Huambisa language
Huambisa, Huambiza, Wambiza, Jíbaro, Xívaro, Wampis, Maina, or Shuar-Huampis is an indigenous language of the Huambisa people of Peru. Spanish colonizers first generated the name Xívaro in the late 16th century as a way of overgeneralizing several ethnicities of similar sociopolitical statuses within the region and referring to them as savages. It is an established language spoken in the extreme north of Peru. It is closely related to the Achuar-Shiwiar, Shuar, and Aguaruna languages, all of which belong to the Jivaroan language family. It has official standing in the area it is spoken.
Classification
Huambisa belongs to the Jivaroan linguistic family, a small language family of northern Peru, specifically in Amazonas, Cajamarca, Loreto, and San Martin, and the Oriente region of Ecuador.Geographic Distribution
Official Status
The Huambisa language is largely spoken between the Condorcanqui Province of the Amazonas Region and the Datem del Marañón Province in the Loreto Region, precisely along the Santiago River|Santiago] River, in which "Middle and Upper Santiago is considered Wampis territory." As of 2012, there were nearly 8,000 speakers of Huambisa worldwide, 5,000 of which live along the Morona and Santiago Rivers. It is currently present in most contexts and domains of communication, some things extending into medias in which Spanish is dominant. In the year 2010, it was declared official in the Amazonas Department together with Aguaruna and Chachapoyas Quechua. A new alphabet for the language was approved in 2012, which will allow for the integration of the indigenous language into the modern world.Dialects/Varieties
Because of how closely the languages of the Jivaroan family are related, they are often thought of as to make up a dialectal continuum, in which Achuar and Shiwiar are related closely enough to be classified under an umbrella term of Achuar-Shiwiar, while speakers of Huambisa are able to distinctly recognize the differences in dialect. Therefore, speakers of Huambisa consider it a distinct language. Some possible subgroups of the Huambisa language include varieties such as that of the Upper Santiago, Middle Santiago, Katirpisa, and Morona. David Beasley and Kenneth L. Pike claim that sometimes with linguistic variation there is slight aspiration and that allophones are voiced following nasal consonants. Their studies are specific to the Wachiycu dialect. In a more recent dissertation written by Jaime Germán Peña, who did field research in communities in Kanus along the Santiago River studying the Santiago regional dialect, he opposes the appearance of any voiced mergers in said dialectal region.Phonology
Huambisa is phonetically related to Aguaruna. The Huambisa language has been studied as a subject of sound symbolism, which connects words through their phonological form to their semantic meanings. It is found in the Huambisa language correspondence among connotations of sounds relative to the words they describe within phonemes, meaning the sounds of the language are not only significant literally, but also symbolically. Much of what is known of Huambisan phonetics is specific to the Wachiycu dialect spoken along the Wachiyacu River and the dialect of the Santiago River region.Consonants
The Huambisa language has 14 consonants, the majority of which are voiceless. The language has only one series of stops and affricates, consisting of 4 stops, /p/, /ṯ/, /k/, /ʔ/, and 2 affricates, /t͡s/ and /t͡ʃ/, of which the principal allophones are voiceless and unaspirated. In fact, articulation, as opposed to whether phonemes are voiced or voiceless, is the primary means of distinguishing between phonological consonants. There are 3 fricatives, /s/, /ʃ/, /h/, 3 nasal consonants, /m/, /n/, /ɲ/, one rhotic phoneme that alternates between the flapped and an approximant,, in which variation is entirely individual but the flap is most common, and one approximant semivowel /j/ that has a very limited use in the language except for as a part of the third-person past-tense suffix, -ji. The most recent work published on the Huambisa language considers the other two semivowels to be allophones, being the positional allophonic realization of /u/, and /ɰ/ being that of /ɨ/.The following table gives the known consonant sounds of the Huambisa language, with pronunciation in IPA transcription.| Bilabial | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | |
| Stop | p | t̠ | k | ʔ | |
| Affricate | t͡s | t͡ʃ | |||
| Fricative | s | ʃ | h | ||
| Nasal | m | n | ɲ | ||
| Rhotic | r | ||||
| Approximant | j |