Wariʼ language
The Wariʼ language is the sole remaining vibrant language of the Chapacuran language family of the Brazilian–Bolivian border region of the Amazon. It has about 2,700 speakers, also called Wariʼ, who live along tributaries of the Pacaas Novos river in Western Brazil. The word wariʼ means "we!" in the Wariʼ language and is the term given to the language and tribe by its speakers.
Wariʼ is written in Latin script.
Dialects
Wariʼ dialects listed by Angenot :;Northern dialects
- Wari’-Oro Waram
- Wari’-Oro Mon
- Wari’-Oro Waram Xijen
- Wari’-Oro Não
- Wari’-Oro Eo
- Wari’-Oro At
- Wari’-Oro Jowin
- Wari’-Oro Kao Oro Aje
Phonology
Consonants
The Oro Nao dialect of Wariʼ as described by Everett & Kern has the following consonant phonemes. It is a relatively large inventory by Lowland Amazonian standards. The angled brackets represent the spellings associated with each sound.is a trilled affricate made up of a bilabial trill preceded by a dental stop, and is only reported from four other languages. In Oro Nao, this has been analysed as an allophone of /t/ that only occurs before /o/ and /y/ which does not occur in every idolect. In some dialects it is a separate phoneme; however, only about 24 words contain the sound, some of which are onomatopoeic. It also is used more by older speakers of the language.
Consonant Alternations
- /t͡ʃ/ can become , with a tendency to surface as more before unrounded vowels than rounded ones: xaxi' na 'he is thin' can be or .
- can become syllable initially, most frequently before /a/ but also before other vowels. The tendency to realise it as a sequence is greater if the syllable is stressed: its filth
can be or . - can become syllable initially, most frequently before /a/ but also before other vowels. The tendency to realise it as a sequence is greater if the syllable is stressed: my head
can be or . - can become before /i/: let's go!
can be or . - can become word initially: I am afraid
can be or . Vowels
Vowel nasalisation occurs on diphthongs only; the few which are not nasalised all end in /i/. The following diphthongs occur in the Oro Nao dialect: , , , , , , , , .
Vowel Alternations
- can become in unstressed syllables if the vowel in the vowel in the following syllable is : it is rocking
can be or . - /e/ becomes before all stops other than , and in unstressed syllables in harmony with /e/ becoming in the stressed syllable: day
is because of the , and they went out is because the in the stressed syllable causes /e/ to become and the preceding ones change in harmony. - /e/ becomes before nasals, and in harmony with a /e/ becoming in the stressed syllable: it is numb
is . - can become in unstressed syllables when the vowel in the stressed syllable is not : its seed
can be or . - is a rare segment and for some speakers is evolving into in open syllables and in closed ones.
Syllables
Wariʼ has words ending in the consonant clusters and. These have been analysed as single sounds, but apparently only to avoid complicating syllable structure. If these are separate phonemes, these clusters only occur word finally.
In the Oro Nao dialect, many consonants alternate with at the beginning of monosyllabic words, and always precedes word initial semivowels, including in polysyllabic words. There is a correlation between words that begin in Oro Nao and words that begin in other dialects. For example, 'water' is
Stress
The final syllable of words in major lexical categories is stressed. The verb tends to take the primary stress, with secondary stress on the others. However, emphasis of a particular word can cause transfer of the primary stress.Morphology
Wariʼ is a largely analytic language, which has almost no verbal inflection but many derivational processes.Possession
Wariʼ has two main classes of nouns, xiʼ nouns and non-xiʼ nouns. Xiʼ nouns are inalienably possessed, and therefore have a paradigm of possession marking suffixes.Some forms have allomorphs, especially when following stems that ends in the vowel , for instance -con becomes -cun and -cam becomes -quem.
There is also a paradigm of nominal inflectional clitics that inflect for person, number and third person gender. These are used to show possession of a non-xiʼ noun.
