Chamorro language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chamorro
Spoken in: Guam, Northern Mariana Islands 
Region: Western Pacific Ocean
Total speakers: First language: more than 60,000
Language family: Austronesian
 Malayo-Polynesian (MP)
  Nuclear MP
   Sunda-Sulawesi
    Chamorro 
Official status
Official language of: Guam, Northern Mariana Islands
Regulated by: no official regulation
Language codes
ISO 639-1: ch
ISO 639-2: cha
ISO/FDIS 639-3: cha

Chamorro is the native language of the Chamoru of the Northern Mariana Islands and Guam. Although the English language is commonplace on both Guam and the Northern Marianas Islands, people still use the Chamorro language. Chamorro is also used in mainland United States by immigrants and some of their descendants.

The numbers of Chamorro speakers have declined in recent years, and the younger generations are less likely to know the language. The influence of English has caused the language to become endangered. Various representatives from Guam have unsuccessfully lobbied the United States to take action to promote and protect the language.[citation needed] In Guam (called "Guåhan" by Chamorro speakers), the number of native Chamorro speakers have dwindled in numbers in the last decade or so while in the Northern Mariana Islands, young Chamorros still speak the language fluently.

A large number of Chamorro words have Spanish etymological roots (e.g. tenda "shop/store" from Spanish tienda), which may lead some to mistakenly conclude that the language is a Spanish Creole: Chamorro very much uses its loan words in a Micronesian way (eg: bumobola "playing ball" from bola "ball, play ball" with infix -um- and reduplication of root). However, Chamorro can also be considered a mixed language (Hispano-Austronesian) or a language that resulted of a contact and creolization process in the Mariana Islands. Modern Chamorro grammar has many elements of Spanish origin, especially in articles, numbers and prepositions.

Chamorro language spread in the United States.
Enlarge
Chamorro language spread in the United States.

There are approximately 50,000 to 75,000 speakers of Chamorro throughout the Marianas archipelago. It is still common among Chamorro households in the Northern Marianas, but fluency has greatly decreased among Guamanian Chamorros during the years of American rule in favor of (a largely pidginized) American English.

Chamorro's nearest grammatical relatives are found in the Philippines.[citation needed] Some of the similarities between the Chamorro language and languages of the Philippines may be due at least in part to the fact that after 90%-95% of the native Chamoru population was wiped out during Spanish rule, large numbers of Filipinos began to be shipped to the archipelago, thus possibly influencing Chamoru language and culture. (Filipinos outnumber Chamorus in the Northern Mariana Islands.)

Contents

[edit] Alphabet

' (glottal stop), A, Å, B, Ch, D, E, F, G, H, I, K, L, M, N, Ñ, Ng, O, P, R, S, T, U, Y

Note that the letter Y is pronounced more like 'dz' (an approximation of the Castilian Spanish pronunciation of "Y"/"Ll", the exact sound of which does not exist in Chamoru), and that Ch is usually pronounced like 'ts' rather than 'tsh'. Note also that A and Å are not always distinguished in written Chamorro, often being written simply as 'A'; nor are N and Ñ always distinguished. Thus the Guamanian place name spelled Yona is pronounced 'dzo-nia', not 'yo-na' as might be expected.

[edit] Chamorro basic phrases

Håfa adai Hello
Håfa tatatmanu hao? How are you?
Håyi na'ån-mu? What is your name?
Si Bruce yu' I am Bruce
Ñåhlang yu' I'm hungry
Adiós Good bye
Buenas días Good morning
Buenas ta'des Good afternoon
Buenas noches Good night
Håfa adai Hello
Esta agupa' See you tomorrow
Si Yu'us ma'ase Thank you
Buen probechu Not at all; you're welcome

[edit] Numbers

Current common Chamorro uses only number words of Spanish origin: unu, dos, tres, etc. Old Chamorro used different number words based on categories: "Basic numbers" (for date, time, etc), "living things", "inanimate things", and "long objects":

English Modern Chamoru Old Chamoru: Basic Numbers Old Chamoru: Living Things Old Chamoru: Inanimate Things Old Chamoru: Long Objects
one unu/una (time) hacha maisa hachiyai takhachun
two dos hugua hugua hugiyai takhuguan
three tres tulu tato to'giyai taktulun
four kuatru fatfat fatfat fatfatai takfatun
five sinku lima lalima limiyai takliman
six seis gunum guagunum gonmiyai ta'gunum
seven sieti fiti fafiti fitgiyai takfitun
eight ochu gualu guagualu guatgiyai ta'gualun
nine nuebi sigua sasigua sigiyai taksiguan
ten dies manot maonot manutai takmaonton
hundred sien gatus gatus gatus gatus/manapo

(The tens digit numbers starting from 10 is dies(10),bente(20),trenta(30),kuarenta(40),singkuenta(50),sisenta(60),sitenta(70),ochenta(80),nubenta(90)

[edit] External links

Wikipedia
Chamorro language edition of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia