Jê languages

Jê–Kaingang, Gê, Ye
Geographic
distribution
Brazil
EthnicityJê peoples
Linguistic classificationMacro-Jê
Subdivisions
  • Paraná
  • Cerrado
Language codes
Glottologjeee1236
Jê languages proper (clear yellow) and other Macro-Jê languages (dark yellow) in modern times. Shadowed area represent approximately extension in the past.

The Jê languages (also spelled , Jean, Ye, Gean), or Jê–Kaingang languages, are spoken by the Jê, a group of indigenous peoples in Brazil.

Genetic relations

The Jê family forms the core of the Macro-Jê family. Kaufman (1990) finds the proposal convincing.

Family division

Ethnologue

According to Ethnologue, the language family is as follows:

  • Northern Jê
    • Apinayé (2,300 speakers)
    • Mẽbengokre (Kayapó) (8,638 speakers)
    • Panará (Kreen Akarore) (380 speakers)
    • Suyá (350 speakers)
    • Timbira (Canela-Krayô, with the Canela and Kreye dialects) (5,100 speakers)
  • Central Jê
    • Acroá (†)
    • Xavante (9,600 speakers)
    • Xerente (1,810 speakers)
    • Xakriabá (†)
  • Southern Jê
    • Xokleng (760 speakers)
    • Kaingáng
      • Kaingáng (18,000 speakers)
      • São Paulo Kaingáng (†)
      • Ingain (†)
      • Guayana (†)

Loukotka (1968)

Below is a full list of Jê language varieties listed by Loukotka (1968), including names of unattested varieties.[1]

Ramirez (2015)

Internal classification of the Jê languages according to Ramirez, et al. (2015):[2]

  • Southern Jê (dialect continuum)
  • Northern Jê
    • Jê proper (Timbira-Kayapó dialect continuum)
      • Canela-Krahô ↔ Gavião-Krĩkati ↔ ApinajéKayapó ↔ Suyá-Tapayuna ↔ Panará-Kayapó do Sul
    • Akuwẽ (various microdialects)
      • Xavante
      • Xerente (including Xakriabá, Akroá, Gueguê)

Ramirez excludes Jaikó as a possibly spurious language.

Nikulin (2020)

According to Nikulin (2020), the internal branching of the Jê language family is as follows:[3][4]

  • Paraná
  • Cerrado
    • Akuwẽ
    • Goyaz Jê
      • Southern Kayapó
      • Northern Jê
        • Timbíra
          • Parkatêjê; Kỳikatêjê
          • Core Timbíra
            • Krikati; Pykobjê
            • Krahô; Canela (dialects: Apànjêkra, Mẽmõrtũmre)
        • Trans-Tocantins

Jaikó is treated as a separate branch of Macro-Jê.

Some sound changes and lexical innovations that define various Jê subgroups:[5]

  • Proto-Southern Jê *a < Proto-Jê
  • Proto-Cerrado *wa < Proto-Jê
  • Proto-Goyaz Jê: *am, *um, *ɨm > *ãm, *ũm, *ɨ̃m
    • Proto-Northern Jê: replacement of *kakũm ‘dry season’ (as in Panará akũŋ and Proto-Central Jê transl. mis – transl. '*wahum) with *aŋgrə
    • Proto-Timbíra: *c > *h
    • Proto-Trans-Tocantins: replacement of *a-mbə ‘eat (intransitive)’ with *ap-ku

Proto-language

Proto-Jê
Reconstruction ofJê languages
Reconstructed
ancestor

Nikulin (2020)

Proto-Jê reconstructions by Nikulin (2020):[3]

