Social:Ecuadorian Siona

From HandWiki
Ecuadorian Siona
Baicoca
Native toEcuador
RegionSucumbíos
EthnicitySiona people (Bai)
Native speakers
<250.[1]
Tucanoan
  • Western
    • Napo
      • Siona–Secoya
        • Ecuadorian Siona
Language codes
ISO 639-3snn
Glottologecua1247[2]
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Ecuadorian Siona (also known as Baicoca) is spoken by the Siona people of Ecuador, and can be considered a dialect or variety of a larger Baicoca-Siecoca, or Siona-Secoya, language cluster. Ecuadorian Siona belongs to the Western Tukanoan language family.

Ecuadorian Siona is closely related to Secoya and Colombian Siona (see Siona language); the three represent a language cluster spoken near the borders of Colombia, Ecuador and Peru.[3] The variety spoken in Ecuador differs from the one spoken in Colombia with regard to some lexical, morphological, and phonological characteristics. Some properties of Ecuadorian Siona are actually closer to Secoya. The three varieties show a high level of mutual intelligibility. Bruil[3] views them as three different varieties of the same Siona-Secoya dialect continuum, with Ecuadorian Siona in the middle.

The Ecuadorian variety is spoken in the Eastern jungle area of Ecuador in the Sucumbíos province. Ecuadorian Siona people mostly reside in six villages: Puerto Bolívar and Tarabëaya are located on the Cuyabeno river, and Sototsiaya, Orahuëaya, Aboquëhuira and Bi'aña on the Aguarico River.[3]

History

Today, Ecuadorian Siona is spoken by less than 250 people and is critically endangered.[1] The influence and spread of the dominant Spanish culture and language brought detrimental consequences for the indigenous ways of living and language. Siona people descended from the so-called Encabellados (the Spaniards came up with the name describing their habit of taking good care of their long hair).[4] The records of contact go back as early as 1599 when the Jesuit missionary first visited the Encabellados.[5] Since then and well into the 18th century, the Jesuit missionary activity had increased as they were trying to convert Encabellados into Catholicism and unite them into reductions.[6] The reductions turned out to be unsuccessful, and eventually, the Jesuits were expelled from the Americas.[7]

The limited contact between the Siona and the Spanish-speaking world did not last very long and was drastically increased after the rubber boom in the late 19th century. In 1955, a missionary couple, Maria and Orville Johnson of the Summer Institute of Linguistics arrived in Sucumbíos.[6] This led to more contact between the Spanish and the Siona. The Johnsons developed a writing system for Siona based on Spanish orthography, which is to this day used by the Siona people of Ecuador. After the oil companies arrived in 1967, the contact reached a critical state.[3]

External factors, such as missionary activity, international tourism, and the presence of the oil industry, have contributed to the decline of native Siona speakers. Some internal factors also play a role, such as changes in the intermarriage patterns and migration. The traditions behind intermarriage used to involve unions between the Siona, the Secoya, and Cofán indigenous groups, making the three more culturally united. Siona and Secoya can be after all considered varieties of the same language. However, their intermarriage practices have extended to other groups probably because the three groups are very small. Today, the Ecuadorian Siona marry other indigenous groups, such as the Amazonian Kichwa and the Shuar, whose languages are unrelated to Siona. They also marry mestizos, that is non-indigenous people of Ecuador. As a result, many Ecuadorian Siona children grow up speaking one language – Spanish.[8][3]

Phonology

The phonemic inventory in Ecuadorian Siona is large relative to other Tukanoan languages, consisting of 17 consonantal phonemes and 12 vocalic phonemes.[3] For the proto-Tukanoan language, only 9 consonants and 12 vowels have been proposed.[9][10]

(C)V(V)(H) represents the basic syllable structure in Ecuadorian Siona, where H stands for the glottal stop [ʔ] or the glottal fricative [h].[3] Long vowels and diphthongs are generally restricted to open syllables, while closed syllables contain short vowels. Only the glottal consonants appear in the coda position, and words generally do not end with closed syllables, except for borrowings, such as the Spanish loanword [mõh.tor] ‘motor’.

