Bororoan languages explained

Borôroan
Region:Brazil
Familycolor:American
Fam1:Macro-Jê?
Glotto:boro1281
Glottorefname:Bororoan
Map:Bororoan languages.png
Mapcaption:Geographical distribution of the Borôroan languages

The Borôroan languages of Brazil are Borôro and the extinct Umotína and Otuke. They are sometimes considered to form part of the proposed Macro-Jê language family, though this has been disputed.[1]

They are called the Borotuke languages by Mason (1950), a portmanteau of Bororo and Otuke.[2]

Languages

The relationship between the languages is,

Gorgotoqui may have also been a Bororoan language.[3] [4]

Orari (Eastern Borôro, Orarimugodoge), listed by Loukotka as a language that was spoken on the Valhas River, Garças River, and Madeira River in Mato Grosso, is another name for Bororo.

Bororo of Cabaçal, which has been documented by Johann Natterer[6] and Francis de Castelnau,[7] has been identified by Camargo (2014) as a separate language distinct from Bororo proper.[8]

Vocabulary

Loukotka (1968) lists the following basic vocabulary items.[4]

gloss Orari Otuque
tonguei-táuro i-kaura azoː ki-taho
handi-kéra i-kera azyida seni
fireyóru dzyóru zoːruː reru
stonetori tori tauri tohori
sunkueri meri baru neri
moonári ari aːliː ari
earthróto mottu moto moktuhu
jaguaradúgo adugo azyukuetá anteko
fishkare karo haré aharo
housebái bai isipá huala
bowbaíga voiga bóika vevika

Proto-language

For a list of Proto-Bororo reconstructions by, see the corresponding Portuguese article.

External relations

The Bororoan languages are commonly thought to be part of the Macro-Jê language family.[9] [10]

Ceria & Sandalo (1995) note parallels between Bororo and the Guaicuruan languages.[11] Kaufman (1994) has suggested a relationship with the Chiquitano language,[12] which Nikulin (2020) considers to be a sister of Macro-Jê.[1] Furthermore, Nikulin (2019) has suggested that Bororoan has a relationship with the Cariban and Kariri languages:[13]

gloss Proto-Bororo Kariri Proto-Cariban
tooth
  • ɔ
dza
  • (j)ə
ear
  • bidʒa
beɲe
  • pana
go
  • tu
tree
  • i
dzi
  • jeje
tonguenunu
  • nuru
rootmu
  • mi(t-)
hand(a)mɨsã
  • əmija
fat (n.)
  • ka
  • ka(t-)
seed
  • a
  • a
fish
  • karo
  • kana
name
  • idʒe
dze
heavy
  • motɨtɨ
madi

An automated computational analysis (ASJP 4) by Müller et al. (2013)[14] also found lexical similarities between Bororoan and Cariban.

Language contact

Jolkesky (2016) notes that there are lexical similarities with the Guato, Karib, Kayuvava, Nambikwara, and Tupi language families due to contact.[15]

Cariban influence in Bororoan languages was due to the later southward expansion of Cariban speakers into Bororoan territory. Ceramic technology was also adopted from Cariban speakers. Similarly, Cariban borrowings are also present in the Karajá languages. Karajá speakers had also adopted ceramic technology from Cariban speakers.

Similarities with Cayuvava are due to the expansion of Bororoan speakers into the Chiquitania region.

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Nikulin . Andrey . 2020 . Proto-Macro-Jê: um estudo reconstrutivo . Ph.D. dissertation . Brasília . Universidade de Brasília.
  2. Book: Mason, John Alden . John Alden Mason . 1950 . The languages of South America . Julian . Steward . Handbook of South American Indians . 6 . 157–317 . Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 143 . Washington, D.C., Government Printing Office.
  3. Combès, Isabelle. 2010. Diccionario étnico: Santa Cruz la Vieja y su entorno en el siglo XVI. Cochabamba: Itinera-rios/Instituto Latinoamericano de Misionología. (Colección Scripta Autochtona, 4.)
  4. Book: Loukotka, Čestmír . Čestmír Loukotka . Classification of South American Indian languages . registration . UCLA Latin American Center . 1968 . Los Angeles.
  5. Combès, Isabelle. 2012. Susnik y los gorgotoquis: Efervescencia étnica en la Chiquitania (Oriente boliviano), p. 201–220. Indiana, v. 29. Berlín.

    See Otuke for various additional varieties of the Chiquito Plains in Bolivia which may have been dialects of it, such as Kovare and Kurumina.

    There are other recorded groups that may have spoken languages or dialects closer to Borôro, such as Aravirá, but nothing is directly known about these languages:[4]

  6. Feest, Christian. 2014. Johann Natterer. Bororo Wordlists and Ethnographic Notes. Bororo Wordlists and Ethnographic Notes. The Ethnographic Collection of Johann Natterer.
  7. Castelnau, Francis de. 1850-59. Expédition dan les parties centrales de l'Amérique du Sud : de Rio de Janeiro à Lima, et de Lima au Para exécutée par ordre du gouvernement français pendant les années 1843 à 1847, sous la direction de Francis de Castelnau. P. Bertrand. Paris
  8. Camargo, Gonçalo Ochoa. 2014. Boe ewadaru = A língua bororo : breve histórico e elementos de gramática. Campo Grande, MS: Universidade Católica Dom Bosco (UCDB).
  9. ,Guérios . R. F. Mansur F. . O nexo lingüístico Bororo/Merrime-Caiapó (contribuição para a unidade genética das línguas americanas) . Revista do Círculo de Estudos "Bandeirantes" . 1939 . 2 . 61–74.
  10. Ribeiro . Eduardo Rivail . Voort . Hein van der . 2010 . Nimuendajú was right: the inclusion of the Jabutí language family in the Macro-Jê stock . International Journal of American Linguistics . 76 . 4 . 517–70 . 10.1086/658056 .
  11. Ceria . Verónica G. . Sandalo . Filomena . A Preliminary Reconstruction of Proto-Waikurúan with Special Reference to Pronominals and Demonstratives . Anthropological Linguistics . [Anthropological Linguistics, Trustees of Indiana University] . 37 . 2 . 1995 . 1944-6527 . 30028310 . 169–191 .
  12. Kaufman, Terrence. 1994. The native languages of South America. In: Christopher Moseley and R. E. Asher (eds.), Atlas of the World’s Languages, 59–93. London: Routledge.
  13. Nikulin, Andrey V. The classification of the languages of the South American Lowlands: State-of-the-art and challenges / Классификация языков востока Южной Америки. Illič-Svityč (Nostratic) Seminar / Ностратический семинар, October 17, 2019.
  14. Müller, André, Viveka Velupillai, Søren Wichmann, Cecil H. Brown, Eric W. Holman, Sebastian Sauppe, Pamela Brown, Harald Hammarström, Oleg Belyaev, Johann-Mattis List, Dik Bakker, Dmitri Egorov, Matthias Urban, Robert Mailhammer, Matthew S. Dryer, Evgenia Korovina, David Beck, Helen Geyer, Pattie Epps, Anthony Grant, and Pilar Valenzuela. 2013. ASJP World Language Trees of Lexical Similarity: Version 4 (October 2013).
  15. Jolkesky . Marcelo Pinho de Valhery . Estudo arqueo-ecolinguístico das terras tropicais sul-americanas . 2016 . University of Brasília . pt . Ph.D. dissertation . Brasília . 2.