Panoan Languages and Linguistics

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American Museum of Natural History, 2013 - Education - 112 pages
Knowledge of Panoan languages and linguistics has increased significantly over the last several decades. The present paper draws upon this new information to produce a current internal classification of all the extant and extinct languages in the Panoan family based on lexical, phonological, and grammatical comparisons. This classification pays special attention to distinguishing dialects from independent languages and to mismatches that exist between linguistically defined languages and socially defined ethnic groups. An evaluation of previously proposed genetic relations to other language families is followed by a discussion of lexical borrowing and possible areal diffusion of grammatical features from and into neighboring non-Panoan languages and Kechua. The history of Panoan linguistics is chronicled from the first Jesuit and Franciscan vocabularies to the most recent contributions, and priorities for future research are suggested. A typological overview of Panoan phonology, morphology, and syntax is provided along with descriptions of some of the extraordinary linguistic features found in the family. Name taboos, postmortem word taboos, in-law avoidance languages, trade languages, ceremonial languages, and other ethnolinguistic phenomena found in the Panoan family are also discussed.

About the author (2013)

David W. Fleck received an M.S. in zoology at the Ohio State University and a Ph.D. in linguistics at Rice University. He is an adjunct research associate in the University of Oregon department of linguistics and a research associate in the American Museum of Natural History Division of Anthropology. He has studied the Matses language since 1997, and has conducted research on other Panoan languages including Marubo, Kashibo, Matis, Kulina of the Curuçá River, Demushbo, and Chankueshbo, the latter three of which are languages spoken by people captured by the Matses in the 1950s. David is currently living permanently among the Matses with his Matses wife, Dina, and two sons, Dunu and David Nacua.

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