Phonology
Bororo has a mid-sized phonemic inventory of seven vowels and fifteen consonants. Orthographic representations, when they differ from IPA, are shown in angle brackets (all from Nonato 2008, based on Americanist transcription).Vowels
The vowel system of Bororo is somewhat cross-linguistically unusual in that it distinguishes roundedness only in its back vowels (although Crowell (1979) analyzes unrounded “back” vowels as central). The mid vowels /e ɤ o/ alternate with the open-mid (or "Diphthongs and long vowels
Bororo has a rich inventory of twelve diphthongs: All pure vowels can also occur long, i.e. as /iː eː ɯː ɤː uː oː aː/. In contrast to other languages with phonemicConsonants
Unusually for a South American language, Bororo has no phonemicSyllable structure and stress
The canonical syllable structure in Bororo is : that is, a mandatory vowel nucleus (or diphthong), optionally preceded by a single onset consonant. Aside from unmodified loanwords from Portuguese (which are quite common, and becoming more so), Bororo syllables never have onset consonant clusters or codas. Stress in Bororo occurs generally (again with the exception of unmodified Portuguese loanwords) on the penultimateMorphophonology
Bororo has a process of stem-initialMorphology
Bororo, like most languages of South America, is synthetic andNouns
There is no category of obligatory nominal affixes in Bororo; a noun phrase may therefore be composed of a single unmarked root.Plurality
Most nouns are pluralized by means of a plural suffix, whose most common allomorph is ''-doge'': ''arigao'' "dog" pluralizes to ''arigao-doge'' "dogs". The other allomorphs are ''-e'' (mainly following names of animals, e.g. ''juko-e'' "monkeys"), ''-mage'' (mainly following kinship terms, e.g. ''i-rago-mage'' "my grandchildren") and -''ge'' (mainly following pronouns, e.g. ''ema-ge'' "they"). In addition, there is a "zero morpheme" ''*bo-'' which can occur only with the plural suffix ''-e'', meaning "things" or "people", hence the Bororos' own term for themselves ''Boe.'' Some nouns, however, are basically plural and require a marked singular suffix ''-dü.'' These generally refer to human beings; examples include "white people" ( "a white person") and "men" ( "a man").Diminution and gender
Postpositions
Bororo uses postpositions rather than prepositions. Notably, these postpositions may be= Focus
= One postposition, ''ji'', is used to establish the nominal focus of a sentence - what Crowell (1979) refers to as "range or referent". In some cases, this functions very similarly to focusing prepositions in English: ''e-mago-re tori ji'', "they talked about the mountains". However, the range of= Demonstratives
= Bororo has three degrees of deictic distance: near (''a-''), medium (''no-''), and distant (''ce-''). To modify a noun, these must precede the relative marker ''-wü'': ''a-wü imedü'' "this man", ''ce-wü imedü'' "that man (over there)". Since Bororo lacksPossession
Like many indigenous languages of South America, Bororo distinguishes inclusive and exclusive first-person plurals as well asVerbs
Bororo verbal morphology is basically divided along lines of transitivity. Both transitive and intransitive verbs take the same set of bound pronouns to convey subjects and objects (e.g. ''i-reru-re, a-reru-re'' "I danced, you danced" / ''i-re a-reru-dö'' "I make you dance"), but each has an exclusive set of suffixes. "Intransitive" suffixes naturally apply to intransitive verbs, for which there is only one core argument - for example, the neutral aspect ''-re'' in ''i-reru-re'' - but also to the agent of a transitive clause, hence ''i-re a-reru-dö''; meanwhile, "transitive" suffixes can only be applied to the main verb of a transitive clause - e.g. the causative ''-dö'' in ''i-re a-reru-dö.'' For this reason, the suffixes listed in this section cannot properly be called "verbal" suffixes alone; they are grouped in this section merely for convenience.Intransitive and ergative
As mentioned above, these morphemes are suffixed either to the verb of an intransitive clause or to the agent of a transitive clause (A).= Aspect
= Bororo uses six suffixes, as well as a null suffix /-∅/, to convey grammatical aspect: three explicit grammatical aspects, divided into "direct" and " indirect" marking. These are the only strictly mandatory affixes of any kind; they vary in frequency, but all are productive and fairly common. All of these seven options are mutually exclusive.Neutral The most common suffix in Bororo by far is the declarative or "neutral" ''-re.'' This suffix conveys a basic and unmarked tense, aspect, and mood for a declarative or interrogative sentence: ''kowaru kuri-re'' "the horse is big", ''kaiba kodu-re'' "where did he go?" Since it does not convey any tense information, it can be translated as either present or past in English: ''kowaru kuri-re'', for example, could be interpreted either as "the horse is big" or "the horse was big".
