Everipedia Logo
Everipedia is now IQ.wiki - Join the IQ Brainlist and our Discord for early access to editing on the new platform and to participate in the beta testing.
Kanoê language

Kanoê language

Kanoê or Kapishana is a nearly extinct language isolate of Rondônia, Brazil. The Kapishana people now speak Portuguese or other indigenous languages from intermarriage.

The language names are also spelled Kapixana, Kapixanã, and Canoé, the last shared with Awa-Canoeiro.

The Kanoê people, although disperse in the southeastern part of the state of Rondônia, live mainly along the Guaropé River. The language is nearly extinct, with only 5 speakers in a population of about 319 Kanoê people.[3]

Kanoé
Kapishana
RegionRondônia, Brazil
Native speakers
5 (2007)[1]
language isolate
Language codes
ISO 639-3kxo
Glottologkano1245 [11][2]

History

The first contact of the Kanoé people with the "white man" brought a lot of death through sickness. Many of the people died of pertussis, measles, and stomach problems since they didn't have the medicine needed to fight the diseases that were available to the "white man". There was also a lot of death due to conflicts with the farmers in the area.[3]

The Kanoê people can be found in two main areas, the banks of the Guaropé River and the Omorê River. The main population, living by the Guaropé River, share the land with other indigenous people and a long history of cohabitation with the "white man". Most of them are inserted into the Brazilian society and married to people belonging to other indigenous groups. Only three of them still speak the native Kanoê today.

By the Omorê River, a single family of Kanoê can be found, with much less influence from the Brazilian society. Having fled into a forest reserve, this group is considered isolated indigenous people, only allowing outside contact in 1995 after many years of attempts by the Ethno Environmental Protection Front. As of 2003, only four people remained of this Kanoê family, with two of them being monolingual Kanoê speakers. The area by the Omorê River is believed to be the original territory of the Kanoê people by Victor Dequech (1942) and Etta Becker-Donner (1955).

Current Status

For a long time Kanoê was too poorly attested to classify. Various proposals were advanced on little evidence; Price (1978) for example thought Kanoê might be one of the Nambikwaran languages. When it was finally described in some detail, by Bacelar (2004), it turned out to be a language isolate. It is believed to have been a naturally developed language, adapted to the needs of the Kanoê people.[4]

The first written study of the Kanoê language available today, dates back to 1943 when Stanislav Zach published a vocabulary of the Kanoê tribe,[5] which was later updated in 1963 by Cestmír Loukotka.

A preliminary report of the phonological features of the Kanoê language was published by Laércio Bacelar in 1992,[6] with a second report and an analysis of the phonology published in 1994.[7] Bacelar and Cleiton Pereira wrote a paper on the morphosyntax of the language in 1996.[8] And in 1998 a paper on the negation and litotes of the language was published by Bacelar and Augusto Silva Júnior.[9] Since then, Laércio Bacelar has been the main linguist investigating the language and working alongside the Kanoê people. In 2004 he published a detailed description of its phonology, grammar and syntax.[10]

A project called Etnografia e Documentação da Lingua Kanoé [12] is underway with a lexicographic and ethnographic approach to record auditory and written data of the Kanoê language. The project is currently coordinated by Laércio Nora Bacelar, a Brazilian Linguist, and is funded by FUNAI - Museu do Índio and by UNESCO. The project also has the support of the entire Kanoê community from both the Guaropé and the Omorê rivers.

Phonology

Consonants

BilabialAlveolarPalatalVelar
Stopptk
Affricatet͡s
Fricativeβx
Nasalmnɲ
Approximantjw
Flapɾ

/x/ is limited to a few verb forms, ‿where it occurs before /ĩ/. /ts/ is highly variable, [ts tʃ s ʃ], with the affricates being the more common, [ʃ] rare, and [tʃ ʃ] most common before /i u/. /r/ is [ɾ] between vowels, [d] after [n] and occasionally initially. /ɲ/ varies as [ȷ̃]. /n/ is [ŋ] before /k/, a pattern which occurs during metathesis. /p/ is very rarely realized as [ɓ]. /w/ /j/ are nasalized after nasal vowels.

Vowels

iĩɨɨ̃uũ
eoõ
ææ̃aʌ̃

Vowel qualities are /i ɛ æ ɨ a u ɔ/, all oral and nasal; the nasal vowels have slightly different or variable pronunciations: [ĩ], [ɛ̃]~[ẽ], [æ̃], [ɨ̃], [ã]~[ʌ̃], [ɔ̃]~[õ], [ũ].

Oral vowels are optionally nasalized next to nasal stops, with the variation of phonemically nasal vowels. /ɛ/ varies as [ɛ]~[e] after /ts/ and next to an approximant. /ɨ/ varies as [ɨ]~[ə] after voiceless consonants. /ɔ/ varies as [ɔ]~[o] after /p, m/. Vowels may have a voiceless offglide (effectively [h]) when not followed by a voiced sound.

