Purépecha language
Purépecha | |
---|---|
Tarascan | |
P'urhépecha | |
Pronunciation | [pʰuˈɽepet͡ʃa] |
Native to | Mexico |
Region | Michoacán |
Ethnicity | Purépecha |
Native speakers | 125,000 (2010 census)[1] |
language isolate or an independent language family | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 |
Either:tsz – Easternpua – Western |
Glottolog |
tara1323 [2] |
Distribution of Purépecha in the Mexican state of Michoacán | |
Purépecha AKA P'urhépecha [pʰuˈɽepet͡ʃa] (Phorhé, Phorhépecha), more popularly known as Tarascan (Spanish: Tarasco),[3] is a language isolate or small language family spoken by a quarter million Purépecha in the highlands of the Mexican state of Michoacán.
Purépecha was the main language of the pre-Columbian Tarascan state and became widespread in northwestern Mexico during its heyday in the late post-classic period (ca. 1400–1521).
Even though it is spoken within the boundaries of Mesoamerica, Purépecha does not share many of the traits defining the Mesoamerican language area.
Classification
Purépecha has long been classified as a language isolate, unrelated to any other known language. This judgement is repeated in Campbell's authoritative classification.[4] Greenberg assigned it to the Chibchan language family,[5] but like the rest of his American classification, this proposal is rejected by specialists.[4]
There are a number of dialects,[6] which SIL International divides into two languages, but Campbell (1997) considers Purépecha to be a single language.
Demography
The Purépecha language is mostly spoken in rural communities in the highlands of Michoacán. The former center of the Tarascan state was around Lake Pátzcuaro and this remains an important center of the Purépecha community. Ethnologue counts Purépecha as two languages: a central language spoken by approximately 40,000 people (2005) around Pátzcuaro, and a western highland language spoken by 135,000 speakers (2005) around Zamora, Los Reyes de Salgado, Paracho de Verduzco, and Pamatácuaro, all of which are in the vicinity of the volcano Parícutin. Due to recent migration, there are also communities of speakers in the cities of Guadalajara, Tijuana and Mexico City and in the United States. The total population of speakers is rising (from 58,000 in 1960 to 96,000 in 1990 and 120,000 in 2000[7]), but the percentage of speakers relative to non-speakers is falling, and the degree of bilingualism is rising - making it an endangered language. Today the percentage of monolingual speakers is below 10%.[7]
History
The Purépecha are known to have migrated from elsewhere to their current location, as their tradition includes stories of having traveled from the Pacific Ocean to their current locations. Ethnohistorical accounts mention them as a people dwelling in the same region of Michoacán inhabited by them today as early as the thirteenth century. According to the Relación de Michoacán the communities around Lake Pátzcuaro were gathered into the strong Purépecha state by the leader of the Uacúsecha group of Purépecha speakers, Tariácuri. Around 1300, he undertook the first conquests of other and installed his sons Hiripan and Tangáxoan as lords of Ihuatzio and Tzintzuntzan respectively, while he himself ruled from Pátzcuaro city. By the time of the death of Taríacuri (around 1350), his lineage was in control of all the major centers around Lake Pátzcuaro.
His son Hiripan continued the expansion into the area surrounding Lake Cuitzeo. In 1460 the Purépecha state reached the Pacific coast at Zacatula, advanced into the Toluca Valley, and also, on the northern rim, reached into the present-day state of Guanajuato. In the 15th century the Purépecha state was at war with the Aztecs. Many Nahua peoples who had until then lived side by side with Purépecha speakers were relocated outside of the Tarascan frontiers, whereas speakers of Otomi, fleeing the Aztec expansion, resettled on the border between the two polities. This created a fairly homogeneous area of Purépecha speakers with no other languages spoken in the core area around Lake Pátzcuaro.[8]
With the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire, the Purépecha state was at first peacefully incorporated into the realm of New Spain, but with the killing of Cazonci Tangaxuán II by Nuño de Guzmán the relation became one of Spanish dominance by force. Exceptions to this were the Hospital communities of Vasco de Quiroga, such as Santa Fé de la Laguna, where Purépecha could live with a degree of protection from Spanish domination. Through Spanish friars, the Purépecha learned to write in the Latin script, and Purépecha became a literary language in the early colonial period. There is a body of written sources in Purépecha from this period, including several dictionaries, confessionaries, and land titles. Among the most important colonial works are the grammar (1558)[9] and dictionary (1559)[10] of Fray Maturino Gilberti, and the grammar and dictionary (1574) by Juan Baptista de Lagunas [11]
From ca. 1700 the status of Purépecha changed, and throughout the twentieth century the Mexican state pursued a policy of hispanicization, under which speakers of indigenous languages were actively encouraged to abandon their languages in favor of Spanish. However, in accord with international changes in favor of recognizing the linguistic rights of indigenous peoples and promoting multiculturalism in colonial states, in 2003 the Congress of the Union of Mexico approved the General Law of Linguistic Rights of the Indigenous Peoples, giving Purépecha and Mexico's other indigenous languages official status as "national languages".
