Warao (also known as Guarauno, Guarao, Warrau) is the native language of the Warao people. A language isolate, it is spoken by about 33,000 people primarily in northern Venezuela, Guyana and Suriname. It is notable for its unusual objectâÂÂsubjectâÂÂverb word order. The 2015 Venezuelan film Gone with the River was spoken in Warao.
Warao appears to be a language isolate, unrelated to any recorded language in the region or elsewhere. Terrence Kaufman (1994) included it in his hypothetical Macro-Paezan family, but the necessary supporting work was never done. Julian Granberry connected many of the grammatical forms, including nominal and verbal suffixes, of Warao to the Timucua language of North Florida, also a language isolate. However, he has also derived Timucua morphemes from Muskogean, Chibchan, Paezan, Arawakan, and other Amazonian languages, suggesting multi-language creolization as a possible explanation for these similarities.
Granberry noted "Waroid" vocabulary items in TaÃÂno, such as or [nosái] in the Ciboney dialect (cf. Warao ) and in Classic TaÃÂno (cf. Warao ).
He also finds such similarities with Guajiro; from toponymic evidence it seems that the Warao or a related people once occupied Goajiro country. Granberry & Vescelius (2004) note that toponymic evidence suggests that the pre-Taino Macorix language of Hispaniola and the Guanahatabey language of Cuba may have been Waroid languages as well.
Jolkesky (2016) notes that there are lexical similarities with the Cariban, Arutani, Jukude, and Sape language families due to contact within an earlier Guiana Highlands interaction sphere.
The language had an estimated 28,100 speakers in Venezuela as of 2007. The Warao people live chiefly in the Orinoco Delta region of northeastern Venezuela, with smaller communities in southwestern Trinidad (Trinidad and Tobago), western Guyana and Suriname. The language is considered endangered by UNESCO.
Historical sources mention ethnic groups in the Orinoco Delta such as Siawani (Chaguanes), Veriotaus (Farautes), and Tiuitiuas (TibitÃÂbis) that spoke Warao or languages closely related to modern Warao. Other extinct groups include:
Loukotka (1968) lists the following varieties:
Mason (1950) lists:
The Warao consonant inventory is small, but not quite as small as many other South American inventories.
The labial plosive is usually realized as voiced . has an allophone word-initially and when between and .
There are five oral vowels and five nasal vowels . After , in word-initial position, becomes .
The language's basic word order has been analyzed as objectâÂÂsubjectâÂÂverb, a very rare word order among nominativeâÂÂaccusative languages such as Warao.
Loukotka (1968) lists the following basic vocabulary items for Uarao and Mariusa, both of which he considers dialects of the Uarao (Warao) parent language.