gloss Proto-Jê
‘foot’ *par
‘arm, branch’ *pañ
‘tree, wood, firewood’ *pĩm
‘to rub, to clean’ *põ
‘to leave.PL’ *pôc
‘to fart’ *pê/*pê-k
‘hungry, to want’ *prə̃m’
‘coal, ember’ *prʏ
‘road’ *pry (~ *pryn)
‘wife’ *prũ
‘to hear, to understand’ *mba
‘liver’ *mba
‘to be afraid’ *-mbaŋ’
‘DAT’ *mə̃
‘to grab, to carry’ *mbə̂
‘tail’ *mbyn
‘celestial body’ *mbyt
‘good’ *mbec
‘PL; with’ *mẽ
‘liquid’ *mbên
‘husband’ *mbɪn’
‘to go.PL’ *mũ
‘ashes’ *mbrə
‘ant’ *mbrʊm’
‘relative by marriage’ (kinship term) *mbre
‘to walk’ *wa
‘to take, to carry’ *wy
‘to untie’ *wô
‘to fly.SG’ *tə
‘tongue’ *ñũctə
‘INSTR’ *tə̃
‘strong, hard’ *tə̂t
‘to die’ *ty
‘capybara’ *k(r)Vmtym’
‘black, dark’ *tyk
‘fat’ *tom’
‘old’ *tʊm’
‘to carry’ *tu
‘horsefly’ *potu
‘NEG’ *tũ
‘to go.SG’ *tẽ
‘to dream’ *peti
‘to send’ *jandə
‘eye’ *ndəm
‘mother’ *nə̃
‘to lie.SG’ *nõ
‘bad or crooked’ *pondʊ (~ *pondʊn)
‘to hit’ *ra
‘wing; armpit’ *jara
‘celestial body’ *roñ
‘to transport liquid or to pour’ *ru
‘to leave, to abandon’ *re
‘to throw.PL’ *rẽ
‘root’ *jarê (~ *jarên)
‘to weed’ *-rê(C)
‘to look’ *rĩt
‘to weave’ *cy
‘seed’ *cym
‘to eat soft food, to suck’ *cô
‘leaf’ *côj
‘nest’ *jacê ~ *jVmcê
‘bandage, sling’ *-cĩ(C)
‘to chew’ *kapnĵa
‘bee, bumblebee’ *nĵy
‘to hang.SG’ *nĵô
‘to tickle’ *nĵê
‘to stand.SG’ *ja
‘to put vertically.SG’ *ja
‘nose’ *ñĩja
‘to eat.INTR, food’ *jañ
‘bitter’ *jə̂
‘smoke’ *ñĩjə̂
‘urine’ *jʏ
‘to sit.SG’ *ñỹ
‘tooth’ *jo
‘salt’ *kVjo
‘to tear, to rip’ *jô
‘pus’ *jʊ
‘postposition’ *jʊ
‘father’ *jʊm’
‘to hide’ *peju
‘to heat, to dry’ *nĵu
‘to sleep’ *ũt/*ñũt
‘thread, knot, cloth’ *jê (~ *jên)
‘female breast’ *ñũmjê(C)
‘vein’ *kujêk
‘to lay.SG’ *ji
‘name’ *jiji ~ *ñĩji
‘meat’ *ñĩ
‘hand (in compounds)’ *ñĩ(m)-
‘basket’ *kaj’
‘skin, bark’ *kyñ
‘lip’ *jar-kyñ
‘to dig’ *ko
‘mouth’ *jar-ko
‘sky’ *kVñko
‘fly, mosquito’ *kôp
‘tree, horn’ *kôm
‘horn’ *ñĩ-kôm
‘wind’ *kôk ~ *ka-kôk
‘to eat’ *kʊ
‘stone’ *kẽt
‘NEG’ *kêt
‘pit’ *kɪj
‘to split’ *kɪ ~ *kɪj ~ *kɪj’
‘offspring’ *kra
‘macaw’ *krat
‘head’ *krỹñ
‘knee’ *jVkrỹñ
‘chin, beak’ *krot
‘hole’ *kre
‘to plant’ *kre
‘thigh’ *krɪñ
‘to push against, to grind’ *ŋə̃(C)
‘feather, hair’ *ŋgoñ’
‘louse’ *ŋgô
‘to push against, to crumble’ *ŋũ
‘to enter.PL’ *ŋgɪ
‘toucan’ *ŋrũ (~ *ŋrũn)
‘egg’ *ŋgre
‘to dance’ *ŋgre
‘wrap’ *ŋrĩ(C)

For a more complete list of Proto-Jê reconstructions, as well as Proto-Southern Jê reconstructions, see the corresponding Portuguese article.

Ribeiro & van der Voort (2010)

Proto-Jê reconstructions by Ribeiro and van der Voort (2010):[6]

gloss Proto-Jê
‘relational prefix’ *j-
‘dative’ *mã
‘to open’ *kje
‘wing’ *j-ar
‘mouth’ *j-arkua
‘mouth’ *j-ar-
‘head’ *krã
‘feather’ *j-ar
‘path’ *prɨ
‘causativizer’ *-n
‘chief’ *paʔi
‘to suck’ *so
‘to catch’ *wɨ
‘to eat, to bite’ *ku
‘body’ *hǝ
‘to sing, to dance’ *ŋrɛ
‘to lay’ *j-i, *s-i
‘hard’ *tǝt
‘to stand’ *j-am
‘thorn’ *j-ĩ
‘to speak’ *wẽ
‘fart’ *pek
‘tree, wood, horn’ *ko
‘wood, firewood’ *pĩ
‘ashes, dust’ *mrɔ
‘to wash’ *pe
‘tongue’ *j-õtɔ
‘hand’ *j-ĩ-
‘hand’ *ɲ-ĩkra
‘to kill’ *wĩ
‘nest’ *j-ase
‘bone’ *si
‘to hear, to know’ *ma
‘egg’ *ŋrɛ
‘stone’ *kɛn
‘skin, bark’ *kɨ
‘to plant’ *krɛ
‘1st person’ *ĩj-
‘2nd person’ *a-
‘3rd person’ *ĩ-
‘3rd person’ *s-
‘pus’ *j-u, *j-ur
‘tail’ *mɨ
‘root’ *j-are
‘seed’ *sɨ
‘to sit’ *j-ã
‘hunger’ *prãm
‘earth’ *pɨka
‘to come’ *tẽm

References

  1. ^ Loukotka, Čestmír (1968). Classification of South American Indian languages. Los Angeles: UCLA Latin American Center.
  2. ^ Ramirez, Henri; Vegini, Valdir; França, Maria Cristina Victorino de (2015). "Koropó, puri, kamakã e outras línguas do Leste Brasileiro". LIAMES: Línguas Indígenas Americanas. 15 (2): 223–277. doi:10.20396/liames.v15i2.8642302.
  3. ^ a b Nikulin, Andrey (2020). "A reconstruction of Proto-Jê phonology and lexicon". Journal of Language Relationship. 17 (1–2): 93–127. doi:10.31826/jlr-2019-171-211.
  4. ^ Nikulin, Andrey. 2020. Proto-Macro-Jê: um estudo reconstrutivo. Doctoral dissertation, University of Brasília.
  5. ^ Nikulin, Andrey; De Carvalho, Fernando O. (2019). "Estudos diacrônicos de línguas indígenas brasileiras: Um panorama" (PDF). Macabéa: Revista Eletrônica do Netlli. 8 (2): 255–305. doi:10.47295/mren.v8i2.1910.
  6. ^ Ribeiro, Eduardo Rivail (2010). "Nimuendajú was right: The inclusion of the jabutí language family in the Macro-Jê stock". International Journal of American Linguistics. 76 (4): 517–570. doi:10.1086/658056. hdl:2066/86080.

Further reading