Munduruku languages

The Mundurukú languages of Brazil form a branch of the Tupian language family. They are Munduruku and the extinct Kuruáya.

Mundurukú
Geographic
distribution
Brazil
Linguistic classificationTupian
  • Mundurukú
Subdivisions
Glottologmund1329

Varieties

Loukotka (1968) lists the following names for Mundurucú language varieties, including names of unattested varieties.[1]

  • Mundurucú / Paiquizé / Pari / Weidéñe - originally spoken along the Tapajós River, now on the Urariá River and Maué-assú River, Amazonas.
  • Kuruáya / Caravare / Curivere / Guahuara / Curuapa - spoken on the Curua River, now perhaps extinct.

Proto-language

Some Proto-Mundurukú reconstructions by Picanço (2005) are as follows.[2]

English glossProto-Mundurukú
wild cat**sipɔrɔ
macaw, sp.**sipaLa
It burned.**o-si-pik
bird**oasɨ̃
manioc**masɨk
babaçu**kosɨ
fish, sp.**isɨe
snake**pɨy
leaf**tɨp / **Lɨp
sling**tobɨy / **Lobɨy
my cultivated garden**o-kɨʔ
an old lady**abɨt
the day after tomorrow**kɨyaCe
to go**Cɨ / **Dɨ
my name**o-bɨtet
It's cold.**i-Cɨk
Who?**abɨ
my finger/hand**o-bɨʔ
It's smoked.**i-pɨrɨk
piquia tree**ʃaʔip
fire/firewood**Laʃa
I slept.**oʃet
ant, sp.**wiʃaʔ
fish, sp.**Laʃew/oy
chief**toʃaw
louse**kip
child**bɨkit
mosquito**tʃik
be hot**takjVp

References

  1. Loukotka, Čestmír (1968). Classification of South American Indian languages. Los Angeles: UCLA Latin American Center.
  2. Picanço, Gessiane Lobato. 2005. Munduruku: Phonetics, phonology, synchrony, diachrony. Doctoral dissertation, University of Vancouver. doi:10.14288/1.0092991
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