Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-2xdlg Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-16T05:37:00.008Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

32 - The Areal Linguistics of Amazonia

from Part II - Case Studies for Areal Linguistics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 May 2017

Raymond Hickey
Affiliation:
Universität Duisburg–Essen
Get access
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2017

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Adelaar, Willem, 2008. Towards a typological profile of the Andean languages. In Lubotsky, Alexander, Schaeken, Jos and Wiedenhoff, Jeroen (eds), Evidence and Counter-Evidence: Essays in Honour of Frederik Kortlandt, vol. 2: General Linguistics, pp. 2333. Amsterdam: Rodopi.Google Scholar
Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y., 1999a. Areal diffusion and language contact in the Içana-Vaupés basin, north-west Amazonia. In Dixon, and Aikhenvald, (eds), pp. 384416.Google Scholar
Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y., 1999b. Serial constructions and verb compounding: Evidence from Tariana (North Arawak). Studies in Language 23 (3): 469498.Google Scholar
Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y., 2001a. Language awareness and correct speech among the Tariana of NW Amazonia. Anthropological Linguistics 43 (4): 411430.Google Scholar
Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y., 2001b. Areal diffusion, genetic inheritance, and problems of subgrouping: A North Arawak case study. In Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y. and Dixon, Robert M. W. (eds), Areal Diffusion and Genetic Inheritance: Problems in Comparative Linguistics, pp. 167194. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y., 2002. Language Contact in Amazonia. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y., 2003. Mechanisms of change in areal diffusion: New morphology and language contact. Journal of Linguistics 39: 129.Google Scholar
Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y., 2007a. Semantics and pragmatics of grammatical relations in the Vaupés linguistic area. In Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y. and Dixon, Robert M. W. (eds), Grammars in Contact: A Cross-linguistic Typology, pp. 237266. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y., 2007b. Classifiers in multiple environments: Baniwa of Içana/Kurripako: A North Arawak perspective. International Journal of American Linguistics 73: 475500.Google Scholar
Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y., 2012. The Languages of the Amazon. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Arhem, Kaj, 1989. The Makú, the Makuna and the Guiana system: Transformations of social structure in northern lowland South America. Ethnos 54: 522.Google Scholar
Ball, Christopher, 2011. Pragmatic multilingualism in the Upper Xingu speech community. In Franchetto, (ed.), pp. 87112.Google Scholar
Basso, Ellen B., 1973. The use of Portuguese relationship terms in Kalapalo (Xingu Carib): Changes in a central Brazilian communicative network. Language in Society 2: 121.Google Scholar
Beier, Christine, Michael, Lev and Sherzer, Joel, 2002. Discourse forms and processes in indigenous lowland South America: An areal-typological perspective. Annual Review of Anthropology 31: 121145.Google Scholar
Birchall, Joshua, 2014. Argument Marking Patterns in South American Languages. PhD dissertation, Radboud Universiteit, Nijmegen.Google Scholar
Bolaños Quinonez, Katherine, 2012. Contact induced categories: A case study of evidentiality in Kakua. Conference presentation, The Nature of Evidentiality. Leiden, 14 June 2014.Google Scholar
Bowern, Claire, Epps, Patience, Gray, Russell et al., 2011. Does lateral transmission obscure inheritance in hunter–gatherer languages? PLoS ONE 6 (9): e25195.Google Scholar
Bowern, Claire, Haynie, Hannah, Sheard, Catherine et al., 2014. Loan and inheritance patterns in hunter–gatherer ethnobiological nomenclature. Journal of Ethnobiology 34 (2): 195227.Google Scholar
Braga, Alzerinda, Cabral, Ana Suelly A. C., Rodrigues, Aryon Dall’Igna and Mindlin, Betty, 2011. Línguas entrelaçadas: Uma situação sui generis de línguas em contato [Intertwined languages: A sui generis situation of languages in contact]. Papia 21 (2): 221230.Google Scholar
Braunstein, José and Miller, Elmer S., 1999. Ethnohistorical introduction. In Miller, Elmer S. (ed.), Peoples of the Gran Chaco, pp. 122. Westport, CT: Bergin & Garvey.Google Scholar
Bruzzi Alves da Silva, Alcionilio, 1977. A Civilação Indígena do Vaupés [The Indigenous Civilization of the Vaupés]. Rome: LAS.Google Scholar
Campbell, Lyle, 2012. Typological characteristics of South American Indian languages. In Campbell, and Grondona, (eds), pp. 259330.Google Scholar
Campbell, Lyle and Grondona, Verónica, 2010. Who speaks what to whom? Multilingualism and language choice in Misión La Paz. Language in Society 39: 617646.Google Scholar
