Tupi–Guarani languages: Difference between revisions

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*'''Guayaquí''' / '''Acé''' - spoken by a tribe in the [[Cordillera de Villa Rica]], Paraguay.
*'''Guayaquí''' / '''Acé''' - spoken by a tribe in the [[Cordillera de Villa Rica]], Paraguay.
*'''Notobotocudo''' / '''Pihtadyouai''' - language of an extinct tribe that lived at the sources of the [[Uruguai River]] and [[Iguasú River]], state of Santa Catarina.
*'''Notobotocudo''' / '''Pihtadyouai''' - language of an extinct tribe that lived at the sources of the [[Uruguai River]] and [[Iguasú River]], state of Santa Catarina.

;Kamayurá group
*'''Kamayurá''' / '''Camayura''' - spoken by a small tribe on the [[Ferro River]] in the Xingú basin, state of Mato Grosso.
*'''Awití''' / '''Auetö''' / '''Aweti''' - spoken in the same region on the [[Culiseú River]], Mato Grosso.
*'''Arawiné''' - little known language from the [[7 de setembro River]], state of Mato Grosso.

;Tapirapé group
*'''Tapirapé''' - spoken on the [[Tapirapé River]] and [[Naja River]], Mato Grosso.
*'''Ampaneá''' - extinct language once spoken at the sources of the [[Tapirapé River]], state of Mato Grosso. (Unattested.)

;Northern group
*'''Tenetehara''' - language with two dialects:
**'''Guajajára''' - originally spoken at the sources of the [[Itapecurú River]] and [[Mearim River]], now on the [[Grajaú River]] and [[Pindaré River]], state of Maranhão.
**'''Tembé''' - originally spoken on the upper course of the [[Pindaré River]], now on the [[Capiro River]] and [[Acará Pequeno River]], state of Maranhão.
*'''Guajá''' / '''Guaxara''' / '''Wazaizara''' / '''Ayaya''' - spoken between the [[Capim River]] and the lower course of the [[Gurupá River]], Maranhão.
*'''Manajé''' / '''Ararandeuára''' - spoken at the sources of the [[Bujarú River]] and on the [[Mojú River]] and [[Ararandéua River]], state of Maranhão.
*'''Manoxo''' / '''Amanaye''' - extinct language once spoken on the lower course of the [[Mearim River]] near [[São Bento, Maranhão]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Turiwára''' / '''Turiguara''' - spoken originally on the [[Turi River]], now on the [[Acará Grande River]].
*'''Kaapor''' / '''Urubú''' / '''Gavião''' - spoken by the tribe of beautiful feather workers who lived on the [[Gurupi River]], [[Guama River]], and [[Tuiassú River]], Maranhão.
*'''Pocheti''' - once spoken on the [[Araguaia River]] and [[Mojú River]]. (Unattested.)

