Miskito grammar


The Miskito language, the language of the Miskito people of the Atlantic coast of Nicaragua and Honduras, is a member of the Misumalpan language family and also a strongly Germanic-influenced language. Miskito is as widely spoken in Honduras and Nicaragua as Spanish, it is also an official language in the Atlantic region of these countries. With more than 8 million speakers, Miskito has positioned in the second place in both countries after Spanish. Miskito is not only spoken in Central America, but in Europe, the USA, Canada and in many other Latin American countries. Miskito used to be a royal state language in the 16th to 19th dynasties of the Miskito Kingdom.

Miskito alphabet

The Miskito alphabet is the same as the English alphabet. It has 21 consonants and 5 vowels.
A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z.

Phonology

Phonemes

  • The exact status of vowel length is not clear; long vowels are not consistently indicated in Miskito writing.

Suprasegmentals

Word stress is generally on the first syllable of each word.

Noun phrase

Ligature

Ligature is a term for describing a grammatical feature of Miskito traditionally referred to with less accuracy in the Miskito context as 'construct'. A ligature is a morpheme which occurs when a noun is linked to some other element in the noun phrase. In Miskito, most of the elements that require the presence of ligature are ones that precede the head noun:
TypeExample
Determinersbaha araska 'that horse'
Adjectivesaraska karna ba 'the horse is strong'
Dependent possessorsJohan araska 'Johan's horse'
Relative clausesKati atkan araska ba 'the horse that Kati bought'

Ligature takes a variety of forms:
FormExamples
-ka suffixaras 'horse' → araskakabu 'sea' → kabukapiuta 'snake' → piutka
-ika suffixkipla 'rock' → kiplika
-ya suffixtasba 'land' → tasbayatala 'blood' → talia
-a- INFIXsilak 'needle' → sialaka utla 'house' → watla
-ka suffix + -a- INFIXduri 'boat' → duar'ka
-ya suffix + -a- INFIXsula 'deer' → sual'ia
irregularplun 'food' → patadiara 'thing' → dukia

Some nouns take no ligature morpheme; these mostly denote parts of the body or kinship, although there is only an imperfect correlation between membership of this morphological class and semantic inalienability.

Possession

preposed particlesuffix forminfix form
1-i-i-'my, our '
2-m-m-'your '
3ai'his, her, its, their'
1+2wan'our '

Pronouns and adverbs

The personal pronouns differentiate three persons and also have an exclusive/inclusive distinction in the first person plural. The general plural morpheme nani or -nan is added to form plurals. Use of these pronouns is optional when person is indexed in the possessed form, relational or verb group.
SingularPlural

yang 'I/me'
man 'you'
witin 'he/him, she/her, it'

yang nani or yangnan 'we/us '
man nani or mannan 'you'
witin nani or witinnan 'they/them'
yawan 'we/us '

The pronouns are not case-specific, and may, under comparable conditions, be marked by the same postpositions as other noun phrases.
PronounsPlace adverbsOther adverbs
Demonstrative
  • naha 'this'
  • baha 'that'
  • nahara, naura 'here'
  • bahara, bukra 'there'
  • naku, nan 'like this'
  • baku, ban 'like that, so'
  • mahka, nanara, nawas 'now'
  • bara 'then'
  • Interrogative
  • ya? 'who?'
  • dia? 'what?'
  • dikia? 'what? '
  • ani? 'which one?'
  • anira? 'where?'
  • nahki? 'how?'
  • ahkia? 'when?'
  • Negative polarity
  • diara kumsin 'anything'
  • upla kumsin 'anybody'
  • kumsin 'any'
  • plis kumsin 'anywhere'
  • piu kumsin 'ever'
  • Postpositions

    ra 'to, in, at...'
    kat
    wina
    'to, as far as'
    'from'

    • Bilwi wina Lempira kat 'from Bilwi to Lempira'
    • utla wina 'out of the house'
    wal'with '
  • Piter tuktika ba wal 'with Piter's child'
  • rais bins wal 'rice with beans'
  • baha lalahka wal 'with that money'
  • ni'with '
  • naha lalahka ni 'with this money'
  • bip taya ni ' of leather '
  • Relationals

    Relationals are quasi-nouns expressing some relationship to their possessor complement. Many of the relationals perceivably originate in locatives of nouns designating parts of the body employed metaphorically to convey spatial or other relations.
    Spatial relationsOther relations
    bila-ra 'in, inside'pura 'on, on top of'mununhta-ra 'under'kaina-ra 'in front of'nina-ra 'behind'tila-ra 'between, among'lama-ra 'near'dukia-ra 'for, about'mapa-ra 'for, against, as regards'watlika-ra 'instead of'tawan 'because of'