Stative The stative suffix ''-nüre'' indicates that the action described by the verb is either ongoing or essential to the subject: ''et-ore e-ra-nüre'' "the children were singing", ''imedü pega-nüre'' "the man is (essentially) bad" (contrast with neutral ''imedü pega-re'' "the man is bad").
Purpose / Hortative The "purpose" suffix -''wö'' indicates that the action in question is the desired result of another (itself usually marked with neutral aspect). This usage always requires a nominalizer ''dü-'' and the postposition ''-bogai,'' "in order to": ''i-tu-re a-nudu-wö dü-bogai'' "I left so that you could sleep" (or "... in order for you to sleep"). This suffix is also used to indicate a
Recent Recent aspect is not conveyed with a suffix ''per se'' but rather the absence of a suffix; that is, a sentence without an aspect suffix is to be understood as occurring in the present or the recent past. Sentences using the other aspect markers may also be understood as present or recent, but only the absence of a suffix conveys this explicitly: ''imedü maru-∅'' "the man is hunting".
Indirect All three explicit aspect suffixes can also be rendered as indirect, meaning that the action they describe was itself described in speech or thought - corresponding broadly to the subjunctive in European languages. Verbs marked as indirect therefore always follow another verb (again usually in the neutral aspect): ''imedü ako-re awagü pega-ye,'' "the man said that the cobra was bad / mean". However, direct suffixes may also occur in this context; the indirect only adds an explicit layer of uncertainty or secondhand knowledge. For example, ''i-mearüdae-re a-mügü-ye'' means "I thought you were there (but I didn't know)", whereas ''i-mearüdae-re a-mügü-re'' would mean "I thought you were there (and so you were)". There is no independent indirect affix. Instead, the three ordinary aspect suffixes change to apparently-related but historically obscure alternate forms when rendered as indirect. There is no indirect version of the recent aspect ''-∅''; its meaning appears to be covered by the neutral indirect ''-ye''. The direct and indirect aspectual suffixes are compared below.
= Negative
= The negative suffix ''-ka- / -ga''- simply negates a verb as in English, and may be followed by any aspect marker: ''a-reru-re'' "you danced" becomes ''a-reru-ka-re'' "you did not dance". This likewise forms a negative imperative without any special marking or fusion: ''a-reru-ka-ba'' "don't dance!"= Hypothetical
= The hypothetical suffix ''-mödü-'' indicates that the action is assumed (whether by the speaker or indirectly), but not definitely stated, to have taken place: ''u-tu-mödü-ka-re'' "he probably did not go", ''u-tu-mödü-ye'' "(someone said that) he did not go". This fuses with the neutral suffix ''-re'' to form ''-möde'': ''u-tu-möde'' "he probably went".= Inchoative
= The inchoative suffix ''-gödü'' indicates that an action is beginning or has begun: ''meri rekodü-gödü-re'' "the sun is beginning to set".Transitive
These three suffixes apply only to verbs which carries the patient or object of a transitive clause (O).= Causative
= The causative suffix ''-dö'' indicates that the subject of the verb causes the main object to perform an action, adding a level of valency: ''i-re a-tu-dö'' "I made you go". Theoretically, this suffix could embed new verbs indefinitely: ''i-re a-dö u-dö e-tu-dö'' "I made you make him make them go", but as in English it is rare to use more than two degrees.= Inceptive
= The inceptive suffix ''-gö'' never occurs independently; it is the result of fusion with the causative. As a result, it has both a strictly= Imminent
= The imminent suffix ''-yagu'' indicates that an action is or was about to happen, or alternatively that it is only "nearly" accomplished: ''a-re a-tu-yagu'' "you were about to go", ''e-re tü-yagu pu-reo-re'' "they are almost alike". This is technically a transitive sentence in Bororo, unlike in English; however, it is restricted entirely to coreferential arguments (i.e. the subject and object are identical).Pronouns
Personal pronouns are divided into free and bound forms. Free forms are used to strongly mark a topic (marked by the "fronting" suffix ''-re:'' homophonous with but not identical to the declarative ''re-''): ''imi-re i-tu-re'' "(as for me,) I'm going". They are also used in " verbless" sentences (for which see below): ''ema-re-o'' "here it is / this is it". Bound forms, meanwhile, are used to mark verb subjects and objects, inalienable possession, and postpositional inflection. The full list of free and bound forms (but not alienable possessors, for which see "Possession" above) is shown in the table below. # Crowell (1979) references a first-person singular bound form ''yo-'' occasionally, but does not provide any description of this form or its use; it may be aSyntax