;Pará group
*'''Camboca''' - extinct language once spoken between the mouths of the [[Tocantins River]] and [[Jacundá River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Apehou''' - once spoken at the mouth of the [[Xingú River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Aratú''' - once spoken at the mouth of the [[Curuá River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Mapua''' - once spoken on [[Marajó Island]] on the [[Mapuá River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Anajá''' - once spoken on [[Marajó Island]] on the [[Anajá River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Camarapim''' - once spoken at the mouth of the [[Pacajá River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Uanapú''' - once spoken on the [[Anapú River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Coaní''' - once spoken at the mouth of the [[Xingú River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Mamayaná''' - once spoken to the south of the mouth of the [[Anapú River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Pacajá''' - once spoken between the [[Pacajá River]] and [[Anapú River]].
*'''Jacunda''' - once spoken on the [[Jacunda River]]. (Villa Real 1848, p. 432, only two words.)
*'''Parakanã''' - spoken between the [[Tocantins River]] and [[Pacajá River]] by an almost unknown tribe.
*'''Anambé''' - once spoken on the left bank of the [[Tocantins River]] near [[Rebojo de Guariba]], now extinct.
*'''Caranbú''' - spoken by the unknown neighbors of the Anambé tribe. (Unattested.)
*'''Tapirauha''' / '''Cupelobo''' / '''Kupẽ-rob''' / '''Jandiaí''' - spoken by only a few individuals on the [[Igarapé do Bacurí]] and west of the [[Cachoeira de Itaboca]].
*'''Anta''' - once spoken by the neighbors of the Tapirauha tribe. (Unattested.)
*'''Tacayuna''' - once spoken on the [[Tacaiuna River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Asurini''' - spoken by the totally unknown tribe that lived between the upper course of the [[Xingú River]], and the [[Freso River]] and [[Pacajá River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Mudzyetíre''' - a Cayapó name for an unknown Tupi tribe that lived on the [[Igarapé Sororosinho]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Tacuñapé''' / '''Eidum''' / '''Péua''' - extinct language once spoken on the [[Iririru River]] and [[Novo River]]. (only a few words.)
*'''Tacumandícai''' / '''Caras Pretas''' - language of a very little known tribe that lived on the lower course of the [[Xingú River]].
*'''Jauari''' - extinct language once spoken on the [[Vermelho River]] and [[Araguaia River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Zapucaya''' - once spoken between the Amazon and [[Paraná do Uraria River]]s. (Unattested.)
*'''Tapajó''' - once spoken at the mouth of the [[Tapajós River]] (cf. Amazonas group). (Unattested.)
*'''Auacachi''' - once spoken at the mouth of the [[Auacachi River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Papateruana''' - once spoken in a part of [[Tupinambarana Island]] on the [[Amazon River]]. (Unattested.)

;Guiana group
*'''Oyampi''' / '''Wayapí''' / '''Guayapi''' - originally spoken on the lower course of the [[Xingú River]], later on the [[Oiapoque River]] in the territory of Amapá, in French Guiana, now on the [[Maroni River]].
*'''Tamacom''' - extinct language once spoken on the middle course of the [[Jarí River]] and at the sources of the [[Maracá River]], Pará. (Unattested.)
*'''Cusari''' / '''Coussani''' - once spoken on the upper course of the [[Araguarí River]], territory of Amapá. (Unattested.)
*'''Paikipiranga''' / '''Parixi''' - spoken at the sources of the [[Maracá River]], Pará.
*'''Calayua''' - once spoken at the sources of the [[Inipucú River]], Pará. (Unattested.)
*'''Apama''' - spoken by a few individuals on the [[Maecurú River]], Pará. (Unattested.)
*'''Emerillon''' / '''Teko''' / '''Emereñon''' / '''Marêyo''' - spoken by only a few families on the [[Approuague River]], [[Camopi River]], [[Inini River]], [[Coureni River]], and [[Araoua River]], French Guiana.
*'''Caripuna''' / '''Calipurn''' - language spoken on the [[Curipi River]], Pará, by the mixed population of diverse origin. (Unattested.)

