Khác biệt giữa bản sửa đổi của “Tiếng Leco”

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'''Leco''', cũng được viết như '''Leko''', là một [[language isolate]] được nghĩ đã biến mất từ lâu nhưng thực ra hiện nay vẫn được nói bởi khoảng 20–40 người ở các vùng phía đông của [[Lake Titicaca]], [[Bolivia]]. Số người biết Leco vào khoảng 80.
'''Leco''', cũng được viết như '''Leko''', là một [[language isolate]] được nghĩ đã biến mất từ lâu nhưng thực ra hiện nay vẫn được nói bởi khoảng 20–40 người ở các vùng phía đông của [[Lake Titicaca]], [[Bolivia]]. Số người biết Leco vào khoảng 80.


==Historical, social, and cultural aspects==

===History===
Apart from some brief lists of vocabulary, the main document for which Leco is known is a Christian doctrine compiled by the missionary Andrés Herrero at the beginning of the 19th century. That doctrine was published in 1905 by Lafone Quevedo, who used it as a source to make a grammatical description of the language. That work was virtually the only available document about Leco, until the linguist Simon van de Kerke (1994) located some speakers of the language and compiled some additional facts which enlarged the analysis of Quevedo.

===Use and description===
In Grimes (1988), Leco is classified as a [[language isolate]] and is considered extinct. However, Montaño Aragón (1987) found some speakers of the language in the region of [[Atén]] and in [[Apolo, La Paz]], in [[Franz Tamayo Province]] in the [[Departments of Bolivia|Bolivian department]] of [[La Paz Department (Bolivia)|La Paz]], along Mapiri River <!-- not [[Mapiri River]] in Brazil --> in [[Larecaja Province]] (situated also in the department of La Paz).

Some speakers were relocated by van de Kerke (1994–97). These speakers, mostly men, were older than 50 years and had not habitually used the language since a long time before that. Van de Kerke relates that the speakers do not feel sufficiently secure to conduct a conversation spontaneously in Leco.

==Linguistic description==

===Phonology===
In regard to the phonology of Leco, one can point out the following (based on van de Kerke, 2009: 289–291). Leco has the following system of consonant phonemes:

{| class=wikitable
|+ style="text-align: left"|'''Figure 1: Consonants in Leco'''
!style="background:#ccccff"|
!style="background:#ccccff"|
!style="background:#ccccff"|[[Bilabial consonant]]s
!style="background:#ccccff"|[[Dental consonant]]s
!style="background:#ccccff"|[[Alveolar consonant]]s
!style="background:#ccccff"|[[Palatal consonant]]s
!style="background:#ccccff"|[[Velar consonant]]s
!style="background:#ccccff"|[[Glottal consonant]]s
|-
! rowspan=3 style="background:#ccccff"| [[Stop consonant]]s
!style="background:#ccccff"|<small>Simple</small>
| p / b || t / d || || || k ||
|-
!style="background:#ccccff"|<small>Aspirate</small>
| p<sup>h</sup> || t<sup>h</sup> || || || k<sup>h</sup> ||
|-
!style="background:#ccccff"|<small>Glottalized</small>
| p'|| t' || || || k'||
|-
!rowspan=2 style="background:#ccccff"| [[Affricate consonant]]s
!style="background:#ccccff"|<small>Simple</small>
| || || ts||ch || ||
|-
!style="background:#ccccff"|<small>Glottalized</small>
| || || || ch'|| ||
|-
! colspan= 2 style="background:#ccccff"| [[Fricative consonant]]s
| || || s / z || || || h
|-
! colspan= 2 style="background:#ccccff"| [[Nasal consonant]]s
| m || n|| || ng || ||
|-
! colspan= 2 style="background:#ccccff"| [[Lateral consonant]]s
| || l || || || ||
|-
! colspan=2 style="background:#ccccff"| [[Rhotic consonant]]s
| || r || || || ||
|-
! colspan=2 style="background:#ccccff"| [[Semivowel]]s
| w|| || || y || ||
|}

Besides, Leco has six vowel phonemes: /a/, /e/, /i/, /o/, /u/ and /è/. The opposition among the first five vowels is distinguished in the data, but the opposition between /e/ and /è/ is found only in a limited number of words, as for example ''pele'' 'balsa' <!-- [[es:Idioma leco]] has "balsa" and [[wikt:balsa#Spanish]] has 4 definitions --> and ''pèlè'' 'name of plant'.