Most xiʼ nouns have alternate forms which cannot be possessed. To signify possession of these forms, you must use the inalienable xiʼ counterparts. For example, to convey the meaning 'his bone or leg', you would need to use the xiʼ form of the noun with the third person masculine singular ending.You cannot use the nonpossessed form of the noun with the third person masculine singular nominal inflectional clitic.
Reduplication
Verbs
There is no affixation at all on verbs, but reduplication is used to mark aspect. Plural forms are derived by partial reduplication of the CV from the stressed syllable. This can either be a CV pattern, usually for transitive verbs: wac 'cut', wawac 'cut' ; caoNouns
Reduplication of nouns can derive names or descriptive terms. Thus capija capija means 'talker', and Towira Towira means 'legendary character who has enlarged testicles'.Clitics
Wariʼ has both verbal and nominal inflectional clitics, which are analysed as such and not affixes for a few reasons. Verbal inflectional clitics can occur as whole utterances as responses, as the referent is clear from the previous statement. They also do not undergo the phonological processes that you would expect if they were suffixes to the main verb, for instance they do not take the primary stress, which the possessive suffixes do when they attach to xiʼ nouns.Verbal inflectional clitics are inflected for person, number, tense, third person gender, voice, and contain both the subject and the object of the verb. Where there is more than one object, the clitic represents one object based on the semantic roles present in the following hierarchy: GOAL>CIRCUMSTANCE>THEME>BENEFACTIVE>COMITATIVE>LOCATION>TIME.
Morphophonological">Morphophonology">Morphophonological Processes
Wariʼ has three types of assimilatory process - regressive, progressive and coalescent. This mainly occurs across word-initial morpheme boundaries.Regressive assimilation occurs at morpheme boundaries involving consonants, where the consonant of the suffix causes a change in the consonant of the stem. This happens when xiʼ nouns with stems that end in -ji inflect for third person masculine or feminine, as the /k/ in the suffix causes the /y/ in the stem to become /ts/: taraji- 'ear' + -con '3sm' = taraxicon 'his ear'
Progressive assimilation occurs over morpheme boundaries between nasal consonants or diphthongs and voiceless stops. This type of assimilation is optional but common in normal speech, however does not seem to appear in careful speech: Mon te? 'Where is my father?' can be pronounced as either or .
Coalescence is the most common assimilatory process, which is often accompanied by regressive vowel harmony. There are three principles which guide the output of vowel coalescence.
- If one of the two vowels is a back vowel, the output vowel will be a back vowel: xiri- 'house' + -u '1s' = xuru 'my house'
- The output vowel will have the height of the highest vowel of the two input vowels: toco- 'eye' + -um '2s' = tucum 'their eyes'
- If the input vowels are identical, the output vowel is identical.
Syntax
A verb can have up to four arguments, but it is uncommon to express more than one at a time. Instances of three or more arguments being expressed usually only come from elicited examples.
COMP sentences
COMP sentences are referred to as such by Everett and Kern because their initial position is occupied by what they refer to as a COMP or complementizer word. These give the sentence – or a variable in the sentence – a particular interpretation.For a sentence to be a COMP sentence, it must have a COMP word in the initial position, an inflectional morpheme closely following which gives information about tense, mood, and sometimes gender, and a tenseless verbal inflectional clitic following the verb.
Here is a list of the COMP words found in the Oro Nao dialect.
COMP word | Morphological composition | Function | Example sentence |
ma | demonstrative 'that:prox:hearer' | interrogation | |
mon | ma+-on '3sm object' | interrogation | |
mam | ma+-m '3sf object' | interrogation | |
main | ma+-in '3n object' | interrogation | |
verb 'to not exist' | negation | ||
mo | verb 'list presentation' | condition | |
preverbal modifier 'like' | indication of resemblance | ||
je | emphatic pronoun '3n' | affirmation/interrogation | |
verb 'to be different' | |||
cain | demonstrative 'that neuter distal' | interrogation | |
pain | prepostition '3n' | subordination |