Vowels are long when they constitute a morpheme of their own. Stress is on the last syllable of a word. Maximally complex syllable is CGVG, where G is a glide /j w/, or, due to epenthesis in certain morphological situations or to elision, the final consonant may be /m n/. One of the more syllabically complex words is /kwivɛjkaw/ 'to shave'. Vowel sequences occur, as in /eaere/ 'chief'.

Morphology

Although Kanoê is an isolate language, it is also a polysynthetic language, where the more complex words are the verbs (Payne 1997). It is also primarily an agglutinative language, and many words are formed by simple roots, juxtaposition and suffixation.[4] The gender can be expressed by suffixation or by a hyperonym, and while Kanoê does not make a distinction of number, it does make a distinction between uncountable and countable nouns, where the suffix {-te} is added[10] . The syntax order of Kanoê follows SOV = subject + object + verb.[4]

In the Kanoê language, the process of morphological reduplication is used to form frequentative verbs. For example, manamana 'kneading', or mañumañu 'chewing'. Although some names show reduplication, it can have an onomatopoeic motivation instead of a morphologic one - most names with reduplication are names for animals and birds, in which the phonetic sequence of the reduplication do seem to imitate the sounds characteristic of said animals, for example kurakura 'chicken' or tsõjtsõj 'colibri bird'.[10]

Pronouns

Personal Pronouns

Personal pronouns in the Kanoê language follow a monomorphic free form in the singular and bimorphic in the plural. These pronouns can occur in the subject or object position. The formation of the plural pronouns follow the formula PRO.PL → PRO.SG + COL, where PRO is the singular form of the pronoun and -COL is the plural morpheme {-te}.[10]

References

[1]
Citation Linkwww.ethnologue.comKanoé at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
Sep 24, 2019, 6:22 PM
[2]
Citation Linkglottolog.orgHammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Kanoê". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
Sep 24, 2019, 6:22 PM
[3]
Citation Linkpib.socioambiental.orgLaércio Nora Bacelar. "Povo". Povos Indígenas No Brasil. Instituto Socioambiental.
Sep 24, 2019, 6:22 PM
[4]
Citation Linkprodoclin.museudoindio.gov.br"Kanoê". Projeto de Documentação de Línguas Indígenas. Museu do Indio.
Sep 24, 2019, 6:22 PM
[5]
Citation Linkopenlibrary.orgStanislav, Zach (1943). Vocabulário das tribos Massacá, Salamãi, Coiá e Canoê (in Portuguese). Rio de Janeiro.
Sep 24, 2019, 6:22 PM
[6]
Citation Linkopenlibrary.orgBacelar, Laércio (1992). Fonologia preliminar da língua Kanoê (in Portuguese). Brasília: Universidade de Brasília.
Sep 24, 2019, 6:22 PM
[7]
Citation Linkopenlibrary.orgBacelar, Laércio (1994). "Fonologia segmental da língua Kanoê: uma análise preliminar". Signótica: Revista do Mestrado em Letras e Linguística (in Portuguese). Goiânia: UFGO (6): 59–72.
Sep 24, 2019, 6:22 PM
[8]
Citation Linkopenlibrary.orgBacelar, Laércio; Pereira, Cleiton (1996). "Aspectos Morfossintáticos da Língua Kanoê". Signótica: Revista do Mestrado em Letras e Linguística (in Portuguese). Goiânia: UFGO (8): 45–55.
Sep 24, 2019, 6:22 PM
[9]
Citation Linkopenlibrary.orgBacelar, Laércio; Silva Júnior, Augusto (1998). "A negação e a litotes na língua Kanoê". Signótica: Revista do Mestrado em Letras e Linguística (in Portuguese). Goiânia: UFGO (9).
Sep 24, 2019, 6:22 PM
[10]
Citation Linkwebdoc.ubn.kun.nlBacelar, Laércio Nora (2004). Gramática da língua Kanoê (PDF) (in Portuguese). Nijmegen: Katholieke Universiteit Nijmegen.
Sep 24, 2019, 6:22 PM
[11]
Citation Linkglottolog.orgkano1245
Sep 24, 2019, 6:22 PM
[12]
Citation Linkprodoclin.museudoindio.gov.brEtnografia e Documentação da Lingua Kanoé
Sep 24, 2019, 6:22 PM
[13]
Citation Linkwww.ethnologue.comKanoé
Sep 24, 2019, 6:22 PM
[14]
Citation Linkglottolog.org"Kanoê"
Sep 24, 2019, 6:22 PM
[15]
Citation Linkpib.socioambiental.org"Povo"
Sep 24, 2019, 6:22 PM
[16]
Citation Linkprodoclin.museudoindio.gov.br"Kanoê"
Sep 24, 2019, 6:22 PM
[17]
Citation Linkwebdoc.ubn.kun.nlGramática da língua Kanoê
Sep 24, 2019, 6:22 PM
[18]
Citation Linken.wikipedia.orgThe original version of this page is from Wikipedia, you can edit the page right here on Everipedia.Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.Additional terms may apply.See everipedia.org/everipedia-termsfor further details.Images/media credited individually (click the icon for details).
Sep 24, 2019, 6:22 PM