Kashinawa (also spelled Kaxinawá, Kashinawa, Kaxynawa, Caxinawa, Caxinawá, and Cashinahua), or Hantxa Kuin (Hãtxa Kuĩ), is an indigenous American language of western South America which belongs to the Panoan language family. It is spoken by about 1,600 Kaxinawá in Peru, along the Curanja and the Purus Rivers, and in Brazil by 400 Kaxinawá in the state of Acre.
Kashinawa | |
---|---|
Kashinawa of the Ibuaçu River | |
Native to | Peru, Brazil |
Ethnicity | Kaxinawá people |
Native speakers | 1,200 (2003–2007)[1] |
Panoan
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | cbs |
Glottolog | cash1254 |
ELP | Cashinahua |
About five to ten percent of speakers have some Spanish language proficiency,[2] while forty percent are literate and twenty to thirty percent are literate in Spanish as a second language.
Dialects are Brazilian Kashinawa, Peruvian Kashinawa, and the extinct Juruá Kapanawa (Capanahua of the Juruá River) and Paranawa.
Phonology
editVowels
editFront | Central | Back | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Close | oral | i ⟨i⟩ | ɨ ⟨e⟩ | u~ʊ~o ⟨u⟩ |
nasal | ĩ ⟨ĩ⟩ | ɨ̃ ⟨ẽ⟩ | ũ~õ ⟨ũ⟩ | |
Open | oral | a ⟨a⟩ | ||
nasal | ã ⟨ã⟩ |
- In final syllables, /a, ã/ are heard as [ə, ə̃].
- /ɨ, ɨ̃/ can also be heard as mid-back [ɤ, ɤ̃].
- Although nasalization is generally marked by placing a tilde over the vowel, some authors choose to mark it with a following ⟨n⟩ to denote that the previous vowel or contiguous vowels are nasalised.
Consonants
editLabial | Alveolar | Retroflex | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | m ⟨m⟩ | n ⟨n⟩ | |||||
Plosive | voiceless | p ⟨p⟩ | t ⟨t⟩ | k ⟨k⟩ | ʔ ⟨’⟩ | ||
voiced | b ⟨b⟩ | d ⟨d⟩ | |||||
Fricative | s ⟨s⟩ | ʂ ⟨x/shr⟩ | ʃ ⟨x/sh⟩ | h ⟨j/h⟩ | |||
Affricate | t͡s ⟨ts⟩ | t͡ʃ ⟨ch⟩ | |||||
Approximant | w~β ⟨v/w⟩ | j ⟨y⟩ |
- The stop consonant d /d/ may be pronounced as an alveolar flap [ɾ] when between two vowels, like the North American English pronunciation of ⟨dd⟩ in the word ladder.
Dictionary
editA dictionary has been compiled and published since 1980.[3]
Orthography
editThe Roman alphabet is used. There is an interrogative punctuation mark different from the question mark.
Morphology
editArticles and adjectives are placed after nouns. There are seven prefixes and five suffixes.
References
edit- ^ Kashinawa at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
- ^ "Kashinawa." Ethnologue. Retrieved 8 Dec 2011.
- ^ Diccionario Cashinahua Tomo 1 Biblioteca Virtual del Ministerio de Cultura. Retrieved 07 Oct. 2024
External links
edit- Cashinahua Pronunciation and Spelling Guide, Native Languages of the Americas website. 1998-2008.
- Diccionario Cashinahua Tomo 1 Wise, Mary Ruth. 1981. Diccionario Cashinahua. Yarinacocha, Peru: Instituto Lingüístico del Verano.
- Animacy and mythology in Hantxa Kuin (Cashinahua), Department of Linguistics, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
- Kensinger, Kenneth M. The phonological hierarchy of Cashinahua (Pano). Summer Institute of Linguistics, University of Oklahoma. 1963.
- Montag, Richard. 2008 Participant Referencing in Cashinahua. SIL International.
- Cashinahua DoReCo corpus compiled by Sabine Reiter. Audio recordings of narrative texts with transcriptions time-aligned at the phone level, translations, and - for some texts - time-aligned morphological annotations.