Nheengatu language

Nheengatu language
Nheengatu
Modern Tupi, ñe'engatú
Spoken in  Brazil
 Colombia
 Venezuela
Native speakers 3,000 in Brazil (1998),
3,000 in Colombia (no date),
2,000 in Venezuela  (1987)
Language family
Tupian
  • Tupí–Guarani
Writing system Latin
Official status
Regulated by No official regulation
Language codes
ISO 639-3 yrl

The Nheengatu language ([ɲɛʔẽŋaˈtu] in original Tupi pronunciation), often spelled Nhengatu, is an Amerindian language of a Tupi–Guarani family. It is also known by the Portuguese names língua geral da Amazônia and língua geral amazônica, both meaning "Amazonian General Language," or even by the Latin lingua brasilica (Brazilian Language). Nheengatu originated in northern Brazil in the 17th century as a lingua franca. Now known as nheengatu (also nhengatu, nyengatú, língua geral, geral, yeral), it is still spoken along the Rio Negro in northern Brazil (as well as in neighboring Colombia and Venezuela).

Contents

Current status

There are perhaps around 8,000 Nheengatu speakers according to The Ethnologue (2005) (Rohter (2005) gives a much larger number); the language has recently regained some recognition and prominence after having been suppressed for many years. It is spoken in the Upper Rio Negro region of Amazonas state, in the Brazilian Amazon, and in neighboring portions of Colombia and Venezuela. It is the native language of the area's rural population, and it is also used as a common language of communication between Indians and non-Indians, and between Indians from different tribes. Its use is also a way for some of the native peoples who have lost their original languages to affirm their ethnic identity, as in the case of the Barés, the Arapaços, and others. In 2003, it gained the status of official language alongside Portuguese in São Gabriel da Cachoeira.

History

Nheengatu was based on tupinambá, the language of the Tupi along the northern Brazilian coast in Maranhão and Pará. It was standardized by Jesuits from the vocabulary and pronunciation of the tupinambá dialect, which were adapted into a grammatical framework based on Portuguese. At its height in the 18th century, it was the dominant spoken language throughout Brazil's vast territory, alongside its closely related southern counterpart, the língua geral paulista, as it was used not only by Indians and missionaries but also as an everyday language by settlers of European ancestry. Nheengatu was carried into the interior and spread across the Amazon region in the 17th and 18th centuries. Its use later declined, partially as a result of the imposition of the Portuguese language by the Marquis of Pombal (1758) and of the expulsion of the Jesuits from Brazil (1759), as well as because of immigration from Portugal.

The very survival of Nheengatu, even in a much diminished state, is surprising, since it suffered centuries of repression, and also because the people of the Upper Rio Negro originally spoke languages not related to it.

Aside from the aforementioned língua geral paulista, now extinct, Nheengatu is also closely related to Paraguayan Guarani, which far from being extinct is the most widely spoken language in that country and one of its official languages. According to some sources, Nheengatu and Guarani are mutually intelligible.

See also

References

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Nheengatu — Infobox Language name=Nheengatu, Modern Tupi nativename= ñe engatú states=Brazil, Colombia, Venezuela speakers=3,000 (Brazil, 1998), 30,000 (Colombia), 2,000 (Venezuela) familycolor=American fam1=Tupian fam2=Tupí Guarani fam3=Subgroup III… …   Wikipedia

  • Nheengatu — Parlée au  Brésil  Colombie …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Nheengatu — (Ñe engatú) Gesprochen in Brasilien, Kolumbien, Venezuela Sprecher 8.000 bis 30.000   Linguistische Klassifikation Tupí Sprachen Tupí Guaraní Sprachen …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Nheengatu — noun A Tupian trade language spoken in Brazil. Syn: Coastal Tupian, Geral, Modern Tupí, Waengatu, Yeral …   Wiktionary

  • Tupi language — Tupí Tupinamba Spoken in Brazil Ethnicity Tupinambá Extinct (survives as Nheengatu) Language family …   Wikipedia

  • Old Tupi language — Infobox Language name=Old Tupi nativename= states=Brazil speakers=extinct familycolor=American fam1=Tupian fam2=Tupí Guarani script=Latin alphabet iso2= [http://www.sil.org/iso639 3/documentation.asp?id=sai sai] (Collective)Old Tupi or Classical… …   Wikipedia

  • Pirahã language — Pirahã xapaitíiso Pronunciation [ʔàpài̯ˈt͡ʃîːsò] Spoken in Brazil Region Amazon River …   Wikipedia

  • Guaraní language — Infobox Language name = Guaraní nativename = avañe ẽ pronunciation = /aʋaɲẽˈʔẽ/ states = Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay speakers = 7 million familycolor=American fam1 = Tupian fam2 = Tupí Guaraní fam3 = Guaraní (I) script = Latin… …   Wikipedia

  • Distinguishing blue from green in language — Main article: Color term#Basic color terms The application of terms to ranges of the visible spectrum are essentially arbitrary, cultural conventions. The notion of green in modern European languages corresponds to about 520–570 nm, but many… …   Wikipedia

  • Dâw language — Dâw Spoken in Brazil Region Amazonas Ethnicity Dâw people Native speakers 94[1]  (date m …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”