Recent developments
To promote bilingual education among Wayuu and other Colombians, the Kamusuchiwoꞌu Ethno-educative Center () came up with the initiative of creating the first illustrated Wayuunaiki–Spanish, Spanish–WayuunaikiDialects
The two main dialects are Wüinpümüin and Wopumüin, spoken in the northeast and southwest of the peninsula, respectively. These dialects are mutually intelligible, as they are minimally distinct. The extinct Guanebucan language may actually have been a dialect of Wayuunaiki. The main difference between Wüinpümüin and Wopümüin is that Wüinpümüin uses ''jia'' as the 3rd person feminine pronoun, and ''jaya'' for the second person plural, while Wopümüin uses ''shia'' as the 3rd person feminine, and ''jia'' as the second person plural. There are minor vocabulary differences, but the main one is related to only the pronouns, and their respective prefixes.Phonology
The vowels of Wayuu are as follows: Note: and are more open than in English. is slightly front of central, and is slightly back of central. All vowels can either occur in short or long versions, since vowel length is distinctive. is a lateral flap pronounced with the tongue just behind the position for the Spanish , and with a more lateral airflow. The length of plosive consonants (p, t, k) and nasal consonants (m, n) can be long, in which case they are written double (pp, tt, kk, mm, nn). The accent in Wayuu generally falls on the second syllable of the word, except when it begins with a geminate vowel (VV) or a consonant followed by a geminate vowel (CVV) or with a closed syllable (CVC), in which case the accent falls on the first syllable. vocal. In words with an irregular accent that do not comply with these rules, the accent is marked when writing with an accent. Nasalization occurs phonetically in Wayu, but does not have a phonemic character. It occurs in vowels next to nasal consonants or as an emphasizing feature of certain words such as ''aa'' "yes", ''ma'i'' "very" or ''eejuu'' "smell".Grammar
Nouns are expressed with a suffix that indicates the plural number (-kana) or the singular depending on whether it is masculine (-kai) or non-masculine (-kat). The classification plural, masculine singular, feminine singular affects the entire language and in particular the pronouns and conjugations of verbs. All nouns that do not have a determined gender are assumed to be non-masculine. Demonstrative pronouns, for example, have a root that indicates whether it is masculine singular (chi-), not masculine singular (tü-) or plural (na-), which is used in the basic form to indicate the closest presence (this, this, these) and to which a suffix is added to indicate degrees of greater distance (-ra/ --la, -sa, -a/-ia/-ya), like this: The personal pronouns in Wayuunaiki are Wayuunaiki uses personal prefixes derived from the pronouns, along with 3 extra non-pronoun derived prefixes (''ka-'' - possessive, ''ma-'' - negative, ''pa-'' - dual (not commonly used)). There also exists a 10th personal prefix for the unspecified/indefinite, labeled as the “zero person”, ''a-''. The vowels in the personal prefixes change depending on the first vowel and consonants of the verb, noun, or preposition it is placed on, dubbed vocalic mutation. The prefixes that correspond with the ''-aya'' ending pronouns typically follow the beginning vowel of the mentioned word classes, while the ones that correspond with the ''-ia'' ending pronouns almost always go through vocalic mutation. There are rules to what vowel is used when, but typically, -''aya'' pronoun derived and the 4 non-pronoun derived prefixes use a, e, or o, while the remaining 3 ''-ia'' pronoun derived use ü, i, and u respectively to the previous. These prefixes are used when expressing a verb with the objective construction, or, for the pronoun-derived prefixes, when expressing someone’s ownership of something. There are 9 triads of suffixes for the singular masculine animate, singular feminine animate/general inanimate, and the general plural. These suffixes can manifest in tense, aspect, and mood suffixes for verbs, derivational words, the definite article suffixes, or in the case of triad G, the negative ''ma-'' verb prefix’s suffixes. The most common triad of suffixes in verbs is triad A (shi/sü/shii), the general time suffixes, also named as “present-past time”, where it combines the English and Spanish equivalents of the basic present and the basic past tense. Whichever equivalent is being implied depends on the context of the situation, and sometimes can be interpreted or translated as a completely different tense, the present-continuous (named “future imminent” in the studies done over Wayuunaiki), which has its own suffix triad, using triad B and combining it with ''-i-'' (-ichi, -irü, -ina).Morphology
Wayuunaiki is agglutinative, with the majority of ways of expressing aspect and mood being used with suffixes, attached to the end of a verb. There are alienable and inalienable nouns, where the former requires possessive suffixes to express possession, while the latter is seen as inherently possessed by something, does not require possessive suffixes, and is usually accompanied by the pronoun derived prefixes. Words can be combined together to form new ones, with the typical 2 patterns being ''alienable + inalienable'' or ''inalienable + inalienable'', where the 0 person (''a-'', ''e-'', ''o-'') prefix of the latter is removed and fully mixed with the former, with necessary vocalic and consonantal mutations. Another form of this is combining any noun or preposition with a verb, the verb going first, to for a new word that could either be a noun or verb. The latter form of this requires a suffix from triad F (chi, lü ~ rü, chii) to be added at the end of the new word. The verb infinitive is formed by taking the root of the verb, adding an indefinite prefix following those rules if it is an active verb, and lengthening the final vowel. If the final vowel is already doubled in the root (-aa, -ee, -ii, -oo, -uu, -üü), then it gets cut in half, and -waa is added to the end. Sets ofSyntax
In general, the verb precedes the subject and the latter precedes the object or predicate (VSO type). However, word order is not restricted and there can be sentences in other word orders. Two predication schemes are presented: a bifurcated predicate-subject one and a synthetic one, predicate-centered or compact, in which the sentence is composed of only one phrase with a verbal nucleus. Conjugation is done through personal prefixes, infixes and suffixes of mode, time and aspect and number-gender of the object. Negation is indicated with the prefix m-, although there is also the negative verb nnojolaa ("not to be", "not to be", "not to have"), and also "not to have" or "not to have" can be expressed with the prefix ma- followed by the respective noun.Numerals
The numerals from 1 to 10 are as follows. Numerals procede the noun.Vocabulary examples
The following are examples of Wayuunaiki. * 'Good morning' * 'Good afternoon' * 'Good night' * 'How are you (singular)?' * 'How are you (plural)?' * 'Rabbit' * 'Grass' * 'Clay jar' * 'Thank you' * 'Hurry up' * 'What is your name?' * 'I love you so much (to a man)' * 'I love you so much (to a woman)' itself comes from 'human being/people' and the suffix , from 'speech' ('word' or 'language'), literally meaning ' hepeople’s speech'.Notes
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