Pijao language
Pijao | |
---|---|
Native to | Colombia |
Region | Tolima |
Ethnicity | Pijao people |
Extinct | 1950s |
unclassified (Maipurean?) | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 |
pij |
Glottolog |
pija1235 [1] |
Pijao (Piajao, Pinao) is an unclassified indigenous American language that was spoken in the villages of Orrega, Coyaima (Koyai, Tupe) and Natagaima in the Magdalena River Valley of Colombia until the 1950s.
A small vocabulary list was collected in 1943; only 30 Pijao words and expressions are known. The few words which resemble Carib are thought to be loans; toponyms in Pijao country are also Carib. Marshall & Seijas (1973) did not detect significative connections between Pijao and other unclassified languages of the area: Colima, Muzo, Pantágora, and Panche, but these are even more poorly attested than Pijao.
Vocabulary
- amé tree
- homéro bow
- sumén to drink
- čaguála canoe
- kahírre dog
- alamán crocodile
- tínki tooth
- tána water
- nasés house
- hoté star
- nuhúgi woman
- oréma man
- yaguáde jaguar
- núna moon
- ñáma hand
- golúpa cassava
- lún eye
- oléma ear
- pegil foot
- tápe stone
- orái red
- toléma snake
- huíl sun
- tenú tobacco
Notes
References
- Marshall Durbin & Haydée Seijas (1973): "A Note on Panche, Pijao, Pantagora (Palenque), Colima and Muzo", International Journal of American Linguistics, Vol. 39, No. 1 (Jan., 1973), pp. 47–51.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, January 22, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.