Orthography
The official alphabet is the P’URHEPECHA JIMBO KARARAKUECHA (Purépecha Alphabet):
The three letters b, d, g occur in spelling only after the nasal letters m, n: mb, nd, ng. Their use is not consistent with orthography on the phonemic principle, because the sounds /p, t, k/ are automatically voiced, shifting in pronunciation to [b, d, ɡ] respectively, after a nasal consonant.
Phonology
In all dialects of Purépecha, stress accent is phonemic. As in Spanish orthography, the stressed syllable is indicated by the acute accent. Examples of minimal pairs are:
- karáni 'write' — kárani 'fly'
- p'amáni 'wrap it' — p'ámani 'touch a liquid'
Usually the second syllable of the word is stressed, occasionally the first.
The phonemic inventory of the Tarécuato dialect is presented below.[14] The Tarécuato dialect differs from other dialects in having a velar nasal phoneme. The table of phonemes uses the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) and also gives the alphabet equivalents (enclosed in angle brackets) in non-obvious cases.
Vowels
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
Close | i | ɨ ⟨ ï ⟩ | u |
Mid | e | o | |
Open | ɑ |
The two mid vowels /e, o/ are uncommon; /o/ is especially rare.
The high central vowel is almost always after /s/ or /ts/ and is then almost an allophone of /i/.
The final vowel of a word is usually whispered or deleted except before a pause.
Vowel clusters are very rare except for sequences generated by adding grammatical suffixes, such as the pluralizers -echa or -icha, the copula -i, or the genitive -iri. Vowel clusters are usually not the first two sounds of a word.
Consonants
Purépecha is one of the few languages in the Mesoamerican region without a phonemic glottal stop (a distinction shared by the Huave language and by some Nahuan languages). It lacks any laterals ('l'-sounds). However, in the speech of many young speakers, the retroflex rhotic has been replaced by [l] by Spanish influence.[15]
There are distinct series of nonaspirated and aspirated consonants and affricate consonants; aspiration is spelled with an apostrophe. There are two rhotics ('r'-sounds; one of them retroflex).
Bilabial | Alveolar | Postalveolar or palatal |
Velar | Labiovelar | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | m | n | ŋ ⟨nh⟩ | |||
Stop | plain | p | t | k | kʷ ⟨ku⟩ | |
aspirated | pʰ ⟨p'⟩ | tʰ ⟨t'⟩ | kʰ ⟨k'⟩ | kʷʰ ⟨k'u⟩ | ||
Affricate | plain | ts ⟨ts⟩ | tʃ ⟨ch⟩ | |||
aspirated | tsʰ ⟨ts'⟩ | tʃʰ ⟨ch'⟩ | ||||
Fricative | s | ʃ ⟨x⟩ | x ⟨j⟩ | |||
Rhotic | r | ɽ ⟨rh⟩ | ||||
Approximant | j ⟨i⟩ | w ⟨u⟩ |
The official orthography does not have distinct representations for the four phonemes /kʷ/, /kʷʰ/, /w/, /j/. It uses the letter ⟨i⟩ for both /i, j/ and the letter ⟨u⟩ for both /u, w/ (these two semivowels are fairly rare). When ⟨k⟩ and ⟨k'⟩ are followed by ⟨u⟩ and another vowel letter, this virtually always represents the labio-velar phonemes.
Intervocally, the aspirated consonants become pre-aspirated; when following nasals, they lose their aspiration entirely. The unaspirated consonants become voiced when following nasals.
Grammar
Typology
Purépecha is an agglutinative language, although sound change has led to a certain degree of fusion. It is sometimes considered a polysynthetic language due to the complex morphology and often long words.[16] Unlike most other languages considered polysynthetic, it has no noun compounding or incorporation. The language is exclusively suffixing and has a large number of suffixes (as many as 160[8]) and clitics. The verb distinguishes thirteen aspects and six modes. The language is double-marking in the typology of Johanna Nichols, meaning that it marks grammatical relations on both the dependent phrases and phrasal heads.
