Karajá | |
Nativename: | Iny rybè |
Pronunciation: | pronounced as /[iˌnə̃ ɾɨˈbɛ]/ |
States: | Brazil |
Region: | Araguaia River |
Ethnicity: | Karajá people (2007) |
Date: | 2006 |
Ref: | e18 |
Familycolor: | American |
Fam1: | Macro-Jê |
Dia1: | Northern |
Dia2: | Southern Karajá |
Dia3: | Javaé |
Dia4: | Xambioá |
Iso3: | kpj |
Glotto: | kara1500 |
Glottorefname: | Karajá |
Elp2: | 3976 |
Elpname2: | Javaé |
Elp3: | 3943 |
Elpname3: | Karajá-Xambioá--> |
Map: | Karajan languages.png |
Notice: | IPA |
Karajá, also known as Iny rybè, is spoken by the Karajá people in some thirty villages in central Brazil.
There are distinct male and female forms of speech; one of the principal differences is that men drop the sound pronounced as //k//, which is pronounced by women.
Karaja is a verb-final language,[1] with simple noun and more complex verbal morphology that includes noun incorporation. Verbs inflect for direction as well as person, mood, object, and voice.
Dialects are Northern Karajá, Southern Karajá, Xambioá, and Javaé.[2]
Karajá proper is spoken on the main course of the Araguaia River in and around Bananal Island. Phonologically, it is set apart from the other dialects (Javaé and Xambioá) by the occurrence of the vowel /ə/ (not represented in the orthography), which corresponds to a full vowel in Javaé and Xambioá whose quality is a copy of the vowel of the next syllable. For example, Karajá bdi /pronounced as /bədɪ// ‘honey’, -dkỹ /pronounced as /-dəkə̃// ‘causative suffix’, -tka /pronounced as /-ɗəka// ‘to tie’, kbò /pronounced as /kəbɔ// ‘banzeiro’, kdò /pronounced as /kədɔ// ‘termite’, rkù /pronounced as /ɾəkʊ// ‘gourd’ correspond to Javaé and Xambioá bidi /pronounced as /bɪdɪ//, -nỹkỹ /pronounced as /-də̃kə̃//, -taka /pronounced as /-ɗaka//, kòbò /pronounced as /kɔbɔ//, kòdò /pronounced as /kɔdɔ//, rùkù /pronounced as /ɾʊkʊ//. Another phonological feature unique to Karajá proper is the progressive palatalization of pronounced as //k// and pronounced as //ɾ// (to pronounced as //tʃ// and pronounced as //dʒ//) following an pronounced as //i//: compare Karajá ritxòrè ‘offspring’, itxòrò ‘fox’, ritxoko ‘Ritxoko clay doll’, idjasò ‘arowana’ and Javaé/Xambioá rikòrè, ikòrò, rikoko, iraso. Examples of lexical differences between Karajá proper and other dialects include lei ‘anaconda’, tõsõ ‘woodpecker’, makiti ‘sugarcane’, corresponding to Javaé and Xambioá rei, sõsõ, biditi.
Karajá proper is further subdivided into Northern and Southern Karajá. Southern Karajá is spoken in the Fontoura (Btõiry) village and further to the south, whereas Northern Karajá is spoken in the São Domingos (Krèhãwa) village and further to the north.[3] There are few differences between Northern and Southern Karajá. Examples of lexical differences include N(orthern) ji(k)arỹ / S(outhern) di(k)arỹ ‘I’, N wi / S wiu ‘song.♂’, N adèrana / S wdèna ‘prostitute’, N bdòlèkè / S bdòkùjkè ‘pirarucu fish’, N butxi / S boti ‘clay pot’, N (k)õritxi / S (k)uritxi ‘curassow’,[3] and other word pairs. Northern Karajá also differs from Southern Karajá in using different habitual markers for different persons (first person -wahã, second person -mahã, third person -mỹhỹ), whereas Southern Karajá uses -mỹhỹ for all three persons. In addition, there is a difference regarding the occurrence of the centripetal prefix (n- or d-, phonologically /d-/) in the first person of the realis mood. In Northern Karajá (just like in Javaé and Xambioá), it occurs only once, after the first person prefix: ã'''d'''iwyde ‘I brought it’. In Southern Karajá, it occurs twice, both before and after the person prefix: '''n'''a'''d'''iwyde ‘I brought it’.
