Piro Pueblo language explained

Piro
States:United States
Region:New Mexico
Ethnicity:Piro
Extinct:1900s
Ref:linglist
Familycolor:American
Fam1:Tanoan
Fam2:Tiwa
Iso3:pie
Linglist:pie
Glotto:piro1248
Glottorefname:Piro
Lingua:64-CAA-c

Piro is a poorly attested, extinct Tanoan language once spoken in the more than twenty Piro Pueblos near Socorro, New Mexico. It has generally been classified as one of the Tiwa languages,[1] though Leap (1971) contested whether or not Piro is truly a Tanoan language at all.[2] The last known speaker, an elderly woman, was interviewed by Mooney in 1897, and by 1909 all Piro members had Mexican Spanish as their native language.

Corpus

The corpus of Piro is limited to place names, two vocabularies and an 1860 translation of the Lord's Prayer using Spanish orthography:[3] [4]

Quitatác nasaul e yapolhua tol húy quiamgiana mi quiamnarinú Jaquié mu gilley nasamagui hikiey quiamsamaé, mukiataxám, hikiey, hiquiquiamo quia inaé, huskilley nafoleguey, gimoréy, y apol y ahuleý, quialiey, nasan e pomo llekeý, quiale mahimnague yo sé mahi kaná rrohoý, se teman quiennatehui mu killey, nani, emolley quinaroy zetasi, na san quianatehueý pemcihipompo y, qui solakuey quifollohipuca. Kuey maihua atellan, folliquitey. Amen.[5]

The Piro-origin place names listed by Bandelier are Abo, Arti-puy, Genobey, Pataotry, Pil-abó, Qual-a-cú, Quelotetrey, Tabirá (Gran Quivira), Ten-abó, Tey-pam-á, Trenaquel and Zen-ecú (Senecú).[3]

Vocabulary

As Piro was morphologically agglutinative, words were built from prefixes, stems and suffixes. For example, quen-lo-a-tu-ya-é ("mosquito") is glossed as "the insect that bites".

Piro was reportedly mutually intelligible with Isleta with many shared words and case stems. Of the 180 words in Bartlett's Piro vocabulary, 87% were identical or nearly so to their corresponding stems in Southern Tiwa. The vocabulary created by Harrington also contains several loanwords from Spanish, such as pipa-hem for "pipe" (from Spanish pipa).[3]

External Resources

Notes and References

  1. Newman, Stanley (1954) "American Indian Linguistics in the Southwest" American Anthropologist New Series, 56(4): pp. 626-634, 631
  2. Leap, William L. (1971) "Who Were the Piro?" Anthropological Linguistics 13: pp. 321-330
  3. Harrington . John P. . Notes on the Piro Language . American Anthropologist . 12 October 1909 . 11 . 4 . 563–594 . 10.1525/aa.1909.11.4.02a00030 . free .
  4. Bartlett . John Russell . The Language of the Piro . American Anthropologist . 9 July 1909 . 11 . 3 . 426–433 . 10.1525/aa.1909.11.3.02a00060 . 3 July 2022.
  5. Book: Colección Polidiómica Mexicana que contiene la Oracion Dominical . Mexico . 1860 . 36., quoted in