Jump to content

Tinigua language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Tiniwa language)
Tinigua
Tiniguas
Native toColombia
RegionMeta Department, Colombia; Serranía de la Macarena, Colombia
Ethnicity1[1]
Native speakers
1 (2013)[1]
Tiniguan
  • Tinigua
Language codes
ISO 639-3tit
Glottologtini1245
ELPTinigua

Tinigua (Tiniguas) is an endangered language isolate spoken in Colombia which used to form a small language family with the now extinct Pamigua language.

Final speakers

[edit]

As of 2000, Tinigua had only two remaining speakers, Sixto Muñoz (Tinigua name: Sɨsɨthio ‘knife’) and his brother, Criterio. Criterio died some time around 2005, leaving behind Sixto as the last remaining speaker of Tinigua.[2] Formerly a resident of the Serranía de la Macarena in Meta Department, Sixto Muñoz currently resides in Jiw village of Barrancón, near the main town of Guaviare Department.[3]: 1029  They lived in Meta Department, between the Upper Guayabero and Yari rivers.[4]

Muñoz also speaks Spanish and is thought to have been born somewhere from 1924-1929. He has five children, but he chose not to teach them Tinigua because they would not have any use for it.[5]

Below is a comparison of Tinigua forms elicited from Sixto Muñoz in 2019 compared with Tinigua and Pamigua words recorded in Castellví (1940).[6][3]

English gloss Tinigua (Sixto Muñoz) Tinigua (Castellví) Pamigua (Castellví)
eye sıt̵́i zőti, zɘ̀ti sete, xete
water ɲikʷájtʃi ñikwáiši nikagé
fire hikʰítsa ičísa ekísa
woman ɲísa ñíza, ñísä nixtá
dog hanó xamno, xámiu xannó
jaguar kʰíɲa ~ tʃíɲa číña, ǰíña, xiña xiñaga
corn jóʔhá t’óka, tióka xukxá
manioc komáha xaačá xoayoa
let's go minahá manaxǎí menáxa
chili pepper tsákha ţáxa saxa
good hajohási ayuxáǐ ayoxagua (‘good morning’)
plantain mandótha madóxa mandotá
spirit hamajiéha pan-kianóso kinoxá (‘enemy’)
man tsɨtsía psäţeyá piksiga
five tsátokwahá (tsátho-kwaʔa ‘left.side-hand’) xopa-kuáxa saksu-kuaxa
eleven tapásaɲóha čimatóse-kiésä čipsé ipa-kiaxi

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Tinigua at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. ^ ""Su cultura y lengua morirán con él"". BBC News Mundo (in Spanish).
  3. ^ a b Epps, Patience; Michael, Lev, eds. (2023). Amazonian Languages: Language Isolates. Volume II: Kanoé to Yurakaré. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-043273-2.
  4. ^ Tobal, Juan Pablo (21 February 2013). "El último Tinígua" (in Spanish). La Voz.
  5. ^ ""Su cultura y lengua morirán con él"". BBC News Mundo (in Spanish).
  6. ^ Castellví, F. Marcelino de. 1940. La lengua tinigua. Journal de la Société des Americanistes de Paris 32. 93–101.

Further reading

[edit]