Uwa language
The Uwa language, Uw Cuwa, commonly known as Tunebo, is a Chibchan language spoken by between 1,800 and 3,600 of the Uwa people of Colombia, out of a total population of about 7,000.
Varieties
There are half a dozen known varieties. Communication between modern varieties can be difficult, so they are considered distinct languages.Adelaar lists the living
- central dialects Cobaría and Tegría on the northern slopes of the Sierra Nevada del Cocuy,
- a western group near Agua Blanca in the departments of Santander and Norte de Santander,
- an eastern group at a place called Barro Negro in the lowlands of Arauca and Casanare,
- and the extinct dialect Sínsiga near Chita, Boyacá.
Berich lists the dialects Cobaría; Agua Blanca ; Rinconada, Tegría, Bócota, & Báchira
Cassani lists Sínsiga, Tegría, Unkasía, Pedraza, Manare, Dobokubí
Osborn lists
- Bethuwa,
- Rikuwa,
- Tagrinuwa,
- Kubaruwa,
- Kaibaká,
- Yithkaya,
- Bahiyakuwa,
- Biribirá,
- and Ruba,
Fabre lists:
- Bontoca, of the mountains of Guican
- Cobaría, along the Cobaría River
- Pedraza or Bethuwa , along the Venezuelan border; extinct
- Sínsiga, in the Guican mountains, recorded from Chita, Boyaca in 1871
- Tegría or Tagrinuwa, along the Cobaría River
- Unkasia, along the Chitiga and Marga rivers
Morphosyntax
Uwa is an ergative–absolutive language with an SOV word order.Nouns
All isolated verbs end in -a. Nouns can be divided into three groups: personal nouns, verbal nouns, and other. The plurality of a referent is not explicitly marked on a verb; however, it is possible to mark a group of human referents using the -in suffix. Some kinship terms use a different term instead of using the -in suffix. Verbal nouns are derived from verbs by appending -quib, -quin or -quey. Other nouns cannot be affixed with the aforementioned suffixes.There are four case suffixes: ergative, absolutive, genitive and vocative.
The subject of a transitive clause, i.e., the ergative case, is marked with the -at suffix:
The subject of an intransitive clause or the object of a transitive clause, i.e., the absolutive case, takes the null suffix -∅:
The owner of a referent is marked with the genitive case using the -ay suffix. It can replace the ergative marker -at in the 1st person singular pronoun of transitive sentences.
The vocative suffix -u is used to identify a referent being addressed:
Personal pronouns
The personal pronouns distinguish between the 1st, 2nd and 3rd person, as well as between the singular and plural:It is possible to use personal pronouns as possessive pronouns by placing them before the relevant noun. However, there exist distinct forms of possessives, which will be discussed later.
The demonstrative pronouns make a two-way distinction: ucha and eya.
Additionally, there exists an intensifier-reflexive pronoun that is analogous to the English ‘oneself’ or ‘alone’. The pronoun itself is subject to inflection:
| singular | plural | |
| 1st person | ajmar, amar | ijmár |
| 2nd person | behmar | bemar |
| 3rd person | ima | imar |
The possessive pronouns in Uwa, just like the personal pronouns, make a proximal-distal distinction in the 3rd person. These are:
Numerals
The Uwa language uses a base-10 number system.Adjectives
In general, adjectives are placed after the noun, although there are instances where they can be placed before it. Nevertheless, the majority of the time, adjectives are utilized in the verbal form:In noun phrases, the adjective tends to take the -a suffix.
Verbs
Verbs in Uwa language can be divided into the following categories: transitive, intransitive, bitransitive, impersonal, objective clause, auxiliary and copular.- Intransitive verbs take one argument, with just one participant:
- Transitive verbs take two arguments, thus implying two participants:
- Bitransitive verbs take three arguments, which means three participants are involved in the action:
- Impersonal verbs express involuntary actions or states that befall a person; those include verbs like to bleed, to vomit, to be tired. Due to their inherent non-agentivity, impersonal verbs lack full conjugation.
- There are certain verbs that refer to the act of speaking, perceiving, or thinking, and these verbs are often followed by a dependent clause that provides more information about the action. These dependent clauses are called objective clauses. In Uwa, examples of such verbs include séhlw̃anro ‘to think’ and waquinro ‘to say’.
- Auxiliary verbs follow the verb or adjective and carry the tense and mood suffixes. These include: yajquinro ‘to do’, cháquinro ‘to put’, tenro ‘to overcome’, rehquinro ‘to be’, rauwinro ‘to enter’ and óraro ‘to suppose’.
- There is only one copular verb, rehquinro, which comes from the word for ‘to be’.
The intentional suffixes -in and -n indicate the intention to be fulfilled by the action of the verb. The action occurs in the future.
Negation can be marked three ways. Future, ability or obligation, and stative verbs are negated with the word bár. Inability or impossibility is marked with -ajar/-ajat in the main verb and with an interrogative word in the same clause, plus an -i suffix on the focused word of focus. The -ti suffix is used on the main verb:
Ability or obligation is indicated in the verb by the suffix -ata. It indicates that something can or must be done. It can also function as a way to express command without using the imperative.
The inability is indicated by appending the suffix -ajar:
Four tenses can be distinguished: present, past, immediate past and immediate future.
| Tense | Suffix |
| past | -jac/-jec/-joc |
| immediate past | -ira/-iri |
| present | -ca |
| immediate future | -ayquira |
The suffixes -ca/-qui and -ya/-yi are used to mark questions in the present and past tenses, respectively.