===Lexicon and classes of words===
In regard to the lexicon and the classes of words in Leco, one can mention the following (van de Kerke, 2009: 293–297):

*In Leco, four major categories of words are distinguished: noun, adjective, verb, and adverb. Besides, the language has a group of minor categories: names of people, personal promouns, deictic pronouns, numerals, interrogative pronouns, etc.
*Nouns are characterized morphosyntactically by constituting the nucleus of a noun phrase and by allowing inflection of number and case. Some nouns or substantives in Leco are ''won'' 'house' and ''phose'' 'daughter'. <!-- [[MOS:SUBSET]] -->
*In regard to the pronouns, Leco distinguishes four types: personal pronouns, such as ''era'' 'I', ''iya'' 'you (singular)', ''kibi'' 'he/she'; demonstrative pronouns, such as ''hoo'' 'this, near the speaker', ''on'' 'that, new the addressee' and ''hino'' 'that, far from the speaker and the addressee'; interrogative pronouns, such as ''ha'' 'who', ''u'' 'what', ''nora'' 'where'; and indefinite pronouns, expressed by means of dubitative phrases, composed of an interrogative pronoun and the suffixes ''-as'' 'also' and ''-ka'' 'como'.
*Leco has a large number of adjectival lexemes, which are characterized by expressing qualities of entities. Thus we have, for example, ''lais'' 'bueno', ''suma'' 'small'.
*Leco has a decimal numeral system, composed of the following units: ''her'' 'one', ''too'' 'two', ''chai'' 'three', ''dirai'' 'four', ''bercha'' 'five', ''berphahmo'' 'six', ''toiphahmo'' 'seven', ''ch'aiphahmo'' 'eight', ''beepila'' 'nine', and ''beriki'' 'ten'. The numbers six to eight follow a system in base five, as in [[Aymara language|Aymara]]: 6 = 5 + 1, etc.
*Leco has a limited number of adverbial lexemes, as, for example: ''kumte'' 'late', ''ch'eka'' 'yesterday', ''china'' 'very'. Also, it has a group of postpositions, which express location and which are combined easily with the case markers, such as ''hekor'' 'afuera', ''apor'' 'near', ''haz'' 'down'.
*In regard to the verbs, these are characterized by functioning as the nucleus of the verbal phrase and by receiving inflectional suffixes of time and person, besides having a series of derivational suffixes. Apart from the auxiliaries ''neck'' and ''kach'', Leco has intransitive, transitive, and ditransitive verbs. A typical characteristic of this language is that of giving much attention to the position of objects. It manifests itself, for example, in the following verbs, which always combine a noun expressing a position with the auxiliary ''kach'' 'to be': ''chelkach'' 'to be laid halfway over an object', ''lewakach'' 'to be hanging', ''chakach'' 'to be sitting', etc.