;Southern group
*'''Apiacá''' - originally spoken between the [[Arinos River]] and [[Juruena River]], now on the [[São Manoel River]] and [[Ronuro River]], and on the upper course of the [[Tapajós River]], Mato Grosso.
*'''Tapañuna''' - language of a very little known tribe that lived between the [[Tapanhuna River]] and [[Peixe River]], state of Mato Grosso. (Unattested.)
*'''Timaóna''' - language of an unknown tribe from the [[Peixe River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Raipé-Sisi''' / '''Aipé-Chichi''' - once spoken between the [[Arinos River]] and [[São Manoel River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Makirí''' - spoken at the mouth of the [[São Manoel River]].
*'''Pariuaia''' - spoken at the sources of the [[Barati River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Kayabí''' / '''Parua''' - spoken on the lower course of the [[Verde Grande River|Verde River]] and on the [[Paranatina River]].
*'''Kawahyb''' / '''Cabahyba''' / '''Kawahíwa''' - originally spoken in the tropical forests west of the upper course of the [[Tocantins River]], later on the [[Ji-Paraná River]] and [[Marmelos River]], Pará.
*'''Dialects:
*'''Parintintin''' / '''Nakazetí''' / '''Itoehebe''' - spoken between the [[Madeira River]] and [[Maiçí River]], Pará.
*'''Wiraféd''' / '''Tupi do rio Machado''' - spoken on the [[Machado River]].
*'''Pauaté''' - once spoken at the sources of the [[Zinho River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Paranawát''' - spoken at the mouth of the [[Muqui River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Mialat''' - spoken on the middle course of the [[Machado River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Takwatíp''' / '''Tacuatepe''' - spoken at the confluence of the [[Ji-Paraná River]] and [[Pimenta Bueno River]].
*'''Tukumaféd''' - spoken on the middle course of the [[Machado River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Ipoteuate''' - spoken on the [[Ji-Paraná River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Apairandé''' - spoken between the [[Ji-Paraná River]] and [[Maiçí River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Jabotiféd''' - spoken on a tributary of the [[Machado River]], east of the Ipoteuate tribe. (Unattested.)
*'''Dawahib''' / '''Bocas Pretas''' - spoken on the [[Anarí River]], Rondônia.
*'''Jaguarúb''' - spoken south of the Paranawát tribe. (Unattested.)
*'''Hamno''' - spoken in the same region as Jaguarúb. (Unattested.)
*'''Sanenäre''' - spoken in the same region as Jaguarúb, but exact location uncertain. (Unattested.)
*'''Majubim''' - spoken at the confluence of the [[Pimenta Bueno River]] and [[Ji-Paraná River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Catuquinarú''' - language of a Tupinized Katukina tribe, spoken on the [[Embira River]], Amazonas.

;Amazonas group
*'''Omagua''' / '''Campeua''' / '''Carari''' - originally spoken along the [[Amazon River]] between the mouth of the [[Juruá River]] and the mouth of the [[Napo River]], now in only a few villages.
*'''Yurimagua''' / '''Yoriman''' - once spoken along the [[Amazon River]] from the mouth of the [[Jutaí River]] to the mouth, of the [[Purus River]], now spoken by only a few of the mixed population in the city of [[Yurimaguas]], Peru. (Unattested.)
*'''Aizuare''' - once spoken from the mouth of the [[Juruá River]] to the mouth of the [[Japura River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Ibanoma''' / '''Bonama''' - spoken on the right bank of the [[Amazon River]] from the mouth of the [[Purus River]] to the mouth of the [[Juruá River]]; now totally extinct. (Unattested.)
*'''Tapajó''' - once spoken at the mouth of the [[Tapajós River]] (cf. Pará group). (Unattested.)
*'''Awakachi''' - once spoken at the mouth of the [[Auacachi River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Papateruana''' - once spoken in a part of the [[Tupinambarana Island]] on the [[Amazon River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Paguana''' - once spoken along the [[Amazon River]] from the mouth of the [[Cafua River]] to the mouth of the [[Tefé River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Cocama''' - language spoken on a great lagoon on the left bank of the [[Ucayali River]] and near the city of [[Nauta]], Peru.
*'''Cocamilla''' - spoken on the lower course of the [[Huallaga River]], Peru. (Tessmann 1930, p. 82.)
*'''Yeté''' - once spoken on the [[Tiputini River]], Loreto province, Peru. (Unattested.)
*'''Jibitaona''' - once spoken near the city of [[Santiago de las Montañas]], Peru. (Unattested.)

