Qʼanjobʼal language explained

Qʼanjobʼal
Nativename:Kanjobal
States:Mexico, Guatemala
Region:Chiapas, Huehuetenango
Ethnicity:208,000 Qʼanjobʼal in Guatemala (2019 census)
Speakers:180,000: in Guatemala
Date:2015  - 2019 census
Ref:e24
Speakers2: in Mexico (2020 census)[1]
Familycolor:American
Fam1:Mayan
Fam2:Western Mayan
Fam3:Qʼanjobalan
Fam4:Qʼanjobalan
Fam5:Kanjobal–Jacaltec
Iso3:kjb
Glotto:qanj1241
Glottorefname:Qʼanjobʼal
Nation: Mexico
Agency:Instituto Nacional de Lenguas Indígenas
Script:Latin

Qʼanjobʼal (in Mayan languages pronounced as /qʼanxoɓal/) (also Kanjobal)[2] is a Mayan language from the Q'anjobalan branch spoken primarily in Guatemala and part of Mexico. According to 1998 estimates compiled by SIL International in Ethnologue, there were approximately 77,700 native speakers, primarily in the Huehuetenango Department of Guatemala.[3] In Chiapas, Mexico, municipalities where the Qʼanjobʼal language is spoken include Catazajá, Amatenango de la Frontera, La Trinitaria, Bella Vista, Frontera Comalapa, Las Margaritas and Maravilla Tenejapa.[4] In Huehuetenango, the municipalities where the language is spoken are San Juan Ixcoy (Yich Kʼox), San Pedro Soloma (Tzʼulumaʼ ), Santa Eulalia (Jolom Konobʼ ), Santa Cruz Barillas (Yalmotx), San Rafael La Independencia, and San Miguel Acatán (Pedro Mateo Pedro 2010). Qʼanjobʼal is taught in public schools through Guatemala's intercultural bilingual education programs.

Classification

Qʼanjobʼal is a member of the Qʼanjobʼalan branch of the Mayan language family. The Mayan language family includes 31 languages, two of which are now extinct. The Qʼanjobʼalan branch includes not only Qʼanjobʼal itself but also Chuj, Akatek, and Jakaltek, also spoken in Mexico and Guatemala. The Qʼanjobʼalan languages are noted for being among the most conservative of the Mayan language family, although they do include some interesting innovations.[5]

Phonology

Qʼanjobʼal consists of 26 consonant sounds and 5 vowel sounds. The letters of the alphabet are as follows: The ʼ in chʼ, kʼ, qʼ, tʼ, txʼ, and tzʼ represents an ejective or glottalic egressive, i.e., the consonant is accompanied by a puff of air from the glottis. The letter r in Qʼanjobʼal has a limited distribution. It is used mostly in borrowings, primarily in words borrowed from Spanish, such as roxax, rose, from Spanish rosa. It is also used in affect and positional words like kʼarari 'noise of an old engine or the like', jeran 'to be in a broken position/form'. The letters tx and x represent retroflex consonants, pronounced with the tongue curled backward in the mouth. It is believed such retroflection in Qʼanjobʼal is an influence from the Mamean Mayan languages.[6]

Vowels!! Front! Back
Closepronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Midpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Openpronounced as /link/
! Bilabial!colspan=2
AlveolarPost-
alveolar
RetroflexVelarUvularGlottal
Nasal(m) pronounced as /link/(n) pronounced as /link/
Plosive/
Affricate
plain(p) pronounced as /link/(t) pronounced as /link/(tz) pronounced as /link/(ch) pronounced as /link/(tx) pronounced as /link/(k) pronounced as /link/(q) pronounced as /link/(ʼ) pronounced as /link/
ejective(tʼ) pronounced as /link/(tzʼ) pronounced as /link/(chʼ) pronounced as /link/(txʼ) pronounced as /link/(kʼ) pronounced as /link/(qʼ) pronounced as /link/
implosive(bʼ) pronounced as /link/
Fricative(s) pronounced as /link/(xh) pronounced as /link/(x) pronounced as /link/(j) pronounced as /link/
Approximant((w) pronounced as /link/)(l) pronounced as /link/(y) pronounced as /link/(w) pronounced as /link/
Flap(r) pronounced as /link/

Stress

Primary stress in Qʼanjobʼal is fairly simple. Words in isolation and in final phrase boundaries bear stress on the last syllable. However, words within a phrasal unit (not in final phrase boundary) bear stress on their first syllable.

