Yine is the principle variety of Piro, which is a Maipurean language spoken in Peru. It belongs to the Piro group which also includes the nearly extinct Iñapari and Apurinã. The Manchineri who live in Brazil (Acre) and reportedly also in Bolivia speak what may be a dialect of Yine (Aikhenvald, Kaufman). A vocabulary labeled Canamaré is "so close to Piro [Yine] as to count as Piro", but has been a cause of confusion with the unrelated Kanamaràlanguage.
Names
This language is also called Contaquiro, Pira, Piro, Pirro, Simiranch, or Simirinche. Cushichineri has been reported as a language, but is actually a family name used with Whites (Matteson 1965). The name Mashco has sometimes been incorrectly applied to the Yine. (See Mashco Piro.)
Varieties
Varieties of Piro (Yine):
Demographics
As of 2000, essentially all of the 4,000 ethnic Yine people speak the language. They live in the Ucayali and Cusco Departments, near the Ucayali River, and near the Madre de Dios River in the Madre de Dios Region in Peru. Literacy is comparatively high. A dictionary has been published in the language and the language is taught alongside Spanish in some Yine schools. There are also a thousand speakers of Machinere.
Phonology
Vowels
- Vowels are nasalized after .
Consonants
- /w/ is heard as a bilabial approximant when before a close vowel.
- /n/ is heard as before /k/.
- /þ/ can be trilled when in word-initial position.
Syntax
Piro has an activeâÂÂstative syntax.
Notes
Further reading
References
- Matteson, Esther. (1965). The Piro (Arawakan) language. University of California Publications in Linguistics, 42. Berkeley y Los Angeles: University of California Press. (Es la tesis para doctorado presentada en 1963 a la University of California, Los Angeles.)
- Nies, Joyce, compilador. (1986). Diccionario piro (Tokanchi gikshijikowaka-steno). Serie LingüÃÂstica Peruana, 22. Yarinacocha: Ministerio de Educación and Instituto LingüÃÂstico de Verano.
- Parker, Stephen. (1989). "Un análisis métrico del acento en el piro". Estudios etno-lingüÃÂsticos, Stephen Parker (ed.), pp. 114âÂÂ125. Documento de trabajo 21. Yarinacocha, Pucallpa: Ministerio de Educación e Instituto LingüÃÂstico de Verano.
- SolÃÂs Fonseca, Gustavo. (2003). Lenguas en la amazonÃÂa peruana. Lima: edición por demanda.
- UrquÃÂa Sebastián, Rittma. (2006). Yine. Ilustraciones fonéticas de lenguas amerindias, ed. Stephen A. Marlett. Lima: SIL International and Universidad Ricardo Palma.
- UrquÃÂa Sebastián, Rittma and Wagner UrquÃÂa Sebastián. (2009). Diccionario yineâÂÂcastellano