ARAWAKAN: GARIFUNA & WAYUU
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- Опубликовано: 13 июн 2023
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Arawakan (Arahuacan, Maipuran Arawakan, "mainstream" Arawakan, Arawakan proper), also known as Maipurean (also Maipuran, Maipureano, Maipúre), is a language family that developed among ancient indigenous peoples in South America. Branches migrated to Central America and the Greater Antilles in the Caribbean and the Atlantic, including what is now the Bahamas. Almost all present-day South American countries are known to have been home to speakers of Arawakan languages, the exceptions being Ecuador, Uruguay, and Chile. Maipurean may be related to other language families in a hypothetical Macro-Arawakan stock.
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Respect for Wayuu people from my beloved and dear Venezuela.
Thank you, I am learning more languages from this channel. ❤🙏
Would be cool to see a video dedicated to garifunas!
Keep it up.
Gafiruna numbers sounds like borrowed from Indo-european languages...
It’s French.
Only one and two are authentically Arawakan. Otherwise, it is a French numeral system adapted to Garifuna phonology.
We didn’t have words from things brought from the other side of the world so names were learned as well as communication wise delegations had to happen because of war and trade
I am a Garinagu and Garifuna is 45% Arawak 25% Carib 15% french 10% English and 5% Spanish
Can you do comparison between Croatian Bosnian and Serbian?
A comparison between Wayuunaiki and Guaraní would be great, I love your videos
They're quite different. There's probably some loanwords from 1000+ years ago, but it would take quite a lot of research to find them
How do you make those cartoon characters
Wanee Pusia?
Can you do a video on the Taino language ❤
The closest living language to Taino is Garifuna, or so they say. It's not a good comparison per say because it has a lot of words from Carib & European languages -- only 45% of the language is Arawak. If I had to guess, I'd say that it probably sounded and had more in common with Wayuu, but I'm not sure, just guessing since Garifuna fused a lot of foreign elements into an Arawakan syntax. There's not enough linguistic heritage left to embrace or construct detailed sentences in Taino, so someone would need to recreate it and whether it would be accurate is hard to say. There's a professor called Richard Morrow Porrata who is trying to revitalize it. He's worth checking out if you're interested in the linguistic aspect of the language. Also, it's worth noting that Taino had two distinct dialects: Classic Taino (primarily in Puerto Rico, central Dominican Republic and other smaller islands) and Ciboney Taino (Cuba, Jamaica, Haiti, and the Bahamas).
@@J.Ige65thank you for this response and i am aware of Richard, there’s also another revitalized version of the Taino language that is called hiwatahia, I bought a book recently and i think they used a mixture of the igneri, kalinago and lokono languages 💕
Do taino as well
Yes !! I have been looking for a Taino video
Garifuna numerals are pretty similar to indoeuropean...
Ítarala
Wáguchi Bungiu le siélubei, inebewalá biri. Ñübuinla barúeihan; adügüwalá bugundan ya ubouagu kei ladügüniwa sielu Ruboun weigan fein to lánina sagü weyu woun, uguñe; ferudunabéi wuribati le adüga wamaalibei kei feruduna wamaniña ha adügübaña wuribati woun. Mígira bawa lun wábürühan lidoun óuchawaguni, dísegüdarügü bawa luéi; Ítarala.
If Taata in Wayuu is Father, this is very similar to many slavic language.