Cariban languages

Cariban languages

Infobox Language family
name=Cariban
region= Mostly within north-central South America, with extensions in the southern Caribbean and in Central America.
familycolor=American
fam1=Je-Tupi-Carib?
child1=Guiana Carib
child2=North Amazonian Carib
child3=Central Carib
child4=South Amazonian Carib
child5="Panare"
child6="Galibi"
child7=Yukpa
The Cariban languages are an indigenous language family of South America. Carib languages are widespread across northern South America, from the mouth of the Amazon River to the Colombian Andes and from Maracaibo (Venezuela) to Central Brazil. Cariban languages are relatively close to each other; in some cases, it is difficult to decide whether different groups speak different languages or dialects of the same language. Because of this, the exact number of Cariban languages is not known with certainty (current estimates range from 25 to 40, with 20 to 30 still spoken). The Cariban family is well known in the linguistic world due to Hixkaryana, a language with Object-Verb-Subject sentences, previously thought not to exist in human language.

Some years prior to the arrival of the first Spanish explorers, Carib-speaking peoples had invaded and occupied the Lesser Antilles, killing, displacing or forcibly assimilating the Arawakan peoples who inhabited the islands. They never reached the Greater Antilles or the Bahamas. Curiously, the Carib language quickly died out while the Arawakan language was maintained over the generations. This was the result of the invading Carib men usually killing the local men of the islands they conquered and taking Arawak wives who then passed on their own language to the children. For a time, Arawak was spoken primarily or exclusively by women and children, while adult men spoke Carib. Eventually, as the first generation of Carib-Arawak children reached adulthood, the more familiar Arawak became the only language used in the small island societies. This language was called Island Carib, even though it is not part of the Carib linguistic family. It is now extinct, but was spoken on the Lesser Antilles until the 1920's (primarily in Dominica, Saint Vincent, and Trinidad).

The largest Carib languages today are Carib proper, or Galibi, with 10,000 speakers, and Macushi language, with perhaps 24,000 speakers. The Hixkaryana language is famous in linguistic typology for its unusual word orders.

Although Garífuna, spoken in Honduras, Guatemala, and Belize, is known as "Black Carib", it is actually an Arawakan language with Carib influence: At one time men used Carib lexical vocabulary, and women Arawak vocabulary, though both on an Arawak grammatical base, but this distinction has dwindled to only a handful of words.

Family division

The Cariban languages are closely related, and in many cases where a language is more distinct, this is due to influence from neighboring languages rather that an indication that it is not closely related. Several classifications are seen; the one shown here divides Cariban into seven branches. A traditional geographic classification into northern and southern branches is cross referenced with (N) or (S) after each language.

*Galibi [Kaliña] (N)
*Guiana Carib: Tiriyó [Trio] (N), Carijona (S), Kaxuiâna [Warikyana] (S), Waiwai (N), Hixkaryána (S), Akuriyó (N), Sikiana-Salumá (N), Hianákoto
*North Amazonian Carib: Atruahí [Atrowari, Waimiri] (N), Macushi (N), Pemon [Arekuna] (N), Akawaio [Kapong] (N), Patamona [Ingariko] (N), Pawishiana
*Central Carib: Wayana (N), Apalaí (N), Maquiritari [Dekwana] (S), Mapoyo-Yabarana (N)
*South Amazonian Carib: Bakairí (S), Kuikúro [Kalapálo] (S), Txikão (N), Matipuhy [Nahukwa] (S), Arára [Pará] (N)
*Yukpa: Japrería (N), Yupka (N), ? Coyaima (N)
*Panare (N)

Genetic relations

The Cariban languages share irregular morphology with the Ge and Tupi families, and Ribeiro connects them all in a Je-Tupi-Carib family.

ee also

*List of Spanish words of Indigenous American Indian origin
*Arawak
*Arawakan languages
*Carib
*Taino
*Garifuna

External links

* [http://www.etnolinguistica.org Etnolinguistica.Org: online resources on native South American languages]
* [http://www.ethnologue.com/show_family.asp?subid=90634 Ethnologue report for Carib languages]
* http://www.cariblanguage.org/galibi.html
* [http://www.rosettaproject.org/archive/Carib Rosetta Project entry]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Cariban languages — Large family of South American Indian languages. It has an estimated 43 members; nearly half are now extinct, and most of the remainder have very few speakers. Most Cariban languages are spoken in southern Venezuela, the Guianas, and Brazil north …   Universalium

  • Cariban — [ karɪb(ə)n] noun a family of South American languages including Carib, mostly extinct or nearly so. adjective denoting the Cariban languages …   English new terms dictionary

  • Languages of Venezuela — There are at least 40 languages around Venezuela, [Ethnologue. [http://www.ethnologue.com/show country.asp?name=VE Languages of Venezuela] .] but Spanish is the language spoken by the majority of Venezuelans. The Constitution of Venezuela of the… …   Wikipedia

  • cariban — ˈkarəbən, ˌban; kəˈrēb noun ( s) Usage: usually capitalized Etymology: Spanish caribán, from caribe Carib 1. a. : a group of Amerindian peoples of northern So. America, the Lesser Antilles, and the Caribbean coast of Hondu …   Useful english dictionary

  • Cariban — noun Date: 1901 1. a member of a group of Indian peoples of South America and the Lesser Antilles 2. the language family comprising the languages of the Cariban peoples …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • Cariban — Car·i·ban (kărʹə bən, kə rēʹbən) n. pl. Cariban or Cari·bans 1. Variant of Carib. 2. A language family comprising the Carib languages.   Carʹi·ban adj. * * * …   Universalium

  • Cariban — adjective a) Of, or pertaining to languages of the Cariban family. b) Relating to the Carib peoples. See Also: Carib, Caribbean …   Wiktionary

  • Languages of Guyana — Several languages are spoken in Guyana. The official language is English. Several other recognized regional languages include Guyanese Creole, Akawaio, Hindi, Macushi, Wai Wai, Arawakan, and Cariban …   Wikipedia

  • Cariban — Ca•ri•ban [[t]ˈkær ə bən, kəˈri [/t]] n. peo a family of American Indian languages, many now extinct or moribund, concentrated in the Guiana region of South America, with lesser representation in E Venezuela, Colombia, and Brazil S of the Amazon …   From formal English to slang

  • South American Indian languages — Introduction       group of languages that once covered and today still partially cover all of South America, the Antilles, and Central America to the south of a line from the Gulf of Honduras to the Nicoya Peninsula in Costa Rica. Estimates of… …   Universalium

Share the article and excerpts

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