    Verbal groups

    Overview

    Finite forms include several tenses and moods, in each of which the person of the subject is marked by suffixes. The tenses themselves have characteristic suffixes which combine with the subject-indexing suffixes.
    In addition to synthetic tenses, there is also a considerable range of periphrastic tenses. These are formed with a non-finite form of the main verb followed by an auxiliary verb.
    Some of the synthetic tenses represent original periphrastic tense structures that have become welded into single words. This helps to explain why there are two different forms each in the present, past and future.
    In addition to a subject index which form part of a verb's suffix, for transitive verbs the verb group includes an object index in the form of a preverbal particle marking the person of the object. The subject markers vary somewhat according to the tense, but the most usual forms are shown in the following table.
    PersonSubject
    suffixes
    Object
    particles
    1-naai
    2-mamai
    3
    -a
    1+2
    -a
    wan

    Conjugation

    The stem of a verb is obtained by removing the -aia suffix from the infinitive. Most verb stems end in a consonant, and are conjugated as follows.
    Present IPresent IIPast IPast IIFuture IFuture IIImperative
    1pulunapulisnapulatnapulripulaisnapulamna
    2pulumapulismapulatmapulrampulaismapulmapuls
    3 and 1+2puluyapulisapulatapulanpulaisapulbia

    Verbs whose stems end in i'' vary from the above paradigm in a few minor points. Bal-aia 'come' and w-aia 'go', have an irregular Present I tense. The verb yabaia 'give' is anomalous in a different way by having irregularly derived non-third-person object-indexing forms. Finally, the most irregular verb of all is the defective and irregular kaia 'to be'.
    Present IPresent IIPast IPast IIFuture IFuture IIImperative
    1pisunapisnapisatnapiripiaisnapimna
    2pisumapismapisatmapirampiaismapimapis
    3 and 1+2pisuyapisapisatapinpiaisapibia

    Present of balaia 'come'Present of waia 'go'
    1aulnaauna
    2aulmaauma
    3 / 1+2aulaauya

    Object1231+2
    Infinitiveaik-aia
    'give me/us'
    maik-aia
    'give you'
    yab-aia
    'give him/her/it/them'
    wank-aia
    'give us '

    PresentPast IPast IIFuture IFuture IIImperative
    1snakatnakaprikaisnakamna
    2smakatmakapramkaismakamabas
    3 / 1+2sakatakankaisakabia''

    Periphrastic tenses

    The range of aspectual, modal and other notions that can be expressed is enlarged considerably by the availability of various periphrastic constructions in which a verb acting as auxiliary is placed after the main verb. The conjugated component can take a variety of tenses, including periphrastic ones, and the periphrases themselves may often be combined; thus chains of several auxiliaries are possible. Some representative examples of such periphrases follow:

    Syntax

    Propositional structure

    While no systematic case marking differentiates formally between subjects and objects, there exist certain option for achieving disambiguation.

    Information structure

    A system of specialized postpositions is used to identify topics and focused constituents:

    Valency

    Most verbs are built up from a monosyllabic lexical root ending in a vowel or a single consonant, to which an extension or stem consonant is very often added. The extensions correlate with transitivity: transitive stems have either -k- or -b-, while intransitive stems have -w-. There is also a valency-decreasing verb-prefix ai- which, added to transitive stems, produces unergative, reflexive, reciprocal or middle verbs. See the section on Derivation for examples.

    Questions

    ya 'who'dia 'what'ani 'which'an 'how many'anira 'where'ahkia 'when'nahki 'how'diakan 'why'

    Sentence mood particles

    bika surprise, exclamationni 'I wonder'ki question, surprise

    Coordinating conjunctions

    bara, bamna, an 'and'apia kaka, o, ar 'or'sakuna, kuna 'but'

    Relative clauses

    There are two major constructions which may be used to form relative clauses in Miskito, the 'external head' strategy and the 'internal head' strategy.

    Lexicon

    General

    As regards origin, the Miskito lexicon consists of the following principal components:
    • words of native Miskito origin;
    • a considerable number of loans from surrounding languages of the related Sumo group;
    • a large number of loan words from English;
    • a smaller number of words borrowed from Spanish.

