Duho languages

Summary

Duho is a proposed language family of South America, uniting two proposed genetic groupings, Hodi–Saliban[1] and Ticuna–Yuri. This language family was proposed by Marcelo Jolkesky (2016), based on his previous but now disclaimed Macro-Daha family which had also included the Andoque–Urequena languages.[2]

Duho
(proposed)
Geographic
distribution
Northwestern Amazon
Linguistic classificationProposed as one of the world's primary language families
Subdivisions
GlottologNone

Zamponi (2017) concludes that the similarities between Saliban and Hodɨ appear to be due to contact, but that a distant genealogical relationship between Betoi and Sáliban is plausible though not demonstrated. He does not address Ticuna–Yuri.[3]

Prehistory edit

Jolkesky (2016) suggests that the homeland of Proto-Duho was in the Serranía de Chiribiquete.[4]: 590 

Language contact edit

Jolkesky (2016) notes that there are lexical similarities with Chibchan languages due to contact, which may point to the earlier presence of Chibchan speakers in the Orinoco basin.[4]: 325 

Classification edit

Internal classification of the Duho language family by Jolkesky (2016):[4]

Pronouns edit

Jolkesky's Duho languages have shared forms in for "I", *kʷ for "you" and *t for "we", which are found in all languages.

language I thou he she we they
Ticuna ʧò- ku- dĩ- ɡĩ- /i- tò- ta-́
Yuri tshuu wikú di - too -
Saliba ʧ- ũku, kʷ- Ø-, i-, -di x-, -x t- h-
Piaroa ʧ(u)- (u)ku, kʷ- Ø-, -de hʷ-, -h t(u)- tʰ(a)-
Wirö ʧ(V)- ɯkʷɯ, kʷ(V)- Ø- h(V)-, -h d(V)-, -dɯtʰɯ tʰ(V)-
Hodi ʰtæ ʰkæ - ʰtai hai
Betoi r(u)- uhu, h(u)- Ø-, -ri Ø- r-, -nuto ?

Lexicon edit

Several basic words in Duho languages appear to be related. The following examples are given, with further parallels in Sape:

language tree mouth head hair path eat spirit offspring breast who what
Ticuna dãi àː èrú ʧi bã̀ ɡõ̀ː ã́ẽ̀ dẽ́ biĩ́ tèẽ́ tàː
Yuri noi i à gerühó ii -mó - - o nné - - -
Saliba - aha iʤu - maa(-na) ikua õãĩ nẽ(-ẽ) omixe ã-diha ã-daha
Piaroa dawi æ u(-ju) -ʦˀe mæ(-næ) ku ãẽ ĩtʰĩ ami di dæhe
Wirö towi a u; -ʤu -ˀʤe ma(-na) ku(-õ) - ĩtʰĩ omu ti tahi
Hodi ʰtawɯ a ʰtu - ma(-na); -ma ʰku-õ ãwẽ(-no) ĩni me(e) - -
(Sape) tapa itu koyanukú, moynaku pa mu ko/ku - katona wi pante pemente

References edit

  1. ^ Rosés Labrada, J. E. 2015. Is Jodï a Sáliban Language? In: Workshop on historical relationships among languages of the Americas. Leiden, 2-5th September 2015, Universiteit Leiden.
  2. ^ Jolkesky, Marcelo. 2009. Macro-Daha: reconstrução de um tronco lingüístico do noroeste amazônico. ROSAE - I Congresso Internacional de Lingüística Histórica, 26–29 July 2009.
  3. ^ Zamponi, Raoul. 2017 (2018). Betoi-Jirara, Sáliban, and Hodɨ: relationships among three linguistic lineages of the mid-Orinoco region. Anthropological Linguistics 59: 263-321.
  4. ^ a b c Jolkesky, M. 2016. Estudo arqueo-ecolinguístico das terras tropicais sul-americanas. Brasilia: UnB. PhD Dissertation.