Morphology and syntax

Verbs

As in all Mayan languages, Qʼanjobʼal classifies all verbs as either inherently intransitive (calling up only one argument) or as inherently transitive (calling up two arguments).[7] Qʼanjobʼal is an ergative–absolutive language, in which the subject of a transitive verb takes an ergative affix, while the subject of an intransitive verb, as well as the object of a transitive verb, takes an absolutive affix.

There are two sets of affixes for ergative: the first set is used for those verbal roots beginning with a consonant, and the second set is used for those beginning with a vowel.

Ergative prefixes
verbal roots beginning with a consonantverbal roots beginning with a vowel
Singular PluralSingular Plural
1st personhin-ko-w-j-
2nd personha-he-h-hey-
3rd persons-/Ø-s-/Ø-y-y-

Ergative affixes are also used for possession.

There is only one set of absolutive affixes with two variations: pronounced like free words or attached to something else. The third person absolutive affix is Ø, i.e., unmarked or empty.

Absolutive affixes
when attached to preceding soundsnot attached to a preceding sound
Singular PluralSingular Plural
1st person-in-onhinhon
2nd person-ach-exhachhex
3rd person-Ø...(hebʼ)ØØ...(hebʼ)

However, while verbs are classified as either ergative or absolutive and take their own respective sets of pronoun affixes, this rule is altered in certain cases, such as when a verb becomes progressive:

but,

Aspect

In Qʼanjobʼal, aspect (whether an action has been completed or not) is more important than tense. Thus, in most utterances, one will indicate whether the action is incompletive, or whether it is completed, or may happen in the future, in which case it is considered 'unreal', or of irrealis mood, the event still only in the realm of thought or imagination.

Incompletive

Ch(i) is used to indicate that an event is incomplete or ongoing at some time:

Completive

Max or x- (both forms are used in free variation) are used to indicate that an event is complete:

Future/Irrealis

The prefix hoq- with the suffix -oq are used to indicate that the event spoken of has not yet happened, but remains only in the realm of the 'unreal' with only the potential for occurrence in the future:

Negative

Negative particles include kʼam and manaq:

Interrogative

Questions can be formed simply by using rising intonation with declarative syntax:

There is also a question particle, mi:

(Used as common form of greeting, like English 'How are you?')

Affixation

Many different affixes are used in Qʼanjobʼal, both prefixes and suffixes. Among these are aj-, used to denote the doer or leader of an action: ajtzʼibʼ, ʼwriterʼ (< tzʼibʼ 'write'), ajbʼe, 'spiritual guide' (< bʼe 'road'); -bʼal, used to indicate the location where something happens: tzombʼal 'market' (< tzon 'buy'); -al, -alil, -il, used to derive abstract nouns from adjectives, adverbs, numerals, transitive verb roots, and nouns: syalixhal 'his/her smallness' (< yalixh 'small'); swinaqil 'husband' (< winaq 'man'); -kʼulal, to derive nouns from intransitive verbs, adjectives, other nouns, etc.: watxkʼulal 'friendliness'; -oj, nominalizer, turning verbs into nouns: kuyoj 'studying' (< kuy 'study').

Word order

Qʼanjobʼal has a fixed word order. It follows a verb–subject–object (VSO) word order. All changes to this word order are driven by pragmatic or syntactic factors like focus, negation, interrogation, relativization, etc. These are subject to an ergative–absolutive pattern where arguments cross-referenced by ergative affixes must become absolutives prior to their fronting (focus, negation, etc.). This results in some possible subject–verb (SV), object–verb–subject (OVS) orders. However SVO, SOV and OSV are not possible (or, at least, not attested in any known corpus). The apparent exception is in reflexives and reflexive possessives, where the reflexive phrase ERG-bʼa (noun) or reflexive possessive ERG-noun appears directly following the verb.[8]

Classifiers

Some Qʼanjobʼal nouns require that certain classifiers be used with them. Among these are no (animals), te (trees/wood), ix (female), naq (male), chʼen (stone/metal), xim (corn), and an (plants).