===Morphology===
In regard to the morphological characteristics of Leco, one can point out the following (van de Kerke, 2009: 297–313).
*Leco is a highly [[agglutinative language]] and it uses predominantly [[suffix]]es.
*In regard to morphology of nouns, nouns have inflection for number, by means of the pluralizing suffix ''-aya'', as in ''choswai-tha-aya'' [woman-DIM-PL] 'little women', and inflection for case, as for example the genitive ''-moki'', which is used with alienable entities like ''kuchi'' 'perro' in ''yo-moki kuchi'' [1SG-GEN] 'mi perro'; the dative ''-(i)ki'', which indicates direction or goal, as in (1); the locative ''-ra'' or ''-te'', which marks a locative complement or a directional locative, as in (2); the ablative ''-rep / -bet'', which indicates the locativee origin, as in (3), etc.
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 25%" border="0"
|-
|(1)||''seneng-'''ki'''''||''hu-ku-ate''||''dulsi''
|-
| ||all-DAT||3PL-dar-PAS.1||candy
|-
| || colspan=3 |‘To all I gave a candy.’
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 50%" border="0"
|-
|(2)||''u''||''trabajo-'''ra'''''||''chera''||''abon-da-no-ne''||''lamka-sich-ne''
|-
| ||what||work-LOC||we||find-FUT-NML-INT||work-INF-TOP
|-
| || colspan=5 |‘In what work are we going to find work (in the town)?’
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 40%" border="0"
|-
|(3)||''lilwo''||''ubus-no-te''||''lal-'''rep'''/lal wara-'''rep'''''
|-
| ||grasshopper||come out-NML-DCL||earth-ABL/earth interior-ABL
|-
| || colspan=3 | ‘The grasshopper comes out from the earth / from within the earth.’
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
*Nouns can be combined, furthermore, with a set of derivative suffixes, as, for example, the diminutive ''-tha'', which besides being combined with substantivees, as in ''won-tha'' [house-DIM] 'little house', is combined also with adjectives, as is seen in (4). Another derivative suffix which affects nouns is the 'delimitative' ''-beka'', which expresses the idea of 'no more', 'only', as is seen in (5). Leco has also deverbative derivative suffixes (which derive nouns from verbs), as, for example, the infinitivizer ''-sich'' in (6), which derives an infinitive form which functions as the subject of a sentence; and the agentive ''-no'', which form derived nouns which express an agentive, such as ''lamas-no'' [work-AG] 'worker'.
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 25%" border="0"
|-
|(4)||''wesra''||''nos-'''tha'''-te''
|-
| ||Guanay||far-DIM-DCL
|-
| || colspan=2 | ‘Guanay is a little far.’
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 30%" border="0"
|-
|(5)||''yo-phos-'''beka'''''||''ho-ra''||''t’e-no-te''
|-
| ||1SG-daughter-DEL||this-LOC||live-NML-DCL
|-
| || colspan=2 | ‘My daughter no longer lives here.’
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 25%" border="0"
|-
|(6)||''lamka-'''sich'''''||''yu-gustas-in-te''
|-
| ||work-INF||1.O-please-NEG-DCL
|-
| || colspan=2 | ‘Working does not please me.’
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
*In regard to verbal morphology, verbs have inflection of person, which is formed by means of suffixes which mark the person of the subject and prefixes which mark the object<!-- o el benefactivo/malefactivo -->, as is shown in (7).
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 45%" border="0"
|-
|(7)||''ya-ache-ki''||''yo-moki''||''aycha''||''yin-k’o-a-ka-te''
|-
| ||1SG-father-GEN||1SG-GEN||meat||1.BEN-eat-PF-AUX-DCL
|-
| || colspan=4 |‘My father has eaten the meat for me.’ (I was not able to eat any more)
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
*As is seen in Figure 2, besides inflection for person, the verb in Leco can be combined with a series of inflectional suffixes (which mark, for example, distinctions of aspectual-temporal type). By way of example, (8) shows the use of the suffix of indirect knowledge (CID) ''-mono'', which is combined with the verb ''moch'' 'say' from which it has been derived.
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: center; width: 60%" border="1"
