grandmother 1.EXC.POSS woman-PL

'grandmothers'

~yuchʉ-~sʉba

grandfather-PL

~yuchʉ-~sʉba

grandfather-PL

'grandfathers' or 'ancestors'

~dabo

wife

~sa

1.EXC.POSS

~dubi-a

woman-PL

~dabo ~sa ~dubi-a

wife 1.EXC.POSS woman-PL

'wives'

~badʉ-~sʉba

husband-PL

~badʉ-~sʉba

husband-PL

'husbands' [27]

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For pluralizing animals, since they are non-human the morpheme –a is used. There are some exceptions where –ya is used. Some examples of this are:

~phido-ro

snake

 

~phido-a

snake-PL

~phido-ro → ~phido-a

snake {} snake-PL

bora-ro

curupira

 

boraro-a

curupira-PL

bora-ro → boraro-a

curupira {} curupira-PL

~die-ro

dog

 

~die-ya

dogs

~die-ro → ~die-ya

dog {} dogs

The word die-ya 'dogs' can become 'female dogs' when suffixed with ̴dubia 'woman'.

Dieya-

dogs

~dubia

females

Dieya- ~dubia

dogs females

Female dogs. [29]

References

Sources

Further reading

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