Lule is an indigenous language of northern
Argentina
Argentina (), officially the Argentine Republic ( es, link=no, República Argentina), is a country in the southern half of South America. Argentina covers an area of , making it the second-largest country in South America after Brazil, th ...
.
Lule may be
extinct
Extinction is the termination of a kind of organism or of a group of kinds (taxon), usually a species. The moment of extinction is generally considered to be the death of the last individual of the species, although the capacity to breed and ...
today. Campbell (1997) writes that in 1981 there was an unconfirmed report that Lule is still spoken by 5 families in
Resistencia in east-central
Chaco Province
Chaco (; Wichi: ''To-kós-wet''), officially the Province of Chaco ( es, provincia del Chaco ), is one of the 23 provinces in Argentina. Its capital and largest city, is Resistencia. It is located in the north-east of the country.
It is borde ...
.
It is unclear if it is the same language as ''Tonocoté''.
Varieties
Unattested varieties classified by Loukotka (1968) as part of the Lule language cluster.
*Tonocoté - once spoken on the
Bermejo River
The Bermejo River (Spanish, Río Bermejo) is a river in South America that flows from Bolivia to the Paraguay River in Argentina. The river is generally called Bermejo in spite of its different names along its way, but it also has its own Nativ ...
near Concepción, Chaco.
*Isistiné - once spoken on the
Salado River near San Juan de Valbuena, Chaco.
*Oristine - once spoken on the Salado River near San Juan de Valbuena, Chaco.
*Toquistiné - once spoken on the Salado River near Miraflores.
*Matará / Amulahí - once spoken near the city of the same name on the Salado River.
*Jurí - extinct language of an agricultural tribe that lived on the Hondo and Salado Rivers, province of Santiago del Estero. The last survivors now speak only a Quechua dialect.
Genetic relations
Lule appears to be distantly related to the still-spoken
Vilela language
Vilela (''Uakambalelté, Atalalá, Chulupí~Chunupí'')Not to be confused with Niwaklé, which is also called Chulupí~Chunupí. is an extinct language last spoken in the Resistencia area of Argentina and in the eastern Chaco near the Paragua ...
, together forming a small
Lule–Vilela family. Kaufman (1990) finds this relationship likely and with general agreement among the major classifiers of South American languages. Viegas Barros published additional evidence 1996–2006. Zamponi (2008) and other authors consider Lule and Vilela two linguistic isolates.
There were three distinct groups known as ''Lulé'':
*The nomadic Lule of the plains, who in addition to their own language, spoke Tonocote, the local lingua franca and the language of Spanish catechism.
*The sedentary Lule of the foothills, who were trilingual in Lule, Tonocote, and Quechua in addition to their original language,
Cacán.
*The Lule-Tonocote, whose language was recorded by Machoni.
Data
In 1586 Father Alonson Bárzana (Bárcena) wrote a grammar of Tonocote, which is now lost. In 1732 Antonio Maccioni (Machoni), who was not aware of Bárzana's grammar, wrote one of his own, ''Arte y vocabulario de la lengua lule y tonocoté'' ('Art and vocabulary of the language of the Lule and Tonocote') of the Lule-Tonocote language at the mission San Esteban de Miraflores. This is our primary data on the language. Métraux (1946) concluded that Lule and Tonocote were distinct, and perhaps unrelated, languages, and that the Tonocote at the Miraflores mission had shifted to the Lule language by the time of Machoni.
Machoni records a language with vowels and few consonants. Final syllables are stressed. There are consonant clusters in initial and final position: ''quelpç'' 'I split', ''slimst'' 'I blow my nose', ''oalécst'' 'I know', ''stuç'' 'I throw'.
External links
* Proel
Lengua Lule* Proel
Bibliography
* Campbell, Lyle. (1997). ''American Indian languages: The historical linguistics of Native America''. New York: Oxford University Press. .
* Kaufman, Terrence. (1990). Language history in South America: What we know and how to know more. In D. L. Payne (Ed.), ''Amazonian linguistics: Studies in lowland South American languages'' (pp. 13–67). Austin: University of Texas Press. .
* Kaufman, Terrence. (1994). The native languages of South America. In C. Mosley & R. E. Asher (Eds.), ''Atlas of the world's languages'' (pp. 46–76). London: Routledge.
* Zamponi, Raoul. (2008). Sulla fonologia e la rappresentazione ortografica del lule. In A. Maccioni, ''Arte y Vocabulario de la lengua Lule y Tonocoté''. (pp. xxi–lviii). Ed. by R. Badini, T. Deonette & S. Pineider. Cagliari: Centro di Studi Filologici Sardi. .
References
{{South American languages
Lule–Vilela languages
Indigenous languages of the South American Chaco
Extinct languages of South America