Yagua | ||||
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Nijyamïï Nikyejaada | ||||
Spoken in | NE Peru, Colombia | |||
Region | western Amazon | |||
Ethnicity | Yagua | |||
Native speakers | 5,700 (2000) | |||
Language family |
Peba–Yaguan
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Language codes | ||||
ISO 639-3 | yad | |||
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The Yagua language is spoken by the Yagua people, primarily in northeastern Peru. As of 2005, it appears that a few speakers may have migrated northward across the Peruvian-Colombian border near the town of Leticia. A third of the population is monolingual, and Yagua is the language of instruction in local primary schools.
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The exonym is spelled Yagua, Yawa, Yahua, Llagua, Yava, Yegua. They also go by Nijyamïï Nikyejaada.
The Yagua language is a member of the Peba–Yaguan language family.
The most recently available estimates, dating from the 1980s, are that there are about 3,000 to 4,000 speakers of the language. At that time, a majority of Yagua individuals were bilingual in both Spanish and the Yagua language. A few distant communities were still largely monolingual, and children were learning the language, though in at least some communities there was parental pressure on children to just speak Spanish. Some ethnic Yaguas are monolingual in Spanish.
Yagua has 6 vowels and 11 consonants, as shown in the chart below. (Orthographic symbols in bold, IPA values in square brackets.)
Front | Central | Back | |
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Close | i [i] | ɨ [ɨ] | u [u] |
Mid | e [e] | o [ɔ] | |
Open | a [a] |
Bilabial | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | |
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Nasal | m [m] | n [n] | |||
Plosive | p [p] | t [t] | č [tʃ] | k [k] | |
Fricative | s [s] | h [h] | |||
Tap | r [ɾ] | ||||
Approximant | w [w] | y [j] |
The language has either tone or a complex pitch-accent system, but this has never been adequately described.
The language is highly agglutinative, such that most words consist of multiple morphemes, and a single word may contain more than one root.
Most Yagua sentences begin with the verb, followed by the subject and object in that order (VSO). It is a "double object" language, with no known syntactic differences between the two objects of verbs like 'give', for example, or applied objects.
The language has numerous postpositions (and no prepositions, which is generally unexpected for VSO languages). There are over 40 noun classifiers, and essentially no "adjectives". Nouns are modified either by nouns, by classifiers, or by other suffixes.
The language is documented in various works by Paul Powlison, Esther Powlison, Doris L. Payne, and Thomas E. Payne.
Yagua has a quinary (base 5) counting system. Different numbers are used for inanimate objects/counting and animate objects (see measure word).
# | Inanimate/Counting | Animate | # | Inanimate/Counting | Animate |
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1 | tárakí | tíkí | 6 | tárakínihyátee | tíkinihyátee |
2 | dárahúy | dánuhúy | 7 | dárahúnihyátee | dánuhunihyátee |
3 | múmurí | múuváy | 8 | múmurínihyátee | múúványihyátee |
4 | dáryahúyu | dányuhúyu | 9 | dáryahúyunihyátee | dányuhúyunihyátee |
5 | tádahyó | tádahyó | 10 | βuyahúy | βuyahúy |