Consonants

Labial Coronal Palatal Dorsal Glottal
Plain Labial
Stop Plain p t k kw
Laryngealized w ʔ
Affricate t∫
Fricative Plain s
Laryngealized h
Nasal m n
Approximant (w) (j)

Vowels

Front Central Back
High i ĩ ɨ ɨ̃ u ũ
Mid e ẽ o õ
Low a ã

Status of preaspiration

It has been suggested that the glottal fricative [h] in the coda position might be better analysed as a case of preaspiration in Ecuadorian Siona.[3] On one hand, its occurrence shows some phonological and phonotactic restrictions, specifically before [–voice] consonants. On the other hand, its occurrence is unpredictable before the palatal nasal. A similar process occurs in other Tukanoan languages. For instance, the occurrence of glottal fricative before voiceless consonants has been observed for Colombian Siona[11] and Ecuadorian Secoya.[12] Among Eastern Tukanoan languages of the Vaupés region (Kotiria (aka Wanano), Wa’ikhana (aka Piratapuyo), Tukano, Siriano, Desano, Tuyuka, and Yuruti), glottal frication before [–voice] is ascribed to preaspiration[13]

A more recent study explored the status of preaspiration in Ecuadorian Siona by applying a distributional method of analysis.[14] General criteria for preaspiration involves “a tight distributional relationship between the aspiration and a set of consonants”, such that [h] only appears before a restricted set of consonants (mostly, voiceless non-continuants but sometimes, voiceless obstruents) (p. 9).[15] In root-internal position and before [–voice], complementary distribution was found between coda [h] and no coda (or coda ∅), and between coda [h] and the second part of the long vowel or diphthong (or long V).[14] Such results strongly suggest preaspiration in this environment, i.e. root-internally and before [–voice]. However, coda [h] was also found in contrastive distribution with coda [ʔ] in the same environment, illustrated by minimal pairs such as [wah.ti] ‘bad spirit’ and [waʔ.ti] ‘machete’. This means that coda [h] cannot be predicted based on the phonological environment where it appears since coda [ʔ] appears in the same environment. Thus, it was concluded that the status of the glottal stop needs to be reevaluated together with the glottal fricative when they appear root-internally. Where coda [h] appears at the morpheme boundary, the results were different: it was found in contrastive distribution with coda ∅, coda [ʔ] and long V before [k, (s), ɲ] (note that [h-s] sequence was not a part of analysed data[14] but such examples appear in Bruil[3]). Thus, at the morpheme boundary, the results are in favour of the phonemic realisation of coda [h]. In addition, the occurrence of [h] before [ɲ] root-internally is extremely rare and is not phonologically predictable, indicating phonemic realization in this environment. In conclusion, while preaspiration within roots is possible, more data need to be analysed; whereas at the morpheme boundary and before [ɲ], preaspiration is highly unlikely.[14]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Mejeant, L. (2001). Culturas y lenguas indígenas del Ecuador. Revista Yachaikuna.
  2. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds (2017). "Ecuadorian Siona". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. http://glottolog.org/resource/languoid/id/ecua1247. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 Bruil, M. (2014) Clause-typing and evidentiality in Ecuadorian Siona. (Doctoral dissertation, Leiden University). LOT.
  4. Chantre y Herrera, J. (1901). Historia de las Misiones de la Compañía de Jesús en el Marañón español–1637-1767. Madrid: Imprenta de Avrial.
  5. Steward, J. H. (1948). Western Tucanoan. In J. H. Steward (Ed.), Handbook of South American Indians (pp. 737-748). Washington: United States Government Printing Office
  6. 6.0 6.1 Vickers, W. T. (1976). Cultural Adaptation to Amazonian Habitats: The Siona-Secoya of Eastern Ecuador. (Phd Thesis), University of Florida.
  7. Vickers, W. T. (2003). The Modern Political Transformation of the Secoya. In N. E. J. Whitten (Ed.), Millennial Ecuador: Critical Essays on Cultural Transformations and Social Dynamics (pp. 46- 74). Iowa City: University of Iowa Press
  8. Bruil, M. (2011). High Level of Endangerment, Low Impact of the Dominant Language. The Case of Ecuadorian Siona from Puerto Bolívar. Paper presented at the Endangered languages: Voices and Images, Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador, Quito Ecuador.
  9. Barnes, J. (1999). Tucano. In R. M. W. Dixon & A. Y. Aikhenvald (Eds.), The Amazonian Languages (pp. 207-226). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  10. Malone, T. (1987). Proto-Tucanoan and Tucanoan Genetic Relationships. Instituto de Lingüístico de Verano. Bogotá.
  11. Wheeler, A. (1987). Gantëya Bain, El Pueblo Siona del río Putumayo Colombia, Tomo I. Lomalinda: Editorial Townsend.
  12. Johnson, O. E., & Levinsohn, S. H. (1990). Gramatica Secoya (Vol. 11). Quito: Instituto Lingüístico de Verano.
  13. Stenzel, K. (2013). A Reference Grammar of Kotiria (Wanano). Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 Damonte, O. (2021). Exploring the Status of Preaspiration in Ecuadorian Siona. (BA Thesis, University of Amsterdam).
  15. Clayton, I. D. (2010). On the Natural History of Preaspirated Stops. (Doctoral dissertation, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill). Carolina Digital Repository.