|+ style="text-align: left"|'''Figure 2: Inflection of the verb'''
| style="background:#ccccff"| '''Verbal root''' || style="background:#ccccff"| '''PROG''' ||style="background:#ccccff"| '''NEG''' || style="background:#ccccff"|'''NML/N/ADJ''' ||style="background:#ccccff"|'''PL''' ||style="background:#ccccff"|'''CID''' ||style="background:#ccccff"|'''AUX''' ||style="background:#ccccff"|'''PAS'''||style="background:#ccccff"|'''DCL/INT'''||style="background:#ccccff"|'''Person'''
|-
| || || || || || || || || || ''-o''
|-
| || || || Adj/N || || || || || ''-t''|| ''-m/-n''
|-
| || || || || ''-aya'' || ''-mono'' || ''-ka'' || ''-taah'' || ||
|-
| V || ''-cha'' || ''-in'' || ''-no'' || || || || || ''-ne'' || ''-am/-an''
|-
| || || ''-ir''|| ''-a'' || || || || || || ''-no(h)''
|-
| || || || ''-ich''|| || || || || || ''-s''
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 50%" border="0"
|-
|(8)||''era''||''fuerza-hote-to:''||''ya-ache-ki-ka''||''mo-no-mono-taah-te''
|-
| ||I||strength-POS-PRS.1||1SG-father-GEN-COMP||say-NML-CID-PAS-DCL
|-
| || colspan=4 |‘It is said that he said "I have strength like my father".’
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
*In regard to the category of mood, in Leco one uses suffixes like ''-kama'' 'power', ''-bibi'' 'almost', among others, to indicate a possible event, as is seen in (9). Leco has, besides, two forms of imperative of the second person, one directed to only one person and another directed to various persons, as is seen in (10a) and (10b).
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 40%" border="0"
|-
|(9)||''chika''||''es-cha-no-te''||''lamkas-in-'''kama'''-te-am''
|-
| ||very||rain-PRS-NML-DCL||work-NEG-work-DCL-PL.1
|-
| || colspan=3 |‘It is raining heavily; we can not work.’
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 25%" border="0"
|-
|(10a)||''iya''||''ta''||''bal-'''a'''''
|-
| ||you (singular)||maize (corn)||plant-IMP
|-
| ||colspan=3 |‘Plant maize (corn)!’
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 25%" border="0"
|-
|(10b)||''heka''||''ta''||''bal-'''noku'''''
|-
| ||you (singular)||maize (corn)||plant-IMP.PL
|-
| ||colspan=3 |‘(You [plural]) plant maize (corn)!’
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
*Verbs in Leco can be combined, besides, with a set of derivational suffixes, related to aspect, as for example the completive ''-hi'' in (11), to distinctions of movement, as, for example, the modifying suffix of movement ''wari-'' in (12), and to valence, as for example the reciprocal suffix ''-mo'' in (13) and the causative ''-ki'' in (14).
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 35%" border="0"
|-
|(11)||''yo-moki''||''warsuch''||''tiltil-'''hi'''-no-te''
|-
| ||1-GEN||trousers||undone-CMPL-NML-DCL
|-
| ||colspan=3 |‘My trousers have been completely broken.’
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 30%" border="0"
|-
|(12)||''wotha''||''wonon-'''wari'''-no-te''
|-
| ||hill||caminar-subir.por.tierra-NML-DCL
|-
| ||colspan=2 |‘He/she is walking up the hill.’
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 40%" border="0"
|-
|(13)||''yobas-aya''||''yanapas-'''mo'''-no-aya-te''||''dihwo''||''bal-ich-ki''
|-
| ||man-PL||help-REC-NML-PL-DCL||peanut||plant-INF-DAT
|-
| ||colspan=4 |‘The men are helping each other to plant peanuts.’
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 30%" border="0"
|-
|(14)||''o-botha-tha-ki''||''do-ko-'''ki'''-a''
|-
| ||2-brother-DIM-DAT||3.O-take-CAUS-IMP
|-
| ||colspan=2 |‘Make him take your (singular) little brother!’
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
In Leco, one sees productive processes of reduplication. With substantives, reduplication can be interpreted as 'a heap/much of', with adjectives, 'a high degree of'; with verbs the interpretation is very diverse and not always transparent; thus we have the reduplicate verb ''tiltilkach'' 'to be undone', derived from ''tiltil'' 'undone', which expresses a state or process, for which reason it is combined also with the auxiliary ''kach'' 'to be'.
<br style="line-height:0.5" />