;Chiriguano group
*'''Chiriguano''' / '''Camba''' - spoken in the Bolivian Andes in the Serranía de [[Aguarugüe]] and in the western part of the Bolivian Chaco, in [[Sara Province]] and on the upper course of the [[Bermejo River]]. Now only in the [[Carandaiti]] Valley and around [[Tarabuco]].
*'''Guarayo''' - spoken at the sources of the [[Blanco River]] and on the [[San Miguel River]], now in the missions of [[Yotáu]], San Pablo, and [[Yaguarú]], province of Santa Cruz, Bolivia.
*'''Pauserna''' / '''Moperecoa''' / '''Warádu-nëe''' - originally spoken on the [[Paragua River]] and [[Tarbo River]], Bolivia, now by only a few individuals on the [[Verde Grande River|Verde River]], a tributary of the [[Guaporé River]], Mato Grosso.
*'''Tapieté''' / '''Kurukwá''' / '''Yanaygua''' / '''Parapiti''' - spoken on the upper course of the [[Pilcomayo River]] and on the [[Parapití River]], Paraguayan Chaco
*'''Izozo''' / '''Chané''' - spoken on the [[Itiyuro River]] in the Campo y Durán and on the [[Parepetí River]], Chaco.
*'''Siriono''' / '''Chori''' - language of a very primitive tribe in central Bolivia, especially in the tropical forests on the [[Ichillo River]] and [[Grande River]], between the [[Blanco River]] and Yapacuní River]], between the [[Ivari River]] and [[Quimore River]], between the upper course of the [[Ivari River]] and [[Grande River]], between the [[Piray River]] and [[Itonama River]], and between the [[Beni River]] and [[Mamoré River]].
*'''Dialects:
*'''Tirinié''' - spoken on the [[Mamoré River]].
*'''Ñeozé''' - spoken on the [[Grande River]] and [[Mamoré River]].
*'''Yandé''' - spoken on the [[Mamoré River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Jora''' - once spoken around the [[Laguna Jorá]] near the city of [[Baures]].

;Mawé group
*'''Mawé''' / '''Mauhé''' / '''Mague''' - originally spoken on the [[Tapajós Mataura River]], [[Maué-assú River]], [[Arapium River]], [[Arichi River]], and [[Tracuá River]], in the state of Pará, now on the [[Uaicurapá River]].
*'''Arapiyú''' / '''Aripuana''' - once spoken at the mouth of the [[Arapiuns River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Andirá''' - once spoken south of [[Tupinambarana Island]] on the [[Amazon River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Igapuitariara''' - once spoken at the sources of the [[Curauaí River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Curiato''' - once spoken at the mouth of the [[Maricauá River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Sapupé''' / '''Sacopé''' - once spoken on the [[Bararatí River]]. (Unattested.)
*'''Maraguá''' - extinct language once spoken on the right bank of the [[Amazon River]], south of the Condurí tribe. (Unattested.)


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 16:11, 15 March 2020

Tupi–Guarani
Geographic
distribution
Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia, French Guiana, Paraguay, Peru
Linguistic classificationTupian
  • Tupi–Guarani
Subdivisions
Glottologtupi1276
Tupi–Guarani (medium pink), other Tupian (violet), and probable range c. 1500 (pink-grey)

Tupi–Guarani (pronunciation) is the name of the most widely distributed subfamily of the Tupian languages of South America. It includes fifty languages, including the best-known languages of the family, Guarani and Old Tupi.

The words petunia, jaguar, piranha, ipecac, tapioca, jacaranda, anhinga, carioca, and capoeira are of Tupi–Guarani origin.[citation needed]

Classification

Rodrigues & Cabral (2012)

Rodrigues & Cabral (2012) propose eight branches of Tupí–Guaraní:

*Cabral argues that Kokama/Omagua is a mixed language, and so not directly classifiable, though most of its basic vocabulary is Tupi–Guarani.

**Not listed in Rodrigues & Cabral

Karipuna language (Amapá) may be spurious.

Michael, et al. (2015)

Michael, et al. (2015) propose the following classification for the Tupi-Guarani languages.

Tupí-Guaraní

O'Hagan (2014)[1] proposes that Proto-Tupi-Guarani was spoken in the region of the lower Tocantins and Xingu Rivers. Proto-Omagua-Kokama then expanded up the Amazon River, Proto-Tupinamba expanded south along the Atlantic coast, and the Southern branch expanded up along the Tocantins/Araguaia River towards the Paraná River basin.

