Panará language


Panará, also known as Kreen Akarore and spelled Panãra, is a Jê language spoken by the Panará people of Mato Grosso, Brazil. It is a direct descendant of Southern Kayapó. Although classified as a Northern Jê language in earlier scholarship, Panará differs considerably from the Northern Jê languages in its morphosyntax and has been argued to be a sister language to Northern Jê rather than a member of that group.

Phonology

Consonants

The consonantal inventory of Panará is as follows.
The underlying nasals are post-oralized to preceding an oral vowel or one of, as in intwêê 'new'.
The geminates occur both in underived roots and at morpheme junctions, as in tepi 'fish' + ty 'dead' → 'dead fish'. Consonant length is phonemic in Panará, hence the inclusion of geminates in addition to the existing Panará obstruents. A geminate is a consonant that is held for a longer period of time than a singleton consonant.
The geminate is realized as by many speakers as a sociolinguistic variation between generations. The use of is associated with pre-contact with the colonizers and is thus used by the older generation of Panará speakers. The younger generation uses as well as the geminate as the language shifts.

Vowels

The vowel phonemes of Panará are as follows.
The vowels are realized as the diphthongs as a result of the phonological rule long vowel diphthongization. Low vowel reduction is also used in Panará; the vowel can be reduced to or when unstressed.

Syllabic structure

The known possible combinations for syllables in Panará are as follows: V, CV, C1C2V, V:, CV:, C1C2V:, CVC3, CV:C3, C1C2VC3, C1C2V:C3. Also note that sequences when C1 and C2 share the same active articulator are banned.
SymbolPermissible Phonemes
CAny consonant
VAny vowel
V:Any long vowel
C1Nasal consonant or stop
C2An approximant
C3Nasal consonant or a non-geminate consonant

i epenthesis

It has been argued that many word-initial and word-final instances of are epenthetic in Panará. Word-initial epenthesis aligns with the following table where refers to a singleton stop, references a geminate, and refers to the allophonic realization of nasal stops, like:.
initial in in root in root in root
MonosyllabicOptionalObligatoryObligatory
PolysyllabicungrammaticalOptionalOptional

Examples for each scenario:
Monosyllabic singleton → 'belly'
Monosyllabic geminate → 'tapir'
Polysyllabic geminate → 'clothes'
Monosyllabic allophonic nasal stops → 'water'
Polysyllabic allophonic nasal stops → 'small hole'

Note: For the optional locations an alternate is also provided.
Word-final epenthesis follows obstruent codas. Examples are shown below:
→ 'fish'
→ 'chair'
→ 'stuff'

Stress

Stress falls on the last underlying vowel of a phonological word. If after the application of the epenthesis the stress falls of the penultimate vowel, the stressed vowel is lengthened: aprẽpi 'picture, spirit', tepakriti 'an aquatic monster', joopy 'dog, jaguar'.

Orthography

Orthography for Panará has been developed by Panará teachers, with help from literacy workshops, over the last 20 years. The following charts for both consonants and vowels are the result of the aforementioned workshops between Panará groups and academics, specifically Bernat Bardagil-Mas and Myriam Lapierre, in 2016 and 2017 and represent the orthography that has been adopted since then.
The orthography of Panará was shown above using the angle brackets in the phonetic tables.

Morphology

Postpositional case marking

In Panará, their case-marking is done postpositionally. These postpositions "indicate various semantic relations, including place, time, cause, goal, means or source, among others". The postpositions include ablative case, adessive, allative, comitative, comitative-locative, desiderative, essive, final, inessive, instrumental comitative case, instrumental comitative, locative-inessive, locative, malefactive, perlative, possessive, and purposive.
Some of the more infrequent types include: the comitative-locative tân that expresses accompaniment at a location, the locative-inessive krɑ, which indicates location inside a physical container, the malefactive pêê, which expresses an event that takes place against X's will or interest, and the purposive suu which expresses purpose, but unlike the desiderative, it does not convey desire.

Nominal number

Nominals inflect for number in Panará. Singular is unmarked, dual is marked with the suffix -ra, and plural is marked with the suffix -mẽra. These suffixes may be attached to nouns and pronouns alike: ka 'you ', kara 'you two', ka 'you guys '. The expression of number via suffixes is optional.
Panará number suffixes
SingularDualPlural
AbsolutiveØ-ra-mẽra
ErgativeØ-rân-mẽrân

Nominal number is inflected for singular, dual, and plural and pronominal clitics are also used for agreement with the verb.