Transitive and intransitive clauses
As seen above, a different set of suffixes applies to intransitive verbs and transitive subjects on the one hand, and verbs containing transitive objects on the other. It follows, therefore, that an intransitive clause must contain only a single verb of the former type (e.g. ''i-reru-re'' "you dance"), whereas a transitive clause must contain one of each. In the latter case, the "subject" word precedes the "object-verb": for example, ''a1-re i2-wiye'' "you1 advised me2". The use of bound pronouns is required even if the sentence contains a full noun in either subject or object position: ''ime e1-re areme e2-wiye'', word-for-word "the men they1-did the women them2 advise" - "the men advise the women". Since ambitransitive verbs are at least exceedingly rare in Bororo, however, and intransitives with postpositional focus are very common, the frequency of strictly "transitive" constructions is far fewer than that of English or Portuguese.Yes-no questions
Yes-no questions ("did/do..." etc.) follow the same syntactical rules as declarative and imperative clauses in Bororo. Indeed, an interrogative clause may differ from a declarative one only by intonation: "you went", ''ature?'' "did you go?" However, a yes-no question may also be indicated explicitly by placing the clitic ''=na'' immediately after the questioned element: "did you go?" This clitic is mandatory after a question that contains only a single uninflected word, for example with pronouns: ? "me?"Informational ("wh-") questions
Bororo has six question words, all ending in the interrogative morpheme ''-ba'': ''kabo-ba'' "what", ''yogüdü-ba'' "who", ''kakodiwü-ba'' ’which', ''ino-ba'' ’how', ''kai-ba'' ’where' and ''kodi-ba'' 'why'. If the question element is modified in some way (e.g. by a preposition), the following modifier must itself be marked with ''-ba'': ''kabo1-ba tabo2-ba imedü maragodü-re'' "what1 did the man work with2?" As this example illustrates, Bororo makes use ofCopular clauses
Unlike in English, many well-formed Bororo clauses lack a verb entirely, in which case the first noun (the subject) takes the "intransitive-ergative" suffixes described above. These clauses usually correspond to those formed using the verb "to be" in English: ''pöbö''-''re wöe'' "there is water here", ''ema-re-o'' "here it is", etc. Crowell (1979) divides these clauses, which he calls "copulative", into "existential", "equative" and "identificational".Crowell 1979, p. 37 Unlike clauses with verbs, these use free pronoun forms exclusively (with the exception of inalienable possession). Existential clauses denote the existence of their subject, optionally qualified by time and place. These are formed simply by applying the relevant inflection to the noun phrase: ''karo-re'' "there are fish / fish exist", ''karo-re pöbö'' ''tada'' "there are fish in the water", etc. If the subject of these clauses is modified by possession, this is taken as a full possessive statement: ''i-ke-re'', "I have food" (lit. "my food is"). Equative clauses denote an identity between two noun phrases. These are formed by the juxtaposition of two noun phrases, only the first of which is inflected: ''imedü-re imi'', "I am a man". If these noun phrases are modified outside of inflection (e.g. are possessed by a full noun rather than a prefixed pronoun), they require the "complex equative" particle ''rema'' (singular) or ''remage'' (plural) to end the clause: ''Kadagare onaregedü-re Creusa rema'' "Creusa is Kadagare's child". Identificational clauses are used to present an object within a particular space. These are formed identically to existential clauses, followed by the addition of one of a set of suffixes ''-o, -no,'' and ''-ce,'' which correspond directly to the deictic prefixes ''a''-, ''no-'' and ''ce-'': ''karo-re-o'' "here / this is a fish".References
Further reading
* Maybury-Lewis, David, and Joan Bamberger. ''Dialectical Societies: The Gê and Bororo of Central Brazil''. Harvard studies in cultural anthropology, 1. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1979. {{authority control Bororo people Bororoan languages Languages of Brazil Indigenous languages of South America (Central)