Proto-Tupian language explained

Proto-Tupian
Also Known As:PT
Familycolor:American
Region:Madeira River basin?
Era:ca. 3000 BCE
Child1:Proto-Tupari
Child2:Proto-Maweti–Guarani
Target:Tupian languages

Proto-Tupian (PT) is the reconstructed common ancestor of all the Tupian languages. It consists, therefore, of a hypothetical language, reconstructed by the comparative method from data of the descendant languages.

In Brazil, Tupian historical-comparative studies are being developed mainly by two scientific teams: one from the Laboratório de Línguas Indígenas (LALI) of the University of Brasília, under the coordination of Aryon Rodrigues; and the other one from the Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi, located in Belém, under the orientation of Denny Moore. These studies provide evidence about the Proto-Tupian economy and culture, suggesting, for example, that they had agriculture.[1]

The most accepted theory is that the Tupian language family originated between the Guaporé and Aripuanã rivers, in the Madeira River basin. There are currently 70 Tupian languages, including Tupi, Paraguayan Guarani, Awetï, Ayvu, etc.

Linguistic homeland

Rodrigues (2007) considers the Proto-Tupian linguistic homeland to be somewhere between the Guaporé and Aripuanã rivers, in the Madeira River basin. Much of this area corresponds to the modern-day state of Rondônia, Brazil. Five of the ten Tupian branches are found in this area, as well as some Tupi–Guarani languages (especially Kagwahiva), making it the probable linguistic homeland of these languages and maybe of the peoples that traditionally speak them. Rodrigues believes that Proto-Tupian dates back to around 5000 BP.

O'Hagan (2014)[2] proposes that Proto-Tupi-Guarani was spoken in the region of the lower Tocantins and Xingu Rivers. Proto-Omagua-Kokama then expanded up the Amazon River, Proto-Tupinamba expanded south along the Atlantic coast, and the Southern branch expanded up along the Tocantins/Araguaia River towards the Paraná River basin.

Lexicon

This section lists Proto-Tupían reconstructions from Rodrigues and Cabral (2012). Since the reconstructions are highly tentative, the Proto-Tupían forms are all marked by two asterisks.

For a list of Proto-Tupian reconstructions by Nikulin (2020),[3] see the corresponding Portuguese article.

Independent nouns

Proto-Tupian independent nouns:

Human beings:
Animals:
Plants:
Nature:

Dependent nouns

Proto-Tupian dependent nouns:

Kinship:
Parts of the body of animals:
Parts of plants:
Artifacts:
Sensations, feelings, and attributes

Verbs, affixes, and others

Proto-Tupian verbs, affixes, and other parts of speech:

Positional verbs
Motion / directional verbs
Dicendi / faciendi verb
Postpositions
Derivational valence changing prefixes

Cultural vocabulary

Proto-Tupían cultural vocabulary (Rodrigues and Cabral 2012):[4]

Proto-Tupian Gloss
    • up
'father'
    • čɨ
'mother'
    • čɨʔɨt
'mother's sister'
    • amõj
'grandfather'
    • aʔɨt
'man's son'
    • memɨt
'woman's child'
    • men
'husband'
    • atʔɨ
'wife'
    • ike
'man's older brother'
    • kɨpʔɨʔɨt
'man's younger brother'
    • kɨpwɨt
'woman's brother'
    • wamu(ã)
'shaman'
    • ekw
'house'
    • ekwen
'door'
    • tʔap
'thatch'
    • upap
'lying place'
    • eɾĩ
'hammock'
    • acoʔi
'to cover'
    • ekwat
'village patio'
    • ŋo ~ ŋe
'cultivated field'
    • čɨt
'digging stick'
    • mani
'manioc'
    • awa(i)
'yams (Dioscorea sp.)'
    • wetjɨk
'sweet potato'
    • kuɾua
'pumpkin'
    • pe
'tobacco'
    • ɾjuku
'achiote (Bixa orellana)'
    • ɨʔa
'calabash'
    • ekwʔɨp
'arrow'
    • wekeʔa
'fish trap'
'ax'
    • ɨɾju
'basket'
    • čʔam
'rope'
    • waʔẽ
'ceramic pot'
    • čɨt
'to bake'
    • wɨp
'to bake, to cook'
    • mõj
'to cook'
    • eʔe
'to grate'
    • čekw
'to pound'

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Rodrigues, Aryon dall'Agna & Ana Suelly Arruda Câmara Cabral. Investigando a origem e o desenvolvimento de orações dependentes nas famílias do tronco lingüístico Tupi . Revista da Abralin, volume 5, numbers 1 and 2 (ten/2006)
  2. O'Hagan, Zachary (with Keith Bartolomei, Natalia Chousou-Polydouri, Emily Clem, Erin Donnelly and Lev Michael). 2014. A Computational-phylogenetic Classification of Tupí-Guaraní and its Geographical Spread. Language Variation and Change, October 20, Chicago.
  3. Nikulin, Andrey. 2020. Proto-Macro-Jê: um estudo reconstrutivo. Doctoral dissertation, University of Brasília.
  4. Book: Aryon Rodrigues

    . Rodrigues . Aryon Dall'Igna . Aryon Rodrigues . Cabral . Ana Suelly Arruda Câmara . Grondona . Verónica . Campbell . Lyle . 2012 . The Indigenous Languages of South America . Tupían . The World of Linguistics . 2 . Berlin . De Gruyter Mouton . 495–574 . 9783110255133.