Javaé is currently spoken by the Javaés River, a smaller branch of the Araguaia, though historically the Javaé inhabited the interior of the Bananal island, until at least the first half of the 20th century. The Javaé are referred to by the Karajá proper as ixỹju, a term otherwise used to non-Karajá indigenous peoples such as the Xavante, but clearly speak a variety of Karajá. Javaé has more Apyãwa loans than other Karajá dialects. Phonologically, Javaé is characterized by the occurrence of /e/ corresponding to Karajá pronounced as //ə// and Xambioá pronounced as //i// preceding a syllable which contains a pronounced as //i//: Javaé -tebiè ‘to raise, to feed’, hetxi ‘bottom, buttocks’, exi ‘soft’, -teji ‘to put’ correspond to Karajá -tbiè, htxi, àxi, tdi; Xambioá -txibiè, hitxi, ixi, tidi. In addition, Javaé has less genderlectal differences than Karajá and Xambioá, as in many cases the Javaé women systematically use forms that are restricted to the male genderlect in other dialects.
Xambioá is spoken on the east bank of the Araguaia, close to the mouth of the Maria River (a western tributary of the Araguaia), which makes it the northernmost variety of Karajá. Ribeiro (2012) reports that there were only 8 fluent speakers in 1998, all of them elderly. Phonologically, Xambioá is characterized by the progressive palatalization of pronounced as //k// to pronounced as /[c]/ following an pronounced as //i//, as in ikòrò [{{IPA|icɔˈɾɔ}}] ‘fox’ (unlike in Karajá, this does not lead to a neutralization with pronounced as /[tʃ]/). Another phonological feature of Xambioá is the occurrence of the oral allophone of pronounced as //a// (i.e., pronounced as /[a]/) where other dialects have pronounced as /[ã]/: Xambioá habu ‘man’, ati ‘Pimelodus|mandi fish’, aw(òk)ò ‘canoe’ vs. Karajá hãbu, hãti, hãw(k)ò. Some Xambioá words are not found in other dialects, such as the Língua Geral Amazônica borrowing mabèra ‘paper’ (in Karajá and Javaé, the term for ‘skin, bark, cloth’ is used instead: Karajá ♀ tky, Javaé ♀ tyky, Karajá/Javaé ♂ tyy).[4]
Karajá has thirteen oral vowels, pronounced as //i ɪ e ɛ ɨ̘ ɨ ɘ ə a u ʊ o ɔ//, and three nasal vowels, pronounced as //ĩ ə̃ õ//. The Javaé and Xambioá dialects differ from Karajá in lacking pronounced as //ə//. pronounced as //a// is nasalized word initially and when preceded by pronounced as //h// or a voiced stop (except in Xambioá): pronounced as //aθɪ// → pronounced as /[ãθɪ]/ 'grass', pronounced as //ɔha// → pronounced as /[ɔhã]/ 'armadillo'. pronounced as //a// also triggers the occurrence of the nasal allophones of preceding pronounced as //b// or pronounced as //d//: pronounced as //bahadʊ// → pronounced as /[mahãdʊ]/ 'group', pronounced as //dadɪ// → pronounced as /[nadɪ]/ 'my mother'.
Front | Central | Back | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Close | i, ĩ | ɨ̘ | u | |
Near-close | ɪ | ɨ | ʊ | |
Close-mid | e | ɘ, ə̃ | o, õ | |
Open-mid | ɛ | ə | ɔ | |
Open | a ([ã]) |
This language has ATR vowel harmony which causes the non-ATR vowels pronounced as //ɪ ɛ ɨ ʊ ɔ// to become more tense (pronounced as //i e ɨ̘ u o//) by the influence of a ATR vowel (one of pronounced as //i e ɨ̘ ɘ u o ĩ//) located further to the right. The vowels pronounced as //a ə̃ õ// are opaque. Note that pronounced as //ɛ ɔ// undergo the harmony in an iterative manner (as in pronounced as //ɾ-ɛ-ɾɔ=ɾ-e// → /ɾeɾoɾe/ ‘I ate it’), whether pronounced as //ɪ ɨ ʊ// may optionally block the further spread of the [+ATR] feature: pronounced as //ɾ-ɛ-hɪ=ɾ-e/ → /ɾehiɾe// or pronounced as //ɾɛhiɾe// ‘I drove it away’.
V → [+ATR] / _ (C)-V[+ATR]
The chart below contains the consonant sounds used in Karajá.