Reduplication

Reduplication, or duplication of a root word, is a minor process in the formation of Qʼanjobʼal vocabulary, as in the following:

Vocabulary

Qʼanjobʼal consists of groups of roots that can take affixes. Words are traditionally classified as nouns, adjectives, adverbs, intransitive and transitive verbs, particles, and positionals. Positionals are a group of roots which cannot function as words on their own; in combination with affixes they are used to describe relationships of position and location. Particles are words that do not take affixes; they mostly function in adverbial roles, and include such things as interrogative particles, affirmative/negative words, markers of time and location, conjunctions, prepositions and demonstratives.

Locatives are often formed by placing a noun after a possessed body-part term: s-ti bʼe, 'edge of the road' < 'its-mouth road' and s-jolom witz, 'mountaintop' or 'summit' < 'its-head mountain'. Similarly, compound nouns may be formed by placing a noun after another possessed noun: y-atutal kuyoj, 'school' < 'its-house studying'.

Numbers

Common words

anima person
chʼenej rock/stone
aʼ ej water/river
ix woman
chikay grandmother
mamin grandfather
ixim corn
kaq red/hot
kʼu sun/day
mam father
mis cat
na house (also atut)
patej tortilla
sat kan sky (lit. snake's eye)
son marimba
te' tree
txʼi' dog
txʼotxʼej land
txutx mother
unin child
waykan star
winaq man
witz mountain
xajaw moon/month
yibʼan qʼinal Earth/world
xumak flower

Abbreviations used

ABS abstractivizer
CL classifier
COM complete
INC incomplete
INT interrogative
IRR irrealis
NEG negative
NZR nominalizer
PL plural
PROG progressive
SFX suffix
STAT status

COMPL:completiveCOM:CompletiveA3S:Third-person singular absolutiveE1S:First-person singular ergativeA1S:First-person singular absolutiveE3S:Third-person singular ergativeSFX:Status suffixINC:IncompletiveA2S: Second-person singular absolutiveE2S: Second-person singular ergativeA3: Third-person absolutiveINTER:InterrogativeA2P: Second-person plural absolutiveA3P: Third-person plural absolutiveNZR:Nominalizer

References

  • Acker . An Michelle . 2016 . Voice and Valence in Qʼanjobʼal . PhD dissertation . Los Angeles . University of California . 28 December 2021.
  • Book: Comunidad Lingüística Qʼanjobʼal. 2005. Gramática descriptiva qʼanjobʼal = Yaqʼbʼanil stxolilal tiʼ qʼanjobʼal. Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala (ALMG), Comunidad Lingüística Qʼanjobʼal. Guatemala City. 70631325. es.
  • Book: Oxlajuuj Keej Mayaʼ Ajtzʼiibʼ [OKMA]. Oxlajuuj Keej Mayaʼ Ajtzʼiibʼ. 2000. Variación dialectal en qʼanjobʼal = Skʼexkixhtaqil yallay koqʼanej. Saaqjumay [Sonia Raymundo González], Adán Francisco Pascual, Pedro Mateo Pedro, and Bʼalam Qʼuqʼ [Eladio Mateo Toledo] (authors/contribs.), Nora C. England (advisor), Guisela Ascensio Lueg (Spanish revision). Informes de variación dialectal series. Guatemala City. Cholsamaj. 99922-53-08-8. 49332799. es.
  • Lichtman, Karen (2010). IPA illustration of Q’anjob’al. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
  • Mateo Pedro, Pedro (2010). The acquisition of verb inflection in Qʼanjobʼal Maya: a longitudinal study. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Kansas.
  • Book: Robertson, John S.. 1992. The History of Tense/Aspect/Mood/Voice in the Mayan Verbal Complex. University of Texas Press. Austin. 0-292-72075-0. 26160695. registration.

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://cuentame.inegi.org.mx/hipertexto/todas_lenguas.htm Lenguas indígenas y hablantes de 3 años y más, 2020
  2. Other variant names include Santa Eulalia Kanjobal, Kanhobal, Qanjobal, Conob, and Eastern Kanjobal.
  3. Centered around the municipio of Santa Eulalia; owing to recent emigrations there are communities of Qʼanjobʼal speakers in the United States (see Gordon (2005).
  4. Web site: Catálogo de las lenguas indígenas nacionales: Variantes lingüísticas de México con sus autodenominaciones y referencias geoestadísticas. Q'anjob'al .
  5. Robertson (1992), p.154.
  6. Robertson (1992), p.58.
  7. Robertson (1992), p.50.
  8. Book: Mateo Toledo, Eladio. The Family of Complex Predicates in Qʼanjobʼal (Maya); Their Syntax and Meaning. 2008.