The language has both grammatical case and postpositions. The case system distinguishes among nominative, accusative, genitive, comitative, instrumental and locative cases, but there are also a large number of nominal derivational affixes. Word order is flexible and the basic word order has been described as either SVO,[17] or SOV,[18] but both authors note that other word orders are frequently used for pragmatic purposes such as focus or topic tracking.[19]
The noun
Nouns are inflected on the basic formula Noun + Number + Case.
The grammar distinguishes between plural and unspecified numbers, having no dedicated singular form.[20]
Plural of a noun is formed by a suffix -echa/-icha or -cha.
- kúmi-wátsï 'fox' - kúmi-wátsïcha 'foxes'
- iréta 'town' - irétaacha 'towns'
- warhíticha tepharicha maru 'some fat women' (lit. women-PL fat-PL some).
The nominative case is unmarked. The accusative case (also called objective case) is used to mark direct and sometimes indirect objects, is marked by a suffix -ni:
The genitive case is marked by -ri -eri:
- imá wárhitiri wíchu 'that woman's dog'
- imá wárhiti-ri wíchu
- that woman-GEN dog
The locative case is marked by -rhu, -o
- kúntaati Maríao 'He'll meet him at María's place'
The instrumental case is marked by the particle jimpó or the suffix -mpu
- jiríkurhniniksï tsakápu k'éri má jimpó 'They hid behind some big rocks'
- ampémpori ánchikuarhiwa 'What will he/she work with?'
- ampé-mpu=ri anchikuarhi-wa-∅
- what-INS work-future tense–3SG[23]
The comitative case is marked by the particle jinkóni or the suffix -nkuni
- apóntini warhíti má jinkóni 'to sleep with a woman'
- xi niwákani imánkuni 'I'll go with him/her'
Discourse-pragmatic focus on a noun or noun phrase is indicated by the clitic -sï.[17]
Verbs
The Purépecha verb inflects for aspects and modes, as well as for person and number of subject and object. There are also a number of suffixes expressing shape, position or body parts affecting or affected by the verbal action.[26][27][28]
Transitivity is manipulated by suffixes forming transitive verbs with applicative or causative meaning or intransitives with passive or inchoative meanings.
Media
Purépecha-language programming is broadcast by radio station XEPUR-AM, based in Cherán, Michoacán. This radio station is an enterprise of the CDI.
Toponyms
- Acuitzio - "Place of the snakes"
- Cuerámaro - "Coat of the swamps"
- Cóporo - "Over the big road"
- Cupareo - "Crossroads"
- Tzintzuntzan - "Place of hummingbirds"
- Zurumuato - "Place in straw hill"
References
- ↑ INALI (2012) México: Lenguas indígenas nacionales
- ↑ Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin; Bank, Sebastian, eds. (2016). "Tarascan". Glottolog 2.7. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
- ↑ MICHOACÁN: A STRUGGLE FOR IDENTITY
- 1 2 Campbell 1997.
- ↑ Greenberg 1987.
- ↑ Friedrich 1971a.
- 1 2 Villavicencio Zarza 2006, p. 53.
- 1 2 Pollard 1993.
- ↑ Gilberti, Fray Maturino. 1987. Arte de la lengua de Michuacan [facsimile 1558] Benedict Warren (ed.) Morelia, Michoacán: Fimax.
- ↑ Gilberti, Fray Maturino. 1991. Vocabulario en lengua de Mechuacan [Facsimile 1559] Benedict Warren (ed.) Morelia, Michoacán: Fimax.
- ↑ Lagunas, Juan Baptista de. 1984. Arte y Dictionario Con Otras Obras en Lengua Michuacana. Benedict Warren (ed.) Morelia, Michoacán: Fimax.
- ↑ Pahuamba et al 1997.
- ↑ http://www.purhepecha.com.mx/takukata.php
- ↑ De Wolf 1989.
- ↑ Chamoreau 2003b, p. 25.
- ↑ Villavicencio Zarza 2006, p. 61.
- 1 2 Capistrán 2002.
- ↑ Friedrich 1984.
- ↑ Villavicencio Zarza 2006, p. 71.
- ↑ Villavicencio Zarza 2006, pp. 74–75.
- ↑ Villavicencio Zarza 2006, p. 306.
- ↑ Villavicencio Zarza 2006, p. 331.
- ↑ Villavicencio Zarza 2006, p. 339.
- ↑ Villavicencio Zarza 2006, p. 376.
