my-server
← Wiki

Purian languages

The Purian languages are a pair of dialects of a singular extinct language, of eastern Brazil:

Coropó (Koropó), once spoken in Minas Gerais and Rio de Janeiro, was added by Loukotka (1935), but removed again by Ramirez et al. (2015).

Purian was initially part of the Macro-Jê proposal. However, when Coropó is removed, there are not sufficient lexical connections to maintain this classification. Coroado and Puri are mutually intelligible with each other, and they are no longer regarded as being in the Macro-Jê family.

The Waitaká and Maromomin languages, both extinct, are possibly belonging to the Purian family, but this is not confirmable as no linguistic information was recorded.

Geographical distribution

The Purian languages were spoken in a continuous region stretching from the Preto River to the Paraíba River (from Queluz, São Paulo to Paraibuna, São Paulo). The Puri occupied the Upper Paraíba do Sul River up to Queluz, São Paulo, and the Coroado from the Pomba River to the Doce River in Minas Gerais.

Internal classification

Dialects

Mason (1950) lists the following dialects of Coroado and Puri:

  • Coroado
  • Maritong
  • Cobanipake
  • Tamprun
  • Sasaricon
  • Puri
  • Sabonan
  • Wambori
  • Shaynishuna

Other languages

Extinct and unknown languages that may have been Purian languages:

Attestation

The Purian languages are only attested by a few word lists from the 19th century. The lists are:

Puri:

Coroado:

  • Martius (1863: 195–198), collected in 1818 near São João do Presídio
  • Eschwege (2002: 122–127), collected in 1815 near São João do Presídio
  • Marlière (Martius, 1889: 198–207), collected between 1817 and 1819 at missions along the lower Paraíba do Sul River
  • Saint-Hilaire (2000: 33), collected in 1816 near Valença, Rio de Janeiro

Vocabulary

Loukotka (1968) lists the following basic vocabulary items.

Proto-language

Silva Neto (2007) reconstructs 47 Proto-Purian forms. Reconstituted forms by Silva Neto (2007) for Puri, Coroado, and Koropó synthesized from historical sources are also provided.

However, similarities in Koropó were later found to be loanwords by Ramirez et al. (2015), who classifies Koropó as Maxakalían. Nikulin (2020) also classifies Koropó as Macro-Jê (Maxakalían branch).

References

Bibliography

  • Campbell, Lyle. (1997). American Indian languages: The historical linguistics of Native America. New York: Oxford University Press. .
  • Kaufman, Terrence. (1994). The native languages of South America. In C. Mosley & R. E. Asher (Eds.), Atlas of the world's languages (pp. 46–76). London: Routledge.

External links