=== Speech ===
In regard to the characteristics of spoken Leco, one can point out the following:
*As van de Kerke (2009: 315) points out, the order of the constituents is not fixed, although, in general, the subject takes the first position, especially if it involves a topicalized element. Besides, the object often precedes the verb, as is seen in (15):
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 50%" border="0"
|-
|(15)||''hino''|| ''yobas-ne'' ||'''''palanta'''''||'''''soh-cha-no-te'''''||''moki-a''||''choswai-ki''
|-
| ||this|| man-TOP||platano||look at-PR-NML-DCL||GEN-3||wife-DAT
|-
| || colspan=6 |‘This man is searching for platano for his wife (of another).’
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
*Leco is a [[pro-drop language]]; this means that an explicit pronominal subject is not required, although this can appear as in (16) (''chera'' 'we'):
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 40%" border="0"
|-
|(16)||''chera''|| ''du-kama-tean'' ||''Burua''||''da-in-tean''||''du-ch''
|-
| ||we||speak-can-1<small>[[plural|PL]]</small>||Leko||want-<small>[[negación|NEG]]</small>-1<small>PL</small>||speak-<small>[[infinitivo|INF]]</small>
|-
| || colspan=5 |'We can speak Leco, but we do not want to speak it.
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
*In Leco, one sees simple and compound speech (van de Kerke, 2009: 316–324). In regard to simple speech, diverse types are distinguished, such as, for example: existential specch, as (17), declarative speech, as (18), interrogative speech, be it confirmative, as (19a), or informative, as (19b), among others.
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 20%" border="0"
|-
|(17)||''aycha''|| ''ne-no-te''
|-
| ||meat|| exist-NML-DCL
|-
| || colspan=2 |‘There is meat!’
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 30%" border="0"
|-
|(18)||''wesra''|| ''nos''||''na-in-tha-te''
|-
| ||Guanay|| far||be-NEG-DIM-DCL
|-
| || colspan=3 |‘Guanay is very near.’
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 25%" border="0"
|-
|(19a)||''sok’och''|| ''da-no-ne''||''iya-n''
|-
| ||food||want-NML-INT||you (singular)-INT
|-
| || colspan=3 |‘Do you (singular) want to eat?’
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 25%" border="0"
|-
|(19b)||''ha-ne''|| ''busa-cha-no-n''
|-
| ||who-INT|| arrive-PRS-NML-INT
|-
| || colspan=2 |‘Who is arriving?’
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
*In regard to compound speech, diverse types are also distinguished: juxtaposed speech, as (20), coordinate speech, as (21), and subordinate speech (causal, concessive, temporal, conditional, consecutive), as (22):
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 45%" border="0"
|-
|(20)||''on''|| ''chelas-no''||''yobas-ne''||''k’o-in-te''||''wet-ra-no-te''
|-
| ||that||become sick-NML||man-TOP||eat-NML-DCL||die-FUT-DCL
|-
| || colspan=5 |‘That sick man is not eating; he is going to die.’
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 50%" border="0"
|-
|(21)||''on''|| ''chelas-no''||''k’o-in-te''||'''no'''||''ko-in-te''||''wet-ra-no-te''
|-
| ||that||become sick-NML||eat-NML-DCL||not||drink-NML-DCL||die-FUT-DCL
|-
| || colspan=6 |‘That sick man is neither eating nor drinking; he is going to die.’
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />
{| style="text-align: left; width: 50%" border="0"
|-
|(22)||''ch’epe''|| ''yin-soncho-a-ra''||''katre-te''||''bar-ka-cha-no-to:''
|-
| ||ill||1.BEN-become sick-PF-LOC||cot-LOC||lying-AUX-PRS-NML-PRS.1
|-
| || colspan=4 |‘Because I feel ill I am lying on a cot.’
|}
<br style="line-height:0.5" />