- ↑ Villavicencio Zarza 2006, p. 381.
- ↑ Friedrich 1969.
- ↑ Friedrich 1970.
- ↑ Friedrich 1971b.
- Campbell, Lyle (1997). American Indian Languages: The Historical Linguistics of Native America. Oxford Studies in Anthropological Linguistics, no. 4. William Bright (series general ed.) (OUP paperback ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-509427-1. OCLC 32923907.
- Capistrán, Alejandra (2002). ""Variaciones de orden de constituyentes en p'orhépecha"". In Paulette Levy. Del cora al maya yucateco: estudios lingüísticos sobre algunas lenguas indígenas mexicanas (in Spanish). Mexico City: UNAM.
- Chamoreau, Claudine (2003b). "Purépecha de Jarácuaro, Michoacán". Archivo de lenguas indígenas de México (in Spanish). Mexico City: El Colegio de México. 25.
- Chamoreau, Claudine (2003). Parlons Purépecha (in French). Paris: L'Harmattan. ISBN 2-7475-4357-9.
- Chamoreau, Claudine (2009). Hablemos Purépecha (in Spanish). Morelia, Mexico: Universidad Intercultural Indígena de Michoacán. ISBN 978-607-424-042-9.
- De Wolf, Paul (1989). Estudios Lingüísticos sobre la lengua P'orhé (in Spanish). Mexico City: Colegio de Michoacán.
- De Wolf, Paul (1991). Curso básico del tarasco hablado (in Spanish). Zamora: Colegio de Michoacán. ISBN 968-7230-61-4.
- Foster, Mary LeCron (1969). "The Tarascan Language". University of California publications in linguistics. 56. Berkeley: University of California Press.
- Foster, Mary LeCron (1971). Jesse Sawyer, ed. "Studies in American Indian Languages'". Berkeley: University of California Press.
|chapter=
ignored (help) - Friedrich, Paul (1984). "Tarascan: From Meaning to Sound.". In Munro Edmonson. Supplement to the Handbook of Middle American Indians. 2. Austin: University of Texas Press.
- Friedrich, Paul (1969). "On the meaning of the Tarascan suffixes of Space" (PDF). International Journal of American Linguistics. Indian University Press. Memoir 23.
- Friedrich, Paul (1970). "Shape in Grammar". Language. 46 (2, Part 1): 379–407. doi:10.2307/412285.
- Friedrich, Paul (1971a). "Dialectal Variation in Tarascan Phonology". International Journal of American Linguistics. 37 (3): 164–187. JSTOR 1264603. doi:10.1086/465157.
- Friedrich, Paul (1971b). The Tarascan suffixes of locative space: meaning and morphotactics. Bloomington: Indiana University. ISBN 0-87750-159-9.
- Friedrich, Paul (1975). A phonology of Tarascan. Chicago: University of Chicago, Department of Anthropology. ISBN 0-916256-03-0.
- Friedrich, Paul (1971c). "Distinctive Features and Functional Groups in Tarascan Phonology". Language. 47 (4): 849–865. doi:10.2307/412160.
- Greenberg, Joseph (1987). Language in the Americas. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
- Hernández Dimas, Ma. Guadalupe; et al. (1999). Curso de lengua p'urhépecha (in Spanish). Mexico City: UNAM.
- Monzón, Cristina (1997). Introducción a la lengua y cultura tarascas (in Spanish). Valencia, Spain: Universidad de Valencia. ISBN 84-370-3307-1.
- Pahuamba, Juan Velázquez; et al. (1997). Vocabulario práctico bilingüe p'urhépecha-español. Dirección General de Culturas Populares, PACMyC.
- Pollard, Helen Perlstein (1993). Taríacuri’s Legacy: The Prehispanic Tarascan State. The Civilization of the American Indian series, vol. 209. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-8061-2497-0. OCLC 26801144.
- Villavicencio Zarza, Frida (2006). P'orhépecha kaso sïrátahenkwa: Desarrollo del sistema de casos del purépecha (in Spanish). Mexico, DF: Colegio de México, Centro de Investigaciones Superiores en Antropología Social. ISBN 968-496-592-3.
External links
Purépecha language test of Wikipedia at Wikimedia Incubator |
- Purépecha Swadesh list of basic vocabulary words (from Wiktionary's Swadesh-list appendix)
- Field recordings of Purépecha carried out by linguist William Shipley, archived at the Berkeley Language Center
- The P'urhépecha WEB page From Michoacán, México. (In Spanish)