Labial | Dental | Postalveolar | Velar | Glottal | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Obstruent | voiceless | tʃ | k | |||
voiced | b | d | dʒ | |||
nasal | m | n | ||||
implosive | ɗ | |||||
fricative | θ | ʃ | h | |||
Sonorant | lateral | l | ||||
central | w | ɾ |
The consonants pronounced as //d l ɗ θ// are palatalized to pronounced as /[dʒ dʒ tʃ ʃ]/ when adjacent to [+ATR] high vowels. Consonants pronounced as //b d// have nasal allophones pronounced as /[m n]/ when occurring before pronounced as //a//. In addition, in the Karajá proper dialect only, pronounced as //k ɾ// are progressively palatalized to pronounced as /[tʃ dʒ]/ following a pronounced as //i//. In fact, almost all occurrences of pronounced as /[dʒ tʃ ʃ]/ can be explained by the operation of these two processes; for these reasons, Ribeiro (2012) argues that pronounced as /[dʒ tʃ ʃ]/ have no phonemic status. Under this analysis, Karajá has only twelve consonant phonemes, eight of which are coronal. The chart below illustrates the phonemic inventory of Karajá assuming pronounced as /[m n dʒ tʃ ʃ]/ are not phonemic.
Coronal | Peripheral | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Dental | Front | Back | ||
Obstruent | plosive | d | b | k |
implosive | ɗ | |||
fricative | θ | h | ||
Sonorant | lateral | l | ||
central | ɾ | w |
Some examples of the differences between men's and women's speech, especially the presence or lack of pronounced as //k// (including in borrowings from Portuguese),[5] follow. Note that men maintain pronounced as //k// in at least one grammatical ending.[5]
Women | Men | Gloss | |
---|---|---|---|
kotù /kɔɗʊ/ | òtù /ɔɗu/ | turtle | |
kòlùkò /kɔlʊkɔ/ | òlùò /ɔluɔ/ | labret | |
karitxakre /kaɾitʃa-kɾe/ | ariakre /aɾia-kɾe/ | I will walk* | |
bèraku /bɛɾaku/ | bero /beɾo/ | river | |
anona /adõda/ | aõna /aõda/ | thinɡ | |
kabè /kabɛ/ | abè /abɛ/ | coffee (from Portuguese café) |
The first (Northern Karajá, Javaé, Xambioá: ♀ jikarỹ, ♂ jiarỹ pronounced as //di(k)aɾə̃//; Southern Karajá: ♀ dikarỹ, ♂ diarỹ pronounced as //dɪ(k)aɾə̃//) and third (tki pronounced as //ɗəkɪ//, ♂ optional male form: tii pronounced as //ɗɪɪ//) person pronouns differ based on gender of the speaker, but the second person pronoun kai pronounced as //kai// is an exception to this rule, and is pronounced the same by men and women.[6]
It is hypothesized (Ribeiro 2012) that in the past this process of the k-drop became a sign of masculinity and women resisted it in order to keep a more conservative form of speech.
The verb in Karajá grammar always agrees with the subject of the sentence, as it does in French for example; these agreements are determined by the past and present tense (also known as realis) or future, potential, and admonitory tenses (also known as irrealis). Verbs have no lexical opposites (such as in vs. out) and direction is represented through inflection; all Karajá verbs can inflect for direction. Verbs are either transitive or intransitive and the valence of each verb, therefore, may increase or decrease depending on their status as transitive or intransitive.
Nouns can be incorporated into verbs to create noun-verb compounds with the noun being placed into the verb. Any noun can be turned into a verb with the use of a suffix and action nouns can be created with the use of the verb stem.
There are three personal pronouns:
Possessive pronouns are not used but are instead marked by affixes (ie. wa- = ‘my’) and there are three demonstrative pronouns:[6]
Direction in the Karajá language does not have any lexical opposites, such as in and out or go and come. Direction, rather, is marked by a set of prefixes that determine whether the event in the sentence is happening away from or toward the speaker. Centrifugal direction (away from the speaker) is characterized by means of the prefix r- while centripetal direction (toward the speaker) is characterized by means of the prefix d-. All the verbs in the Karajá language — even those that do not convey the semantics of movement — obligatorily inflect for direction.[6]
Karajá language is characterized both by the reduction of valence and by the increase in valence. Valence increase happens through causitivization and through oblique promotion while valence decrease happens through reflixivatization, passivization, and antipassivization (Ribeiro 2012).