==Chú thích==
==Chú thích==
Dòng 33: Dòng 368:
[[Thể loại:Endangered language isolates]]
[[Thể loại:Endangered language isolates]]
[[Thể loại:Ngôn ngữ tại Bolivia]]
[[Thể loại:Ngôn ngữ tại Bolivia]]



{{IndigenousAmerican-lang-stub}}
{{IndigenousAmerican-lang-stub}}

Phiên bản lúc 19:29, ngày 13 tháng 5 năm 2016

Leco
Leko, Rik’a
Sử dụng tạiBolivia
Khu vựceast of Lake Titicaca
Tổng số người nói20
Dân tộc2,800 (2001)[1]
Phân loạilanguage isolate
Mã ngôn ngữ
ISO 639-3lec
Glottologleco1242[2]
ELPLeco

Leco, cũng được viết như Leko, là một language isolate được nghĩ đã biến mất từ lâu nhưng thực ra hiện nay vẫn được nói bởi khoảng 20–40 người ở các vùng phía đông của Lake Titicaca, Bolivia. Số người biết Leco vào khoảng 80.


Historical, social, and cultural aspects

History

Apart from some brief lists of vocabulary, the main document for which Leco is known is a Christian doctrine compiled by the missionary Andrés Herrero at the beginning of the 19th century. That doctrine was published in 1905 by Lafone Quevedo, who used it as a source to make a grammatical description of the language. That work was virtually the only available document about Leco, until the linguist Simon van de Kerke (1994) located some speakers of the language and compiled some additional facts which enlarged the analysis of Quevedo.

Use and description

In Grimes (1988), Leco is classified as a language isolate and is considered extinct. However, Montaño Aragón (1987) found some speakers of the language in the region of Atén and in Apolo, La Paz, in Franz Tamayo Province in the Bolivian department of La Paz, along Mapiri River in Larecaja Province (situated also in the department of La Paz).

Some speakers were relocated by van de Kerke (1994–97). These speakers, mostly men, were older than 50 years and had not habitually used the language since a long time before that. Van de Kerke relates that the speakers do not feel sufficiently secure to conduct a conversation spontaneously in Leco.

Linguistic description

Phonology

In regard to the phonology of Leco, one can point out the following (based on van de Kerke, 2009: 289–291). Leco has the following system of consonant phonemes:

Figure 1: Consonants in Leco
Bilabial consonants Dental consonants Alveolar consonants Palatal consonants Velar consonants Glottal consonants
Stop consonants Simple p / b t / d k
Aspirate ph th kh
Glottalized p' t' k'
Affricate consonants Simple ts ch
Glottalized ch'
Fricative consonants s / z h
Nasal consonants m n ng
Lateral consonants l
Rhotic consonants r
Semivowels w y

Besides, Leco has six vowel phonemes: /a/, /e/, /i/, /o/, /u/ and /è/. The opposition among the first five vowels is distinguished in the data, but the opposition between /e/ and /è/ is found only in a limited number of words, as for example pele 'balsa' and pèlè 'name of plant'.

Lexicon and classes of words

In regard to the lexicon and the classes of words in Leco, one can mention the following (van de Kerke, 2009: 293–297):

  • In Leco, four major categories of words are distinguished: noun, adjective, verb, and adverb. Besides, the language has a group of minor categories: names of people, personal promouns, deictic pronouns, numerals, interrogative pronouns, etc.
  • Nouns are characterized morphosyntactically by constituting the nucleus of a noun phrase and by allowing inflection of number and case. Some nouns or substantives in Leco are won 'house' and phose 'daughter'.
  • In regard to the pronouns, Leco distinguishes four types: personal pronouns, such as era 'I', iya 'you (singular)', kibi 'he/she'; demonstrative pronouns, such as hoo 'this, near the speaker', on 'that, new the addressee' and hino 'that, far from the speaker and the addressee'; interrogative pronouns, such as ha 'who', u 'what', nora 'where'; and indefinite pronouns, expressed by means of dubitative phrases, composed of an interrogative pronoun and the suffixes -as 'also' and -ka 'como'.
  • Leco has a large number of adjectival lexemes, which are characterized by expressing qualities of entities. Thus we have, for example, lais 'bueno', suma 'small'.
  • Leco has a decimal numeral system, composed of the following units: her 'one', too 'two', chai 'three', dirai 'four', bercha 'five', berphahmo 'six', toiphahmo 'seven', ch'aiphahmo 'eight', beepila 'nine', and beriki 'ten'. The numbers six to eight follow a system in base five, as in Aymara: 6 = 5 + 1, etc.
  • Leco has a limited number of adverbial lexemes, as, for example: kumte 'late', ch'eka 'yesterday', china 'very'. Also, it has a group of postpositions, which express location and which are combined easily with the case markers, such as hekor 'afuera', apor 'near', haz 'down'.
  • In regard to the verbs, these are characterized by functioning as the nucleus of the verbal phrase and by receiving inflectional suffixes of time and person, besides having a series of derivational suffixes. Apart from the auxiliaries neck and kach, Leco has intransitive, transitive, and ditransitive verbs. A typical characteristic of this language is that of giving much attention to the position of objects. It manifests itself, for example, in the following verbs, which always combine a noun expressing a position with the auxiliary kach 'to be': chelkach 'to be laid halfway over an object', lewakach 'to be hanging', chakach 'to be sitting', etc.

