Tarairiú language

Tarairiú AKA Caratiú is an extinct and very poorly known language of eastern Brazil. The Tarairiu nation was divided into several tribes: the Janduí, Kanindé, Paiaku (Pajacú, Bajacú), Jenipapo, Jenipabuçu, Javó, Kamaçu, Tukuriju, Ariu, and "Xukuru" / Xacó.

Tarairiú
Otschukayana
Native toBrazil
RegionPernambuco, Paraíba, Rio Grande do Norte, Ceará
Extinct(date missing)
unclassified
Language codes
ISO 639-3None (mis)
Glottologtara1303  Tarairiú[1]
jeni1237  Jenipapo-Kaninde[2]

It was once spoken between the Assú River and Apodi River in Rio Grande do Norte.[3]

Extinct varieties

Below is a list of extinct Tarairiú language varieties listed by Loukotka (1968), including names of unattested varieties.[3]

  • Xoró - once spoken on the Apodi River, state of Rio Grande do Norte.
  • Janduí - once spoken between the Apodi River and Açú River, Rio Grande do Norte.
  • Payacu - once spoken in Rio Grande do Norte in the Serra do Coité, Serra de São Bento and Serra Calabouço between the Jaguaribe River and Apodi River.
  • Panatí - once spoken in the state of Paraíba in the Serra Panatí and near Villaflor.
  • Miñari - once spoken in the valley of the Apodi River, Rio Grande do Norte.
  • Panahi - language of the neighbors of the Miñari tribe, Rio Grande do Norte.
  • Canindé - once spoken at the sources of the Choró River, state of Ceará.
  • Genipapo - Portuguese name of an extinct language on the Choró River.
  • Camamu - once spoken on the Acaraú River, Ceará.
  • Itañá / Baturité - once spoken in the Serra de Baturité, Ceará.
  • Candodú - language of a neighboring tribe of the Jucá, Quixetó and Caratiú.
  • Caratiú - once spoken at the sources of the Poti River and in the valley of the Triá River, Ceará.
  • Camasú - once spoken in Ceará state at the sources of the Acaratí-guasú River
  • Acriú - once spoken on the left bank of the Acaraná River, Ceará.
  • Anasé - spoken in Ceará, on the right bank of the Acaraú River.

Classification

The language is attested only through a few word lists. A few words resemble those of neighboring Kariri (and other Macro-Je) and Xukuru languages, but not enough to support a genealogical connection. Kaufman (1994) reports that "not even Greenberg dares classify this language".

Vocabulary

Some of the recorded words:

GlossTarairiú[4]
'water'teu
'fire'kiro-kia, intoá
'stone'kebra
'head'kreká
'hair'unj
'ear'bandulak
'eye'pigó
'nose'korõza
'mouth'moz
'tooth'cidolé
'hand'koreké
'foot'poyá
'man'xenupre
'woman'moela, moéça
'son'ako
'house'sok
'eat'kringó
'sleep'gonyã

Resemblances with Macro-Jê languages are in kebra 'stone' (Proto-Je *kɛn), kreká 'head' (*krã), koreké 'hand' (*-ĩkra), and poyá 'foot' (*par). Resemblances with Xukuru are kiro- 'fire' (Xukuru kiyo), kringó 'eat' (kringgo 'feed'), sok 'house' (šekh).

Loukotka (1968) gives three words in Tarairiú:[3]

  • agh 'sun'
  • kén 'stone'
  • ake 'tobacco'

For a more extensive vocabulary list of Tarairiú by de Souza (2009),[5] see the corresponding Portuguese article.

References

  1. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Tarairiú". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
  2. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Jenipapo-Kaninde". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
  3. Loukotka, Čestmír (1968). Classification of South American Indian languages. Los Angeles: UCLA Latin American Center.
  4. J. de Souza Santos, 2009, p. 735-739
  5. de Souza Santos, Juvandi. 2009. Cariri e Tarairiú?: culturas tapuais nos sertões da Paraíba. Doutorado em História. Porto Alegre: Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul.
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