Social:Catacaoan languages

From HandWiki
Short description: Extinct Peruvian language family
Catacaoan
Geographic
distribution
Piura Region, Peru
Linguistic classificationSechura–Catacao
  • Catacaoan
Subdivisions
  • Catacao
  • Colan
  • Chira
Glottologtall1235[1]
Catacao.svg
Location of the Catacaoan languages within Piura Region

The Catacaoan languages are an extinct family of three languages spoken in the Piura Region of Peru. The three languages in the family are:[2]

  • Catacao or Katakao, once spoken around the city of Catacaos
  • Colán or Kolán, once spoken between the Piura River and Chira River
  • Chira or Lachira or Tangarará, once spoken along the Chira River. It is unattested.

In Glottolog, the two attested languages, Catacao and Colán, are subsumed into the extinct Tallán language as dialects.

Vocabulary comparison

Colan and Catacao vocabulary[3][4]
English Colan Catacao
drink kum konekuk
heart ñessini-m ñiesiñi-čim
water yup yup
woman pi-m pi-čim
fire huyur guanararak
daughter hiku-m yku-čim kapuk
son hiku-m yku-čim
river yup [water] tuyurup
brother pua-m pua-čim
grass aguakol taguakol
man yatadla-m aszat
moon nag nam
eat agua agua-čim
sea amum amaum
mother nu-m ni-čim
dead dlakati ynata-klakatu
bird yaiau yeya
bone dladlapi-ram lalape-čen
rain (v.) ñar ñarakñakitutin
rain (n.) nug guayakinum
fish llas llas
branch yabiti-ram yabike
rule (v.) čañar čañak
sister puru-m puru-čim
sun turinap nap
earth dlurum durum
trunk tuku-ram taksikáas
wind kuiat ñap vik

Genetic relations

Loukota compares Catacaoan to the Culle language and the Sechura language but does not make any claims about genetic relatedness.[3]

References

  1. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds (2017). "Tallán". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. https://glottolog.org/resource/languoid/id/tall1235. 
  2. Loukotka, Čestmír (1968). Classification of South American Indian Languages. Los Angeles: UCLA Latin American Center. https://archive.org/details/classificationof0007louk. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 Loukotka, Čestmír (1949). "Sur quelques langues inconnues de l'Amérique du Sud" (in fr). Lingua Posnaniensis 1: 53–82. 
  4. Loukotka was based in the list of the bishop Baltasar Jaime Martínez Compañón: «43 voces castellanas traducidas alas ocho lenguas que hablan los indios de la costa, sierra y montañas del obispado de Trujillo del Perú, por el obispo de esta misma ciudad, baltazar Martinez de Compañón», written circa 1780.