Matsés language

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Matsés, (Mayoruna)
Spoken in: Perú, Brazil
Total speakers: ~2,000
Language family: American
 Panoan
  Mayoruna
   Matsés, (Mayoruna)
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: mcf
ISO 639-3: mcf

The Matsés language (sometimes called Mayoruna) is an indigenous language of the Peruvian and Brazilian Amazon basin which belongs to the Panoan language family and is spoken by ca. 2000 Matsés people (Fleck 2006). The language is vigorous and is spoken by all age groups in the Matsés communities. In the Matsés communities several other indigenous languages are also spoken by women who have been captured from neighboring tribes and some mixture of the languages occur (Fields & Wise 1976 p.1, Fleck 2006 p. 542).

Contents

[edit] Geography

The language is spoken in the Loreto Region of Peru and the Amazonas state of Brazil, along the Javari River and its tributaries. A large community is found at Yaquerana in the Maynas Province of Loreto.

[edit] Genealogy

Along with the languages of the Matis and Korubo peoples, Matsés constitutes the Mayoruna subgroup of the Panoan languages.

[edit] Phonology

According to Fleck (2003) Matses has six vowels and 18 consonants.

[edit] Vowels

The vowel system of Matses is peculiar in that both of its back vowels are unrounded. They should accurately be represented as [ɯ] and [ɤ] but the convention is to transscribe them with <u> and <o>.(Fleck 2003, p. 72)

Front Central Back
Close
(high)
i ɨ u [ɯ]
Mid ɛ o [ɤ]
Open
(low)
ɑ

[edit] Consonants

The consonants of Matsés according to Fleck (2003).

Consonants  Labial  Alveolar  Retroflex  Palatal  Velar  Glottal 
Stop  p b t d     k (ʔ)
Fricative    s ʂ ʃ    
Affricates    ts    
Nasal  m n   (ŋ)  
Approximant  w   j      
Flap      ɾ      

[edit] Grammar

The Matses language is primarily suffixing and highly synthetic with many morphological possibilities and potentially very long words. There is body-part prefixation, but no productive noun incorporation (Fleck 2006b). Inflectional and class-changing morphology is fusional, while non-class-changing derivational morphology is mostly agglutinative. Matsés is predominantly “dependent-marking” and uses ergative/absolutive case-marking. Its basic word order is SOV.

[edit] References

  • Fields, Harriet L. & Mary Ruth Wise (1976) Bosquejo de la Fonología Matses (Mayoruna), Datos Etno-Lingüisticos No 31, SIL, Lima Peru[1] (Spanish)
  • Fleck, David W. (2003) A grammar of Matses. PhD. Dissertation presented at Rice University found at Rice University Electronic Theses and Dissertations
  • Fleck, David W. (2006) Antipassive in Matses. Studies in Language, Volume 30, Number 3, pp. 551-573(23)
  • Fleck, David W. (2006b) "Body-Part Prefixes in Matses: Derivation or Noun Incorporation?", IJAL 72,1, 59-96.