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Ocaina language

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Bora-Huitoto language spoken in South America
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Ocaina
Xafahxajoh
Pronunciation['xaFa?xaho?]
Native toPeru, Colombia
EthnicityOcaina
Native speakers
(55 cited 2000-2012)[1]
Dialects
  • Dukaiya
  • Ibo'tsa
Language codes
ISO 639-3oca
Glottologocai1244
ELPOcaina
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Ocaina is an indigenous American language spoken in western South America.

Classification

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Ocaina belongs to the Witotoan language family. It is its own group within the Huitoto-Ocaina sub-family.

Geographic distribution

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Ocaina is spoken by 54 people in northeastern Peru and by 12 more in the Amazonas region of Colombia. Few children speak the language.[citation needed]

Dialects

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There are two dialects of Ocaina: Dukaiya and Ibo'tsa.

Phonology

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Consonants

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Ocaina consonant phonemes[2]
Bilabial Alveolar Postalveolar/
Palatal
Velar Glottal
Nasal lenis m n n
fortis m: n: n:
Plosive p b t r tj dj k g ?
Affricate ts dz tS dZ
Fricative F b s S Z x h

Vowels

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Ocaina vowel phonemes
Front Central Back
High i, i i, i
Low e a, a o, o

Tone

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Syllables in Ocaina may be marked with one of two tones: high or low.

Syllables

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Syllables in Ocaina consist of a vowel; single consonants may appear on either side of the vowel: (C)V(C).

Writing system

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Ocaina is written using a Latin alphabet. A chart of symbols with the sounds they represent is as follows:[3]

Latin IPA
a /a/
b /b/
c /k/ - /ts/
ch /tS/
ds /dz/
dy /dj/
e /e/
f /F/
g(u) /g/ - /h/
h /?/
i /i/
j /h/
k /k/
ll /dZ/
m /m/
m /m:/
n /n/
n /n:/
n /n/
n /n:/
o /o/
p /p/
qu /k/
r /r/
s /s/
sh /S/
t /t/
z /ts/
ty /tj/
u /i/
v /b/
x /x/
y /Z/
  • Because the Ocaina alphabet is based on Spanish, c is used to indicate /k/ before a, o, and u, qu is used before e and i, and k is used in loan words, such as kerosene "kerosene".
  • Nasalization is indicated by inserting n after a vowel. Compare: tya tyoja [tja tjoha] "hang it" vs. tya tyonjan [tja tjoha] "clean it".
  • High tone is indicated with the acute accent: a, e, i, o, u.

References

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  1. ^ Ocaina at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022)
  2. ^ Agnew & Pike 1957.
  3. ^ Leach 2008, p. 66.

Citations

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  • Agnew, Arlene; Pike, Evelyn G. (January 1957). "Phonemes of Ocaina (Huitoto)". International Journal of American Linguistics. 23 (1): 24-27. doi:10.1086/464385.
  • Leach, Ilo M. (2008). Wise, Mary Ruth (ed.). Vocabulario Ocaina (PDF). Serie Linguistica Peruana (in Spanish). Vol. 4 (2nd ed.). Yarinacocha, Peru: Instituto Linguistico de Verano.
Official languages
Indigenous
languages
Arawakan
Barbacoan
Bora
Witoto
Chibchan
Chocoan
Guajiboan
Tucanoan
Cariban
Ticuna-Yuri
Other
Creoles/Other
Sign languages
Italics indicate extinct languages
Spanish varieties
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Arawakan
Campa
Piro
Upper Amazon
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Arawan
Aymaran
Boran
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Cahuapanan
Harakmbut-Katukinan
Jivaroan
Pano-Tacanan
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Quechuan
Cajamarca-Canaris
Central
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Tucanoan
Tupian
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Isolates
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