Yaio language
Appearance
(Redirected from Yebarana language)
Yao | |
---|---|
Jaoi | |
Yebarana | |
Native to | Trinidad, French Guiana |
Era | 17th century |
Cariban
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | None (mis ) |
Glottolog | yaoa1239 |
Yao (Jaoi, Yaoi, Yaio, Anacaioury) is an extinct Cariban language of Trinidad and French Guiana, attested in a single 1640 word list recorded by Joannes de Laet. It is thought that the Yao people migrated from the Orinoco to the islands perhaps a century earlier, after the Kaliña.[1] The name 'Anacaioury' is that of a number of chiefs encountered over a century or so.
Yao is too poorly attested to classify within Cariban with any confidence, though Terrence Kaufman links it to the extinct Tiverikoto.[2] A few of the attested words are:
nonna or noene 'moon', weyo 'sun', capou 'céu', chirika 'star', pepeïte 'wind', kenape 'rain', soye 'earth', parona 'sea', ouapoto 'fire', aroua 'jaguar', pero 'dog' (from Spanish).[citation needed]
References
[edit]- ^ Tassinari (2003) No Bom da Festa, p 122–125
- ^ Kaufman, Terrence (1994). Moseley, Christopher; Asher, R.E. (eds.). Atlas of the World's Languages. New York: Routledge. pp. 73–74. ISBN 0-415-01925-7.
Categories:
- Cariban languages
- Extinct languages of South America
- Indigenous languages of the Caribbean
- Languages of French Guiana
- Languages extinct in the 17th century
- Languages of Trinidad and Tobago
- Indigenous peoples in French Guiana
- Indigenous peoples in Trinidad and Tobago
- Indigenous languages of the Americas stubs