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Kĩsêdjê (Suyá, Kĩsêdjê: ''Kĩsêdjê kapẽrẽ'' ) is a Northern Jê language ( Jê, Macro-Jê) spoken in
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,
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. It is closely related to Tapayúna; together, they form the
Tapajós The Tapajós ( pt, Rio Tapajós ) is a river in Brazil. It runs through the Amazon Rainforest and is a major tributary of the Amazon River. When combined with the Juruena River, the Tapajós is approximately long. It is one of the largest clearw ...
branch of Northern Jê. Kĩsêdjê is closely related to Tapayúna; the common past on the
Tapajós River The Tapajós ( pt, Rio Tapajós ) is a river in Brazil. It runs through the Amazon Rainforest and is a major tributary of the Amazon River. When combined with the Juruena River, the Tapajós is approximately long. It is one of the largest cle ...
, shared by the KÄ©sêdjê and the Tapayúna, is still part of their oral history. Phonological differences between the languages include the reflexes of Proto-Northern Jê ''*m/*mb'', ''*mr/*mbr'', ''*c'' (in onsets), ''*ñ'' (in codas), and ''*b'' (in stressed syllables). In KÄ©sêdjê, these consonants are reflected as ''m/mb'', ''mr/mbr'', ''s'', ''n'', and ''p'', respectively, whereas Tapayúna has ''w'' ( ̃, ''nr'' ( ¾Ìƒ, ''t'' ( ̪, ''j'' ( , and ''w'' ( in the same words.


Phonology


Consonants

Kĩsêdjê preserved the consonants of Proto-Tapajós almost intact, with the exception of the sound change ''*t̪ʰ'' > ''s''.


Onsets

The following table lists some of the possible onsets of Kĩsêdjê; in addition, most of these can further combine with /w/ or /ɲ/ (in words whose Proto-Northern Jê etyma contain one of ''*wa'', ''*wə̂'', or ''*jê'', which are analyzed as complex nuclei). Underlying nasals acquire an oral phase preceding an oral nucleus.


Vowels

The vowel inventory of Kĩsêdjê is shown below (the orthographic representation is given in italics; the characters in slashes stand for the
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values of each vowel). Nonato (2014) reports that there is no allophonic variation. By convention, the
tilde The tilde () or , is a grapheme with several uses. The name of the character came into English from Spanish, which in turn came from the Latin '' titulus'', meaning "title" or "superscription". Its primary use is as a diacritic (accent) in ...
, which is part of the graphemes that denote nasal vowels, is left out in the orthography following , , and (but not ), as in ɔ̃‘to go (plural)’. In addition, the vowels /ɘ̃/ and /ã/ are not differentiated in the orthography (both are written as <ã>).


Echo vowels

Kĩsêdjê has a phenomenon whereby an
echo vowel An echo vowel, also known as a synharmonic vowel, is a paragogic vowel that repeats the final vowel in a word in speech. For example, in Chumash, when a word ends with a glottal stop and comes at the end of an intonation unit, the final vowel is r ...
is obligatorily inserted in utterance-final words whose underlying form ends in a consonant; that way, all utterances end in vowels on surface in KÄ©sêdjê. Vowel epenthesis often causes the underlying coda to lenite. The resulting alternations are represented orthographically, as in ''thep'' ˆtÌ Ê°É›pÌš/ ''thewe'' ˆtÌ Ê°É›wɛ‘fish’, ''wit'' ˆwitÌš/ ''wiri'' ˆwiɾi‘only’, ''ngrôt'' ˆÅ‹gɹotÌš/ ''ngrôrô'' ˆÅ‹gɹoɾo‘the Pleiades’, ''khẽn'' ˆkʰɛ̃nÌš/ ''khẽne'' ˆkʰɛ̃nɛ̃‘stone’, ''hwysysôm'' ʷɨsɨˈsomÌš/ ''hwysysômy'' ʷɨsɨˈsomɨ‘mosquito’. In words that end in an underlying rhotic coda, echo vowels are inserted regardless of whether the word is in the utterance-final position, as in ''ngõrõ'' ˆÅ‹É”̃ɺɔ̃‘to sleep’ (forms such as * ˆÅ‹É”̃ɺare unattested).