Numerals

Panará does not have a set of numerals beyond one and dual. There are words for few and many. Some numerals were translated from Portuguese but most are just said in Portuguese if they are needed.
Panarápytipyti-ranõpjõinkjêti
Translationoneone-DU FewMany

Countability

Pluralization is always acceptable with animate nouns and sometimes acceptable for inanimate nouns with a numeral placed before it. However, some nouns are not acceptable even with the numeral addition, illustrating a category akin to mass nouns. Here are some examples of mass nouns:
PanaráTranslation
inkôwater
intarain
kwêkwêmud
nanpjublood

Clause type

Verbs in Panará may receive inflectional suffixes that have been analyzed as encoding mood and clause type.

Mood

In Panará, mood is a more functional category that corresponds to tense. The irrealis mood is often thought of as future tense, whereas realis mood corresponds to non-future non-modal clauses.

Syntax

In Panará, the roles of the arguments in a clause are indicated both by postpositional case marking and by a series of proclitics which encode the role of the arguments as well as their person and/or number features. Within X-bar theory, Panará has a very free positioning of XP's compared to other Jê languages.
In Panará, the roles of the arguments in a clause are indicated both by postpositional case marking and by a series of proclitics which encode the role of the arguments as well as their person and/or number features.

Postpositional case-marking

The case marking in Panará follows an ergative-absolutive pattern. Transitive agents are marked by the ergative postposition hẽ, whereas transitive patients and the sole arguments of intransitive verbs are unmarked.

Clitics

Proclitics encode a wide array of features in Panará, including the role and the person/number features of the arguments, mood, voice, and direction. The person indexes are organized ergatively in the realis mood and accusatively in the irrealis mood.
The table below shows the slots found in realis or conditional clauses.
9876543210
moodA2PL voicedirectionrecipientincorporated
postpositional phrase
dual absolutive indexverb
2=jy= RLS.INTR
2=ta= COND
2=tu= COND.INTR
2=rê= 1SG/DU
2=nẽ= 1/3PL
2=ka= 2
2=ti= 3SG/DU
2=rê= 2PL2=pĩ= RCPR
2=jĩ=/jã= REFL
2=py= REGR/ITER
2=mỹn= CTPT
2=kjẽ= 1SG/DU
2=pan= 1PL
2=kãn= 2
2=mã= 3SG
2=mẽ= 3DU
2=ran= 3PL
mẽ DUra-/r- 1SG/DU
a-/k- 2
∅-/s- 3SG/DU
ra-/p- 1PL
ra-/r- 3PL
verb

Irrealis clauses receive the mood marker ka.

Language play

Code-switching puns

While all languages have and utilize various humour forms, code-switching puns are a form of humour which is quite specific to Panará. These puns arise from the interplay of Panará and Portuguese, the colonizing language. For example, after a doctor mispronounces someone's name as, a Panará individual then repeats this mispronunciation to their friends and continues deforming its pronunciation until arriving at an end form, meaning "swollen eye". Panará speakers also use their form of humour self-reflexively, where during a Panará conversation they add a boastful interjection with purposely mispronounced Portuguese such as "I know a lot". This code-switching humour originated from the neighbouring Kayabi nation ridiculing Panará speakers' mispronunciation of Portuguese; however, it was adopted by Panará speakers as a form of cultural humour with which they in turn ridicule outsiders' misuse and mispronunciation of Panará. Code-switching puns have since become culturally important to the Panará people. Forcing previously isolated nations such as the Panará and the Tupian-speaking Kayabi onto the same reserve can create tensions and loss of identity due to inter-tribal contact, in addition to contact with colonizers. Therefore, code-switching puns in Panará have become an important way of maintaining Panará identity and agency, both regarding inter-tribal tensions and as a way to fight colonization.

Importance

Documenting verbal play and pragmatic language unique to Indigenous languages is important at the general level: culture is carried in and transmitted by interpersonal language use ; additionally, stylistic diversity is socially communicative, since speech styles and genres vary from culture to culture. Therefore, studies of discourse, speech style, and genre can help with understanding and documenting Indigenous cultures, thereby working to resist the effects of colonization. Additionally, promoting unique language play may help increase the societal prestige of threatened Indigenous languages and raise awareness to support language and cultural revitalization.