Zuruahá language


Zuruahá is an Arawan language spoken in Brazil by about 130 people.
Zuruahá is mentioned in Kaufman from personal communication from Dan Everett. He made first contact with the community in 1980. The language had not been studied as of 1994, but seems most similar to Deni.

Phonology

Vowels

  1. The vowel /u/ is ambiguous regarding its classification in the system. As in Deni and other languages of the family, it works as if it had an intermediate height between /a/ and /e/. In other words, /u/ is not specified in the terms of the close feature. The asymmetry of the vowel system is also due to the insertion of /i/ in the system. This vowel appears to have been introduced into the system more recently. According to Dixon and Everett, the central vowel was not part of the Proto-Arawá vowel system. In Suruwahá, it has a different behaviour than the other vowels: it is rare in the language of old people; never appears in diphthongs and is the phonetic realization of the neutralisation of the contrast between the other vowels in certain positions.

    Consonants

  2. Suruwahá's alveolar plosive consonants are slightly backed, resembling retroflex consonants.
  3. The Voiced dental and [alveolar taps and flaps|alveolar tap] occurs in colloquial speech, but, in careful pronunciation, it is actually pronounced as an alveolar lateral flap.