Urequena language
The extinct Urequena language (also Urekena or Arequena) is a closely related dialect to Andoque.[1] It is known only from an unpublished word list by Austrian naturalist Johann Natterer that was probably recorded in June or July 1831.[2]
| Urequena | |
|---|---|
| Arequena, Uerequena, Urekena | |
| Native to | Putumayo River (in Colombia, Peru, or Brazil) | 
| Native speakers | extinct | 
| Andoque–Urequena
 
 | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | – | 
| Glottolog | urek1234 | 
Vocabulary
    
The table below adapted from Jolkesky (2016) shows similarities between Urequena and Andoque.[3]: 285 The Urequena (Uerequena, Arequena,[4] Orelhudos) data is from an undated 19-century manuscript by Austrian naturalist Johann Natterer.[5] Natterer gives the Içá River (or Putumayo River) as the location of the language.[2]
- English gloss 
 (translated)- Portuguese gloss 
 (Jolkesky 2016)- Urequena 
 (transcription)- Urequena 
 (IPA)- Andoque - 1.S (I) - 1.S - no-, nö- - no-, nə- - no-, o- - 3.S.INDEF - 3.S.INDEF - ni-, in- - ni-, in- - ni-, i- - 1.P (we) - 1.P - kau- - kau- - ka(a)- - water - água - da u koü - daukʷɯ - dʌʉhʉ - bow - arco - bàarù - baaru - pãhã-se ‘arco’ ("bow") - banana - banana - kòka-rè - kɔka-ræ - kɒkɒ-pɤ - arm - braço - -nùka - -nũka - -nõka - head - cabeça - -nari - -nari - -tai: - canoe - canoa - pau kö - paukə - pukə̃ - rain - chuva - da oié - dawiæ - dɤʔi - finger - dedo - -ni-rui - -ni-rui - -si-domĩ - tooth - dente - -konì - -konĩ - -kónĩ - stomach - estômago - -tuu - -tuː - -tura - star - estrela - vuai kùi - βuaikui - fʉəkhʉ - tongue - língua - -tschoru - -ʧoru - -sonə̃ - axe - machado - föü - ɸəɯ - pʌʌ - maize - milho - schuu - ʃuu - soboi - nose - nariz - -vüta - -βɯta - -pɤta - eye - olho - -jakoü - -jakoɯ - -ákʌ - calf, lower leg - pantorrilha - -va - -βa - -pã ‘perna’ ("leg") - leg - perna - -va-tana - -βa-tana - -pã ‘perna’ ("leg"); -tanə̃ ‘osso’ ("bone") - net - rede - kooma͠n - koːmã - komə̃ - nail - unha - govü-tarü - ɡoβɯ-tarɯ - -si-kopɤ 
See also
    
    
References
    
- Johann Natterer's Linguistic Heritage.
- Johann Natterer and the Amazonian languages.
- Jolkesky, Marcelo Pinho De Valhery. 2016. Estudo arqueo-ecolinguístico das terras tropicais sul-americanas. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Brasília.
- Alem do Brazil - Johann Natterer e as coleções etnográficas da expedição austríaca de 1817 a 1835 ao Brasil.
- The Ethnographic Collection of Johann Natterer.
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.