Iatê language
Yatê, or Fulniô, is a language isolate of Brazil, and the only indigenous language remaining in the northeastern part of that country. The two dialects, Fulniô and Yatê, are very close. The Fulniô dialect is used primarily during a three-month religious retreat. Today, the language is spoken in Águas Belas, Pernambuco.
The language is also called Carnijó, and alternate spellings are Fornió, Furniô, ''Yahthe, and Iatê''.
Classification
Kaufman classified Fulniô as one of the Macro-Jê languages. However, Eduardo Ribeiro of the University of Chicago, who is working on large-scale classification of Brazilian languages, finds no evidence to support this, and treats it as an isolate. Jolkesky again has it as Macro-Jê, but Nikulin again excludes it.Phonology
Fulniô has the following sounds:Consonants
- is rare.
- A glottal stop occurs, but is considered epenthetic.
- can be heard as a velar nasal before a velar stop.
- can be heard as a palatal lateral before a post-alveolar affricate, and can be heard as an alveolar lateral flap when following fricatives, nasals or stops.
Vowels
Fulniô has 8 vowels.| Front | Central | Back | |
| Closed | |||
| Near-close | |||
| Close-mid | |||
| Open-mid | |||
| Open |
- can be heard as nasalized when preceding a nasal consonant in closed syllables, or word-finally after a nasal consonant.
All seven have nasalized and glottalized allophones, depending on adjacent consonants. Vowels occur long and short. However, long vowels result from assimilation of, are pronounced in one dialect, and so are analyzed as sequences.
Tones are high and low. Contour tones occur allophonically adjacent to voiced consonants. Final syllables tend to lack a tone contrast, and final vowels may be devoiced or dropped.
There are no vowel sequences; vowels either coalesce or are separated by a glottal stop. Consonant clusters are limited to two consonants, apart from a possible additional, with the maximum syllable being CCCVC; reduced vowels between consonants are analyzed as by Meland & Meland: 'crossing over', 'rotten'.