Varieties

Below is a list of Tupi–Guarani language varieties listed by Loukotka (1968), including names of unattested varieties.[2]

Tupi (Abañeénga) dialects
  • Tamoyo - once spoken from the Cabo de São Tomé to Angra dos Reis, state of Rio de Janeiro. (Unattested.)
  • Ararape - once spoken on the Paraíba River in the state of Rio de Janeiro. (Unattested.)
  • Temimino - once spoken on the coast of the state of Espirito Santo. (Unattested.)
  • Tupiniquin / Margaya - once spoken on the coast from Espirito Santo as far as Camamu, state of Bahia.
  • Tupinamba - formerly spoken on the coast from Camamu as far as the mouth of the São Francisco River, later on the coast in the state of Maranhão.
  • Tupina - once spoken in the interior of the state of Bahia. (Unattested.)
  • Caeté / Caité - once spoken on the coast from the mouth of the São Francisco River to the mouth of the Paraíba River. (Unattested.)
  • Amoipira / Anaupira - once spoken in the interior of the state of Bahia, from Cabrobó to the mouth of the Grande River. (Unattested.)
  • Abaete - once spoken in Bahia on the Abaeté River. (Unattested.)
  • Maromomi - dialect spoken at the old mission of São Bernabé, Rio de Janeiro. (Unattested.)
  • Potiguara / Petigare - dialect once spoken on the coast from the mouth of the Paraíba River to the mouth of the Parnaiba River, now spoken by a few families in the Baía do Traição, state of Paraíba.
  • Viatan - once spoken in the interior of the states of Pernambuco, but the exact location not recorded. (Unattested.)
  • Tobajara / Miarigois - once spoken in the interior of the state of Ceará on the Camocim River. (Unattested.)
  • Cahicahi / Caicaze / Caicai - once spoken on the lower course of the Itapecurú River, state of Maranhão. (Unattested.)
  • Jaguaribára - once spoken at the mouth of the Jaguaribare River, state of Ceará. (Unattested.)
  • Tupinambarana - once spoken on the island of the same name on the Amazon River. (Unattested.)
  • Nhengahiba / Ingahiva - once spoken in the southern part of Marajó Island, Pará. (Unattested.)
  • Nheéngatu / Niangatú / Lingoa geral - a language spoken by the mixed population on both banks of the Amazon River and in the past century used in intertribal and commercial relations.
Guarani (Karani, Abañéem) dialects
Guaranized languages
  • Shetá / Aré / Yvaparé - once spoken in the interior of the state of Paraná on the Ivaí River, now extinct.
  • Serra dos Dourados (tribe with unknown name) - in the Serra dos Dourados, state of Paraná.
  • Guayaquí / Acé - spoken by a tribe in the Cordillera de Villa Rica, Paraguay.
  • Notobotocudo / Pihtadyouai - language of an extinct tribe that lived at the sources of the Uruguai River and Iguasú River, state of Santa Catarina.
Kamayurá group
  • Kamayurá / Camayura - spoken by a small tribe on the Ferro River in the Xingú basin, state of Mato Grosso.
  • Awití / Auetö / Aweti - spoken in the same region on the Culiseú River, Mato Grosso.
  • Arawiné - little known language from the 7 de setembro River, state of Mato Grosso.
Tapirapé group
Northern group
Pará group
Guiana group
Southern group
Amazonas group
Chiriguano group
Mawé group

See also

References

  1. ^ O'Hagan, Zachary (with Keith Bartolomei, Natalia Chousou-Polydouri, Emily Clem, Erin Donnelly and Lev Michael). 2014. A Computational-phylogenetic Classification of Tupí-Guaraní and its Geographical Spread. Language Variation and Change, October 20, Chicago.
  2. ^ Loukotka, Čestmír (1968). Classification of South American Indian languages. Los Angeles: UCLA Latin American Center.

External links