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Umalali, The Garifuna Women's Project, Seattle, September 3, 2008 larryswanson.com | Teaching file language gentili.net | Auditory Processing, Child Language Disorder Treatment drakeinstitute.com | Receptive and Expressive Language minnesotavisiontherapy.co... |
Garifuna is an Arawakan language spoken in Honduras, Guatemala, and Belize by the Garifuna people. The language is also spoken to a lesser extent in Nicaragua's Mosquito Coast. Historically it was referred to as Carib or Black Carib and Igñeri by Europeans. One interesting feature of Garifuna is a vocabulary split between terms used only by men and terms used only by women. This does not however affect the entire vocabulary but when it does, the terms used by men generally come from Carib and those used by women come from Arawak.
[edit] Where SpokenGarifuna is spoken in Central America, especially in Honduras (about 128,000 speakers), but also in Guatemala (about 20,000 speakers), Belize (about 15,000 speakers), Nicaragua, and within the USA in New York City. [edit] VocabularyThe vocabulary of Garifuna is composed as follows:
Apart from that, there also some few words from African languages. [edit] PhonologyIn Garifuna there are six vowels: a, e, i, o, ü, and u. The system of consonants does not show any peculiarities: b, ch, d, f, g, h, k, l, m, n, p, r, s, t, w, y. [edit] Grammar[edit] Personal pronounsWith independent personal pronouns, Garifuna distinguishes masculine and feminine gender:
The forms au and amürü are of Cariban origin, the others are of Arawakan origin. [edit] Plural of nounsPluralization of nouns is irregular, it is realized by means of suffixing. For example:
However, the plural of Garífuna is Garínagu. [edit] PossessionPossession on nouns is expressed by personal prefixes:
[edit] VerbOn the Garifuna verb, the grammatical categories tense, aspect, mode, negation, and person (both subject and object) are expressed by means of affixes, partly supported by particles. The paradigms of conjugation are very numerous. [edit] ExamplesThe conjugation of the verb alîha "to read" in the present continuous tense:
[edit] NumeralsFrom "3" upwards, the numbers of Garifuna are exclusively of French origin and are based on the dying Vigesimal system, which in today's Standard French is only apparent at "80":
[edit] Other Types of WordsThe language uses prepositions and conjunctions. [edit] SyntaxThe word order is verb-subject-object (VSO). [edit] External links
[edit] References
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