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Macro-Jê (also spelled Macro-Gê) is a medium-sized language stock in South America, mostly in Brazil but also in the Chiquitanía region in Santa Cruz, Bolivia, as well as (formerly) in small parts of Argentina and Paraguay. It is centered on the Jê language family, with most other branches currently being single languages due to recent extinctions.

Macro-Jê
Macro-Gê
Geographic
distribution
Linguistic classificationJe–Tupi–Carib?
  • Macro-Jê
Subdivisions
Glottolognucl1710  (Nuclear–Macro–Je)
The Macro-Jê families of Kaufman's conception

Families


The Macro-Jê family was first proposed in 1926, and has undergone moderate modifications since then. Kaufman (1990) finds the proposal "probable".[1]

Eduardo Ribeiro of the University of Chicago finds no evidence to classify Fulniô (Yatê) and Guató as Macro-Jê, pace Kaufman, nor Otí, pace Greenberg. Ribeiro does include Chiquitano, pace Rodrigues.[2]:263–4

These languages share irregular morphology with the Tupi and Carib families, and Rodrigues (2000) and Ribeiro connect them all as a Je–Tupi–Carib family.

Pache (2018) suggests a distant genetic relationship between Macro-Jê and Chibchan.[3]

Glottolog accepts Jean, Krenak (Aimore), Karaja, Maxakalian, Ofaie, Rikbaktsa, and Yabutian (Jabuti). Lexical parallels with Kamakanan and Purian have yet to be corroborated with reconstructions; the similarities with Purian disappear once Coropo is reclassified as Maxakalian. It notes suggestive grammatical similarities with Bororoan, Kariri, and Chiquitano, of the kind also shared with Tupian and Cariban, but little lexical evidence.


Jolkesky (2016)


Jolkesky (2016) proposes the following internal classification of Macro-Jê:[4]:794–795

Macro-Jê

Nikulin (2020)


Nikulin (2020) proposes the following internal classification of Macro-Jê:[5]

Macro-Jê

Nikulin (2020) does not accept the following languages and language families as part of Macro-Jê.

However, Nikulin (2020) considers Chiquitano to be a sister of Macro-Jê.[5]


Proto-language


Proto-Macro-Jê
Reconstruction ofMacro-Jê languages
Lower-order reconstructions
  • Proto-Jabutí
  • Proto-Jê
  • Proto-Trans–São Francisco

Proto-Macro-Jê is notable for having relatively few consonants and a large vocalic inventory. There are also complex onsets with rhotics, as well as contrastive nasalization for vowels.

Phonological inventory of Proto-Macro-Jê as reconstructed by Nikulin (2020):[5]

For a list of Proto-Macro-Jê reconstructions by Nikulin (2020), see the corresponding Portuguese article.


Language contact


Many Macro-Jê languages have been in contact with various languages of the Tupí-Guaraní family, which resulted in lexical borrowings. For instance, Ribeiro (2012) finds a number of Apyãwa loanwords in Karajá (such as bèhyra ‘carrying basket’, kòmỹdawyraandu beans’, hãrara ‘macaw (sp.)’, tarawè ‘parakeet (sp.)’, txakohi ‘Txakohi ceremonial mask’, hyty ‘garbage (Javaé dialect)’) as well as several Karajá loans in Apyãwa (tãtã ‘banana’, tori ‘White man’, marara ‘turtle stew’, irãwore ‘Irabure ceremonial mask’), Parakanã, and Asuriní of Trocará (sata ‘banana’, toria ‘White man’).[2]:10–12 Loans from one of the Língua Geral varieties (Língua Geral Paulista or Língua Geral Amazônica) have been found in Karajá (jykyra ‘salt’, mỹkawa ‘firearm’, brùrè ‘hoe’, kòmỹta ‘beans’, mabèra ‘paper (Xambioá dialect)’, ĩtajuwa ‘money (dated)’), Maxakalí (ãmãnex ‘priest’, tãyũmak ‘money’, kãmãnok ‘horse’, tapayõg ‘Black man’), Ritual Maxakalí (kõnõmĩy ‘boy’, kõyãg ‘woman’, petup ‘tobacco’, pakõm ‘banana’, tapuux ‘foreigner’, xetukxeka ‘potato’), and Krenak (tuŋ ‘flea’, krai ‘non-Indigenous person, foreigner’).[6] Chiquitano has borrowed extensively from an unidentified Tupí-Guaraní variety; one example is Chiquitano takones [takoˈnɛs] ‘sugarcane’, borrowed from a form close to Paraguayan Guaraní takuare'ẽ ‘sugarcane’.[7]:8