Morphology

In regard to the morphological characteristics of Leco, one can point out the following (van de Kerke, 2009: 297–313).

  • Leco is a highly agglutinative language and it uses predominantly suffixes.
  • In regard to morphology of nouns, nouns have inflection for number, by means of the pluralizing suffix -aya, as in choswai-tha-aya [woman-DIM-PL] 'little women', and inflection for case, as for example the genitive -moki, which is used with alienable entities like kuchi 'perro' in yo-moki kuchi [1SG-GEN] 'mi perro'; the dative -(i)ki, which indicates direction or goal, as in (1); the locative -ra or -te, which marks a locative complement or a directional locative, as in (2); the ablative -rep / -bet, which indicates the locativee origin, as in (3), etc.


(1) seneng-ki hu-ku-ate dulsi
all-DAT 3PL-dar-PAS.1 candy
‘To all I gave a candy.’


(2) u trabajo-ra chera abon-da-no-ne lamka-sich-ne
what work-LOC we find-FUT-NML-INT work-INF-TOP
‘In what work are we going to find work (in the town)?’


(3) lilwo ubus-no-te lal-rep/lal wara-rep
grasshopper come out-NML-DCL earth-ABL/earth interior-ABL
‘The grasshopper comes out from the earth / from within the earth.’


  • Nouns can be combined, furthermore, with a set of derivative suffixes, as, for example, the diminutive -tha, which besides being combined with substantivees, as in won-tha [house-DIM] 'little house', is combined also with adjectives, as is seen in (4). Another derivative suffix which affects nouns is the 'delimitative' -beka, which expresses the idea of 'no more', 'only', as is seen in (5). Leco has also deverbative derivative suffixes (which derive nouns from verbs), as, for example, the infinitivizer -sich in (6), which derives an infinitive form which functions as the subject of a sentence; and the agentive -no, which form derived nouns which express an agentive, such as lamas-no [work-AG] 'worker'.


(4) wesra nos-tha-te
Guanay far-DIM-DCL
‘Guanay is a little far.’


(5) yo-phos-beka ho-ra t’e-no-te
1SG-daughter-DEL this-LOC live-NML-DCL
‘My daughter no longer lives here.’


(6) lamka-sich yu-gustas-in-te
work-INF 1.O-please-NEG-DCL
‘Working does not please me.’


  • In regard to verbal morphology, verbs have inflection of person, which is formed by means of suffixes which mark the person of the subject and prefixes which mark the object, as is shown in (7).


(7) ya-ache-ki yo-moki aycha yin-k’o-a-ka-te
1SG-father-GEN 1SG-GEN meat 1.BEN-eat-PF-AUX-DCL
‘My father has eaten the meat for me.’ (I was not able to eat any more)


  • As is seen in Figure 2, besides inflection for person, the verb in Leco can be combined with a series of inflectional suffixes (which mark, for example, distinctions of aspectual-temporal type). By way of example, (8) shows the use of the suffix of indirect knowledge (CID) -mono, which is combined with the verb moch 'say' from which it has been derived.


Figure 2: Inflection of the verb
Verbal root PROG NEG NML/N/ADJ PL CID AUX PAS DCL/INT Person
-o
Adj/N -t -m/-n
-aya -mono -ka -taah
V -cha -in -no -ne -am/-an
-ir -a -no(h)
-ich -s


(8) era fuerza-hote-to: ya-ache-ki-ka mo-no-mono-taah-te
I strength-POS-PRS.1 1SG-father-GEN-COMP say-NML-CID-PAS-DCL
‘It is said that he said "I have strength like my father".’


  • In regard to the category of mood, in Leco one uses suffixes like -kama 'power', -bibi 'almost', among others, to indicate a possible event, as is seen in (9). Leco has, besides, two forms of imperative of the second person, one directed to only one person and another directed to various persons, as is seen in (10a) and (10b).


(9) chika es-cha-no-te lamkas-in-kama-te-am
very rain-PRS-NML-DCL work-NEG-work-DCL-PL.1
‘It is raining heavily; we can not work.’


(10a) iya ta bal-a
you (singular) maize (corn) plant-IMP
‘Plant maize (corn)!’


