- Source: Ciguayo language
Ciguayo (Siwayo) was the language of the Samaná Peninsula of Hispaniola (now the Dominican Republic) at the time of the Spanish Conquest. The Ciguayos appear to have predated the agricultural Taíno who inhabited much of the island. The language appears to have been moribund at the time of Spanish contact, and within a century it was extinct.
Ciguayo was spoken on the northeastern coast of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Magua from Nagua southward to at least the Yuna River, and throughout the Samana Peninsula.
Lexicon
Little is known of Ciguayo apart from it being a distinct language from Taino and neighboring Macorix. The only attested words are "gold", tuob (presumably [tuˈob] or [ˈtwob]) and a few place names such as Quizquella (presumably [kisˈkeja]), meaning "very mountainous." This makes it unlikely that the language is Arawakan or Cariban, as languages of those families have simple V and CV syllable structures even in loanwords that were originally CCV or CVC. Granberry & Vescelius (2004) speculate that the closest parallels might be in the Tolan languages of Honduras.
Granberry & Vescelius (2004) analyze the morphemes of tuob 'gold' and Quizquella 'very mountainous' as:
to-w-b(e) 'gold'
to- (cf. Eastern Tol t 'heavy(ness)')
-w- (cf. Eastern Tol -w- 'its')
-b(e) (cf. Eastern Tol -pe 'stone')
kʰis-kʰe-ya 'very mountainous'
kʰis- (cf. Eastern Tol kʰis 'hard rock')
-kʰe- (cf. reduplication in Eastern Tol)
-ya (cf. Eastern Tol yo 'tree')
See also
Pre-Arawakan languages of the Greater Antilles
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Ciguayo
- Ciguayo language
- Ciguayos
- Samaná Peninsula
- Chiefdoms of Hispaniola
- Indigenous peoples of the Caribbean
- Jicaquean languages
- Pre-Arawakan languages of the Greater Antilles
- Evolution of languages
- Macorix language
- List of language families