Some Macro-Jê languages from different branches have secondarily contacted with each other, also resulting in lexical loans. Ribeiro (2012), for instance, identifies several Karajá loans in Mẽbêngôkre, especially in the dialect spoken by the Xikrin group. These loans are thought to have entered Mẽbêngôkre from the variety spoken by the Xambioá group of the Karajá people. Examples include warikoko (Kayapó dialect) or watkoko (Xikrin dialect) ‘tobacco pipe’, rara ‘kind of basket’, wiwi ‘song, chant’, bikwa ‘relative, friend’, bero ‘puba flour’, borrowed from Karajá werikòkò, lala, wii, bikòwa, bèrò.[2]:13

Loanwords from Brazilian Portuguese are found in many, if not all, Macro-Jê languages spoken in Brazil. Examples from Maxakalí include kapex ‘coffee’, komenok ‘blanket’, kapitõg ‘captain’, pẽyõg ‘beans’, mug ‘bank’, tenemiyam ‘TV’ (borrowed from Portuguese café, cobertor, capitão, feijão, banco, televisão);[6] in Karajá, Ribeiro (2012) documents the Portuguese loans nieru ‘money’ and maritò ‘suit, jacket’ (from dinheiro, paletó), among others.[2]:18

There is a significant number of loanwords from Chiquitano or from an extinct variety close to Chiquitano in Camba Spanish, including bi ‘genipa’, masi ‘squirrel’, peni ‘lizard’, peta ‘turtle, tortoise’, jachichicha leftover’, jichi ‘worm; jichi spirit’, among many others.[7]

Jolkesky (2016) notes that there are lexical similarities with Arawakan languages due to contact.[4]


See also



Further reading



References


  1. Kaufman, Terrence. (1990). Language history in South America: What we know and how to know more. In D. L. Payne (Ed.), Amazonian linguistics: Studies in lowland South American languages (pp. 13–67). Austin: University of Texas Press. ISBN 0-292-70414-3.
  2. Ribeiro, Eduardo Rivail (2012). A grammar of Karajá (Ph.D. dissertation). Chicago: University of Chicago.
  3. Pache, Matthias J. 2018. Contributions to Chibchan Historical Linguistics. Doctoral dissertation, Universiteit Leiden.
  4. Jolkesky, Marcelo Pinho de Valhery (2016). Estudo arqueo-ecolinguístico das terras tropicais sul-americanas (Ph.D. dissertation) (2 ed.). Brasília: Universidade de Brasília.
  5. Nikulin, Andrey (2020). Proto-Macro-Jê: um estudo reconstrutivo (PDF) (Ph.D. dissertation). Brasília: Universidade de Brasília.
  6. Nikulin, Andrey; Silva, Mário André Coelho da (2020). "As línguas Maxakalí e Krenák dentro do tronco Macro-Jê". Cadernos de Etnolingüística. 8 (1): 1–64.
  7. Nikulin, Andrey (2020). "Contacto de lenguas en la Chiquitanía". Revista Brasileira de Línguas Indígenas. 2 (2): 5–30. doi:10.18468/rbli.2019v2n2.p05-30.



На других языках


- [en] Macro-Jê languages

[es] Lenguas macro-ye

Macro-Ye (también escrito como macro-Gê y macro-Jê) es un conjunto de lenguas de América del Sur que en la opinión de los especialistas forman macrofamilia, que incluye a la familia de lenguas ye (jê) y otras lenguas de Brasil. Como unidad filogenética, este grupo fue propuesto por primera vez en 1926 por W. Schmidt y fue mantenido después con modificaciones que varían de un autor a otro. Kaufman (1990) encuentra la hipótesis de parentesco filogenético como "probable".

[fr] Langues macro-jê

Le groupe macro-jê (également orthographié macro-ge, macro-gê ou macro-je), comprend 32 langues d'Amérique du Sud, principalement du Brésil et pour l'une d'elles de Bolivie (chiquitano). La famille jê-kaingang est la plus importante de ce groupe.

[it] Lingue macro-gê

Il gruppo di lingue Macro-Gê (anche denominato Macro-Jê) è un ipotetico macrolinguaggio del Sud America centrato sulla Famiglia linguistica Jê, con tutti gli altri rami, ormai ridotti a singole lingue, a causa di recenti estinzioni delle altre lingue che avrebbero fatto parte del macrolinguaggio.

[ru] Языки макро-же

Языки макро-же (Macro-Jê), реже макро-хе (Macro-Gê) — гипотетическая макросемья индейских языков Южной Америки, ядром которой традиционно считается семья языков же. Макросемья впервые предложена в 1926 году, с тех пор гипотеза была модифицирована, однако всё ещё считается «допустимой» лингвистами-американистами (Кауфман, 1990)[1].



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