(10b) heka ta bal-noku
you (singular) maize (corn) plant-IMP.PL
‘(You [plural]) plant maize (corn)!’


  • Verbs in Leco can be combined, besides, with a set of derivational suffixes, related to aspect, as for example the completive -hi in (11), to distinctions of movement, as, for example, the modifying suffix of movement wari- in (12), and to valence, as for example the reciprocal suffix -mo in (13) and the causative -ki in (14).


(11) yo-moki warsuch tiltil-hi-no-te
1-GEN trousers undone-CMPL-NML-DCL
‘My trousers have been completely broken.’


(12) wotha wonon-wari-no-te
hill caminar-subir.por.tierra-NML-DCL
‘He/she is walking up the hill.’


(13) yobas-aya yanapas-mo-no-aya-te dihwo bal-ich-ki
man-PL help-REC-NML-PL-DCL peanut plant-INF-DAT
‘The men are helping each other to plant peanuts.’


(14) o-botha-tha-ki do-ko-ki-a
2-brother-DIM-DAT 3.O-take-CAUS-IMP
‘Make him take your (singular) little brother!’


In Leco, one sees productive processes of reduplication. With substantives, reduplication can be interpreted as 'a heap/much of', with adjectives, 'a high degree of'; with verbs the interpretation is very diverse and not always transparent; thus we have the reduplicate verb tiltilkach 'to be undone', derived from tiltil 'undone', which expresses a state or process, for which reason it is combined also with the auxiliary kach 'to be'.

Speech

In regard to the characteristics of spoken Leco, one can point out the following:

  • As van de Kerke (2009: 315) points out, the order of the constituents is not fixed, although, in general, the subject takes the first position, especially if it involves a topicalized element. Besides, the object often precedes the verb, as is seen in (15):


(15) hino yobas-ne palanta soh-cha-no-te moki-a choswai-ki
this man-TOP platano look at-PR-NML-DCL GEN-3 wife-DAT
‘This man is searching for platano for his wife (of another).’


  • Leco is a pro-drop language; this means that an explicit pronominal subject is not required, although this can appear as in (16) (chera 'we'):


(16) chera du-kama-tean Burua da-in-tean du-ch
we speak-can-1PL Leko want-NEG-1PL speak-INF
'We can speak Leco, but we do not want to speak it.


  • In Leco, one sees simple and compound speech (van de Kerke, 2009: 316–324). In regard to simple speech, diverse types are distinguished, such as, for example: existential specch, as (17), declarative speech, as (18), interrogative speech, be it confirmative, as (19a), or informative, as (19b), among others.


(17) aycha ne-no-te
meat exist-NML-DCL
‘There is meat!’


(18) wesra nos na-in-tha-te
Guanay far be-NEG-DIM-DCL
‘Guanay is very near.’


(19a) sok’och da-no-ne iya-n
food want-NML-INT you (singular)-INT
‘Do you (singular) want to eat?’


(19b) ha-ne busa-cha-no-n
who-INT arrive-PRS-NML-INT
‘Who is arriving?’


  • In regard to compound speech, diverse types are also distinguished: juxtaposed speech, as (20), coordinate speech, as (21), and subordinate speech (causal, concessive, temporal, conditional, consecutive), as (22):


(20) on chelas-no yobas-ne k’o-in-te wet-ra-no-te
that become sick-NML man-TOP eat-NML-DCL die-FUT-DCL
‘That sick man is not eating; he is going to die.’


(21) on chelas-no k’o-in-te no ko-in-te wet-ra-no-te
that become sick-NML eat-NML-DCL not drink-NML-DCL die-FUT-DCL
‘That sick man is neither eating nor drinking; he is going to die.’


(22) ch’epe yin-soncho-a-ra katre-te bar-ka-cha-no-to:
ill 1.BEN-become sick-PF-LOC cot-LOC lying-AUX-PRS-NML-PRS.1
‘Because I feel ill I am lying on a cot.’


Chú thích

  1. ^ Lỗi chú thích: Thẻ <ref> sai; không có nội dung trong thẻ ref có tên e18
  2. ^ Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin biên tập (2013). “Leco”. Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.

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