Morphology


Finiteness

As in all other Northern Jê languages, verbs inflect for finiteness and thus have a basic opposition between a ''finite'' form (also ''form B'' and ''main form'') and a ''nonfinite form'' (also ''form A'' and ''embedded form''). Finite forms are used in matrix clauses only, whereas nonfinite forms are used in all types of subordinate clauses as well as in some matrix clauses. Nonfinite forms are most often formed via suffixation and/or prefix substitution. Some verbs (including all descriptives with the exception of ''katho'' ‘to leave’, whose nonfinite form is ''kathoro'') lack an overt finiteness distinction. The available nonfinite suffixes are ''/-ɺ/'' (the most common option, found in many transitive and intransitive verbs, with its allomorph ''/-j/'' after the vowel ''/a/''), ''/-n/'' (found in some transitive verbs), as well as ''/-k/'', ''/-m/'', and ''/-t/'' (found in a handful of intransitive verbs which take a nominative subject when finite), as shown in the table below. In Proto-Northern Jê, several verbs derived their finite forms by means of leniting the stem-final consonant (''*-t'', ''*-c'', ''*-k'' → ''*-r'', ''*-j'', ''*-r''). In Kĩsêdjê, at least three verbs retain this pattern, though the relation between the finite and nonfinite forms has been obfuscated by a series of regular sound changes, including ''*-ôj'' > ''-wâj'' (''-âj'' after a labial), ''*-c'' > ''-t''.


The erstwhile palatalizing prefix

In Proto-Northern Jê, a small set of verbs formed their nonfinite forms by employing one of the aforementioned processes and a morphophonological process whereby the onset of the stressed syllable became palatal, and the nucleus of the stressed syllable was raised (if possible); this has been attributed to the influence of an underlying palatalizing nonfinite prefix. In Kĩsêdjê, some of these verbs still follow the archaic pattern, though the relation between the finite and nonfinite forms has been obfuscated by a series of regular sound changes.


Prefix substitution or loss

In addition to the aforementioned processes, the finiteness inflection may involve prefix substitution or loss. For example, the valency-reducing prefixes are ''a(j)-'' (
anticausative An anticausative verb (abbreviated ) is an intransitive verb that shows an event affecting its subject, while giving no semantic or syntactic indication of the cause of the event. The single argument of the anticausative verb (its subject) is a pa ...
) and ''a-'' (
antipassive The antipassive voice (abbreviated or ) is a type of grammatical voice that either does not include the object or includes the object in an oblique case. This construction is similar to the passive voice, in that it decreases the verb's valency ...
) in finite verb forms, but ''wi-'' and ''tá-/tu-'', respectively, in the nonfinite forms. In addition, some verbs which denote physiological activities or movement have a prefix (''i-'' and ''a-'', respectively) in their finite forms but not in the nonfinite form. Some examples are given below.


Syntax


Nominative–absolutive clauses

Future, progressive, continuous, completive, and negated clauses in Kĩsêdjê show a cross-linguistically rare
morphosyntactic alignment In linguistics, morphosyntactic alignment is the grammatical relationship between Argument (linguistics), arguments—specifically, between the two arguments (in English, subject and object) of transitive verbs like ''the dog chased the cat'', an ...
pattern, known as the
nominative–absolutive alignment In linguistic typology, nominative–absolutive alignment is a type of morphosyntactic alignment in which the sole argument of an intransitive verb shares some coding properties with the agent argument of a transitive verb and other coding proper ...
. Kĩsêdjê has also been considered unusual in the literature because of its unexpected (from a cross-linguistic point of view) distribution of ergative and
nominative In grammar, the nominative case (abbreviated ), subjective case, straight case or upright case is one of the grammatical cases of a noun or other part of speech, which generally marks the subject of a verb or (in Latin and formal variants of Engl ...
marking of transitive agents in certain types of clauses, such as
future The future is the time after the past and present. Its arrival is considered inevitable due to the existence of time and the laws of physics. Due to the apparent nature of reality and the unavoidability of the future, everything that currently ...
and negative clauses. More specifically, transitive agents expressed by a full noun phrase are nominative (marked by the subject marker ''ra'' in the examples below), whereas pronominal transitive agents are ergative, as in the following examples: Such split has been previously considered to be impossible by
R. M. W. Dixon Robert Malcolm Ward "Bob" Dixon (born 25 January 1939, in Gloucester, England) is a Professor of Linguistics in the College of Arts, Society, and Education and The Cairns Institute, James Cook University, Queensland. He is also Deputy Director o ...
:
Cross-referencing systems are thus basically pronominal (with the affixes having developed from free-form pronouns, in some earlier stage of the language). We would expect them to be on a nominative-accusative pattern, since this characterizes pronouns at the extreme left of the hierarchy … What we can predict is that, if there is a ‘split’ of this kind, then bound prefixes will be accusative and case-marking on free forms will be ergative. This is exactly what is found.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Suya Language Jê languages Languages of Xingu Indigenous Park