    Derivation

    Some derivational affixes:
    AffixFunctionMeaningExamples
    -ira suffix adjectives from nouns abundancetawa 'hair' → taw-ira 'hairy'kipla 'rock' → kipl-ikakipl-ik-ira 'rocky'
    adjectives from nominalized adjectives in -kasuperlativekarna 'strong' → karn-ikakarn-ik-ira 'very strong'sirpi 'small' → sirpi-kasirpi-k-ira 'very small'tara 'big' → tar-katar-k-ira 'very big'
    -s suffixadjectives from nouns privative, '-less'napa 'tooth' → napa-s 'toothless'tangni 'flower' → tangni-katangni-ka-s 'flowerless'walpa 'stone' → walpa-yawalpa-ya-s 'stoneless'
    -ka suffixnouns from adjectivesabstract nouns, '-ness' karna 'strong' → karn-ika 'strength'ingni 'bright' → ingni-ka 'brightness'
    -ra suffixnouns from adjectivesabstract nouns, '-ness'sirpi 'small' → sirpi-ra 'smallness'siksa 'black' → siks-ira 'blackness'
    -aika suffixnouns from verbs instrumentpahb-aia 'sweep' → pahb-aika 'broom'
    placeplap-aia 'run' → plap-aika 'track'
    -anka suffixnouns from verbsaction pahb-aia 'sweep' → pahb-anka 'act of sweeping'
    -ra suffixnouns from verbsactionplap-aia 'run' → plap-ra 'running'
    reduplication + -ra suffixnouns from verbs agent, '-er'plap-aia 'run' → pla-plap-ra 'runner'
    undergoerraw-aia 'get better, be cured' → ra-raw-ra 'patient'
    -b- or -k- suffix verbs from verb rootstransitive verbdak-b-aia 'cut 'ra-k-aia 'cure '
    verbs from adjective rootsrat-ni 'wet ' → rat-b-aia 'wet '
    -w- suffixverbsintransitive verbdak-w-aia 'break 'ra-w-aia 'be cured'
    verbs from adjective rootsing-ni 'bright' → ing-w-aia 'shine'
    ai- prefixintransitive verbs from transitivesreflexive or middlesak-b-aia 'stretch out' → ai-sak-b-aia 'lie down'srung-k-aia 'cover' → ai-srung-k-aia 'cover oneself'

    Typological overview

    Phonology

    Phoneme inventory

    The Miskito phoneme inventory includes four vowels, apparently with phonemic length playing a part. Consonant series include voiced and voiceless plosives, voiced nasals and semivowels, two liquids and the fricative s. Orthographic h apparently represents a suprasegmental feature.

    Other aspects

    Syllables consist of a vowel nucleus preceded and followed by a maximum of two consonant: V. Word stress is normally on the first syllable and not distinctive.

    Morphology

    Inflectional and derivational morphology are of moderate complexity and predominantly suffixing, together with the use of infixes in the nominal paradigm.

    Nominal morphology

    The nominal morphological categories are ligature and person of the possessor, the exponents of which have suffix and infix allophones, except for third person and first person inclusive possessor indices, which are preposed particles. Plural number is indicated by a postpositive particle.

    Verbal morphology

    In the verbal morphology, tense, mood and person are marked by suffixes. Object indices of transitive verbs are represented by particles preceding the verb. Number is not marked in these subject and object indices, but a plural subject may be indicated through a verbal periphrasis serving this function.

    Syntax

    Word order

    Sentence order is predominantly SOV. Auxiliaries follow main verbs. Sentence particles are sentence-final. Within the noun phrase, most determiners precede the head, but articles follow it, as do quantifiers. Adjectives may either precede or follow the head noun. Possessors precede possessed, and relative clauses precede their head. The ligature morpheme generally occurs on the noun whenever this is preceded by one of the items mentioned, and also when it takes a possessive index. Postpositional structures are found.

    Head or dependent marking

    Miskito is consistently head-marking. There is pro-drop for both subject and object. The finite verb's subject argument is indexed for person on the verb. Transitive verbs also index their object through pre-verbal particles. A maximum of one such object index is possible. If a transitive verb has both a patient and a recipient, the latter is not indexed and appears as a postpositional phrase.
    The expression of nominal possessive or genitive relations is similarly head-marking: the head is marked with indices indicating the person of the dependent, the noun phrase expressing which is either omitted normally if pronominal or precedes the head, e.g. arask-i 'my horse', araska 'his horse', Juan araska 'Juan's horse'.

    [Adposition]s

    Other relations between a verb and its noun phrase complements or adjuncts are expressed by means of postpositional structures or relational constructions. Postpositions are invariable and follow the noun phrase, e.g. Nicaragua ra 'in/to Nicaragua'. A relational construction has the internal form of a possessive construction, except that the place of the head noun is occupied by a quasi-noun called a relational; the latter is often followed by a postpositon. E.g. nin-i-ra 'behind me', nina-ra 'behind him', Juan nina-ra 'behind Juan', where the relational nina imitates a possessed noun.

    Predication, sentence types and compound and complex sentences

    There is a copula with an irregular and defective conjugational paradigm.
    Negation is achieved through various constructions. One is the use of the verb's negative participle, which is invariable for person and tense; another is through use of a negative particle apia which follows verbs, but precedes the copula. Yes–no questions have no special grammatical marking as such, but all kinds of questions are optionally followed by the sentence particle ki. Other sentence particles express different modal nuances.
    Verbs or whole clauses may be conjoined by juxtaposition, all but the last verb in the chain adopting the form of a switch reference participle. These vary in form depending on whether the following verb has the same or a different subject, and also depending on certain tense or aspect relations, and on the person of the subject in the case of different-subject participles.
    Besides these widely used constructions, clauses may also be linked by coordinating conjunctions, and subordinate clauses may be marked by a clause-final subordinator.