Misumalpan languages

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The Misumalpan languages (also Misumalpa or Misuluan) are a small family of Native American languages spoken on the east coast of Nicaragua and nearby areas. Joseph Greenberg considers them to constitute a subfamily of the nuclear Chibchan group, but his classification is generally rejected. Misumalpan specialist Ken Hale considers a possible connection between Chibchan and Misumalpan to be "too distant to establish".[1] The name "Misumalpan" was devised by John Alden Mason and is composed of syllables from the names of the family's three members Miskitu, Sumu and Matagalpan.[2]. It was first recognized by Walter Lehmann in 1920. While all the languages of the Matagalpan branch are now extinct the Miskitu and Sumu languages are alive and well - Miskito with almost 200,000 speakers and serves as a second language for speakers of other Indian languages on the Mosquito Coast. According to Hale [3] most speakers of Sumu also speak Miskitu.

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[edit] Genealogy

The Misumalpan languages include:

Miskito became the dominant language of the Mosquito Coast from the late 1600s on, as a result of their alliance with the British Empire. In northeastern Nicaragua, it continues to be adopted by former speakers of Sumo. However, its sociolinguistic status is lower than that of the English-based creole of the southeast, and in that region Miskito seems to be losing ground. Sumo is endangered in most areas where it is found, although some evidence suggests that it was dominant in the region before the ascendancy of Miskito. The Matagalpan languages are long since extinct, and not very well documented.

All Misumalpan languages share the same phonology, apart from phonotactics. The consonants are p, b, t, d, k, s, h, w, y, and voiced and voiceless versions of m, n, ng, l, r; the vowels are short and long versions of a, i, u.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Hale & Salamanca 2001, p. 35
  2. ^ Hale & Salamanca 2001, p. 33
  3. ^ Hale & Salamanca 2001, p. 35

[edit] External links

[edit] Bibliography

  • Benedicto, Elena (2002), "Verbal Classifier Systems: The Exceptional Case of Mayangna Auxiliaries." In "Proceedings of WSCLA 7th". UBC Working Papers in Linguistics 10, pp. 1-14. Vancouver, British Columbia.
  • Benedicto, Elena & Kenneth Hale, (2000) "Mayangna, A Sumu Language: Its Variants and Its Status within Misumalpa", in E. Benedicto, ed., "The UMOP Volume on Indigenous Languages", UMOP 20, pp. 75-106. Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts.
  • Colette Craig & Kenneth Hale, "A Possible Macro-Chibchan Etymon", Anthropological Linguistics Vol. 34, 1992.
  • Constenla Umaña, Adolfo (1987) ``Elementos de Fonología Comparada de las Lenguas Misumalpas, Revista de Filología y Lingüística de la Universidad de Costa Rica 13 (1), 129-161.
  • Constenla Umaña A. (1998). Acerca de la relación genealógica de las lenguas lencas y las lenguas misumalpas, Communication presented at the First Archeological Congress of Nicaragua (Managua, 20-21 July), to appear in 2002 in Revista de Filología y Lingüística de la Universidad de Costa Rica 28 (1).
  • Hale, Ken. El causativo misumalpa (miskitu, sumu). In Anuario del Seminario de Filología Vasca "Julio de Urquijo" 1996, 30:1-2.
  • Hale, Ken (1991) ``Misumalpan Verb Sequencing Constructions, in C. Lefebvre, ed., Serial Verbs: Grammatical, Comparative, and Cognitive Approaches, John Benjamins, Amsterdam.
  • Hale, Ken and Danilo Salamanca (2001) "Theoretical and Universal Implications of Certain Verbal Entries in Dictionaries of the Misumalpan Languages", in Frawley, Hill & Munro eds. Making Dictionaries: Preserving indigenous Languages of the Americas. University of California Press.
  • Ruth Rouvier, "Infixation and reduplication in Misumalpan: A reconstruction" (B.A., Berkeley, 2002)
  • Phil Young and T. Givón. "The puzzle of Ngäbére auxiliaries: Grammatical reconstruction in Chibchan and Misumalpan", in William Croft, Suzanne Kemmer and Keith Denning, eds., Studies in Typology and Diachrony: Papers presented to Joseph H. Greenberg on his 75th birthday, Typological Studies in Language 20, John Benjamins 1990.

[edit] Meta-Bibliography