Unergative verbs may be causativized by means of suffixing the causativizer suffix -dkỹ plus the verbalizer suffix -ny to the nominalized verb.[6] In the example below, the verb rika ‘to walk’ is first nominalized by means of the process of consonantal replacement, yielding rira, and then causativized.
The man in this example is the causer who makes the child, the causee, walk.
In Karajá, it is possible to demote a patient of a transitive verb to peripheral status by means of the antipassive prefix ò-:[6]
Reflexivity in the Karajá language is marked by the reflexive prefix with two allomorphs, exi- ̣(on verbs) and ixi- (on postpositions):[6]
In these examples, the patient is coreferential with the agent (that is, they refer to the same individual).
Passives are described as the change of a clause from a transitive to an intransitive sentence through the demotion of the subject. Passive verbs are marked either by the prefix a- (or by its zero allomorph ∅- in the vowel-initial stems that belong to the so called ɗ-class):[6]
Here, the subject ‘mother’ is demoted in the second example.
When referring to nouns, plurality is expressed through three processes: reduplication, the pluralizer -boho, and the use of the noun mahãdù ‘people, group’. In verbs, plurality is marked through the use of the pluralizer -eny.
Reduplication refers to the repetition of word categories to convey a certain meaning. In the case of the Karajá language, reduplication occurs with nouns and is used to convey plurality:[6]
The pluralizer -boho is used to pluralize the three personal pronouns:[6]
In addition, the latter example shows how the pluralizer –boho, when combined with the noun for people (iny), functions as a first person plural inclusive pronoun to include those outside of a specific group. According to Ribeiro, iny serves the same function as the phrase Portuguese: a gente, commonly found in Brazilian Portuguese.[6]
In contrast to the pluralizer -boho, the noun word mahãdù is not used with pronouns but rather functions as a noun to pluralize a group of people, as shown in the following example:[6]
In the above sentence, ‘Karajá’ (iny) becomes pluralized through the use of bãhãdʊ.
As mentioned above, the pluralizer -èny functions to pluralize verbs as shown in the following example:[6]
‘Came’, in this example, is pluralized to indicate that many individuals came.
Ribeiro (2012) finds a number of Apyãwa loanwords in Karajá (such as bèhyra ‘carrying basket’, kòmỹdawyra andu ’beans’, hãrara ‘macaw (sp.)’, tarawè ‘parakeet (sp.)’, txakohi ‘Txakohi ceremonial mask’, hyty ‘garbage (Javaé dialect)’) as well as several Karajá loans in Apyãwa (tãtã ‘banana’, tori ‘White man’, marara ‘turtle stew’, irãwore ‘Irabure ceremonial mask’), Parakanã, and Asuriní of Trocará (sata ‘banana’, toria ‘White man’).[6] Some loans from one of the Língua Geral varieties (Língua Geral Paulista or Língua Geral Amazônica) have also been found, including jykyra ‘salt’, mỹkawa ‘firearm’, brùrè ‘hoe’, kòmỹta ‘beans’, mabèra ‘paper (Xambioá dialect)’, ĩtajuwa ‘money (dated)’).
Karajá has also contacted with the distantly related Mẽbêngôkre language. Ribeiro (2012) identifies a number of Karajá loanwords in Mẽbêngôkre, especially in the dialect spoken by the Xikrin group; the source of these loanwords is thought to be the Xambioá dialect. Examples include warikoko (Kayapó dialect) or watkoko (Xikrin dialect) ‘tobacco pipe’, rara ‘kind of basket’, wiwi ‘song, chant’, bikwa ‘relative, friend’, bero ‘puba flour’, borrowed from Karajá werikòkò, lala, wii, bikòwa, bèrò.[6]
Loanwords from Brazilian Portuguese, such as nieru ‘money’ and maritò ‘suit, jacket’ (from Portuguese: dinheiro, Portuguese: paletó), are also found.[6]
Jolkesky (2016) notes that there are lexical similarities with the Karib, Puinave-Nadahup, and Tupi language families due to contact.[7]
Loukotka (1968) lists the following basic vocabulary items for Karajá and Javajé.[8]
gloss | Karajá | Javajé | |
---|---|---|---|
one | dohodzyi | zohódi | |
two | inati | ináti | |
three | inatanga | nádo | |
head | wa-ara | rahah | |
ear | noʔonti | nóhonti | |
tooth | wa-idzyu | zyuʔú | |
woman | hanökö | uãuoːkoː | |
water | bé | bää | |
stone | máma | mená | |
maize | mahi | diulad'ié | |
tapir | kaongri | konrí |