Campbell, Lyle and Grondona, Verónica, 2012a. Languages of the Chaco and Southern Cone. In Campbell, and Grondona, (eds), pp. 625668.Google Scholar
Campbell, Lyle and Grondona, Verónica (eds), 2012b. The Indigenous Languages of South America: A Comprehensive Guide. Berlin: de Gruyter Mouton.Google Scholar
Campbell, Lyle, Kaufman, Terrence and Smith-Stark, Thomas, 1986. Mesoamerica as a linguistic area. Language 62: 530570.Google Scholar
Carlin, Eithne, 2007. Feeling the need: The borrowing of Cariban functional categories into Mawayana (Arawak). In Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y. and Dixon, Robert M. W. (eds), Grammars in Contact: A Cross-Linguistic Perspective, pp. 313332. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Carlin, Eithne, 2011. Nested identities in the southern Guyana-Suriname corner. In Hornborg, and Hill, (eds), pp. 225236.Google Scholar
Carneiro, Robert L., 2000. The evolution of the tipiti: A study in the process of invention. In Feinman, Gary and Manzanilla, Linda (eds), Cultural Evolution: Contemporary Viewpoints, pp. 6191. New York: Kluwer Academic Publishers.Google Scholar
Chacon, Thiago, 2013. Kubeo: Linguistic and cultural interactions in the Upper Rio Negro. In Epps, and Stenzel, (eds), pp. 403440.Google Scholar
Chang, William and Michael, Lev, 2014. A relaxed admixture model of language contact. Language Dynamics and Change 4 (1): 126.Google Scholar
Chernela, Janet, 2013. Toward an East Tukano ethnolinguistics: Metadiscursive practices, identity, and sustained linguistic diversity in the Vaupés basin of Brazil and Colombia. In Epps, and Stenzel, (eds), pp. 197244.Google Scholar
Clastres, Hélène, 1995. The Land-without-Evil: Tupí-Guaraní Prophetism. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press.Google Scholar
Constenla-Umaña, Adolfo, 1991. Las lenguas del área intermedia: introducción a su estudo areal [The Languages of the Intermediate Area: Introduction to their Areal Study]. San José: Editorial de la Universidad de Costa Rica.Google Scholar
Crevels, Mily and van der Voort, Hein, 2008. The Guaporé-Mamoré region as a linguistic area. In Muysken, Pieter (ed.), From Linguistic Areas To Areal Linguistics, pp. 151179. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.Google Scholar
Derbyshire, Desmond, 1987. Morphosyntactic areal characteristics of Amazonian languages. International Journal of American Linguistics 53: 311326.Google Scholar
Derbyshire, Desmond and Payne, Doris, 1990. Noun classification systems of Amazonian languages. In Payne, Doris (ed.), Amazonian Linguistics: Studies in Lowland South American Languages, pp. 243271. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Dixon, Robert M. W. and Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y. (eds), 1999a. The Amazonian Languages. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Dixon, Robert M. W. and Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y., 1999b. Introduction. In Dixon, and Aikhenvald, (eds), pp. 122.Google Scholar
Dumont, Jean-Paul, 1991. The Headman and I: Ambiguity and Ambivalence in the Fieldworking Experience. Prospect Heights, IL: Waveland Press.Google Scholar
Dunn, Michael, Terrill, Angela, Reesink, Ger, Foley, Robert and Levinson, Stephen, 2005. Structural phylogenetics and the reconstruction of ancient language history. Science 309: 20722075.Google Scholar
Echeverri, Juan Alvaro, 1997. The People of the Center of the World: A Study in Culture, History, and Orality in the Colombian Amazon. PhD dissertation, New School for Social Research, New York.Google Scholar
Edmundson, George, 1904. The Dutch on the Amazon and Negro in the seventeenth century, part II: Dutch trade in the basin of the Rio Negro. The English Historical Review 19 (73): 125.Google Scholar
Edmundson, George, 1922. Introduction. Journal of the Travels and Labours of Father Samuel Fritz in the River of the Amazons Between 1686 and 1723, pp. 331. London: Hakluyt Society.Google Scholar
Epps, Patience, 2005. Areal diffusion and the development of evidentiality: Evidence from Hup. Studies in Language 29 (3): 617650.Google Scholar
Epps, Patience, 2007a. The Vaupés melting pot: Tukanoan influence on Hup. In Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y. and Dixon, Robert M. W. (eds), Grammars in Contact: A Cross-linguistic Typology, pp. 267289. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Epps, Patience, 2007b. Birth of a noun classification system: The case of Hup. In Wetzels, W. Leo (ed.), Language Endangerment And Endangered Languages: Linguistic and Anthropological Studies with Special Emphasis on the Languages and Cultures of the Andean–Amazonian Border Area, pp. 107128. The Netherlands: Leiden University.Google Scholar
Epps, Patience, 2008. Grammatical borrowing in Hup. In Matras, Yaron and Sakel, Jeanette (eds), Grammatical Borrowing: A Cross-linguistic Survey, pp. 551565. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.Google Scholar
Epps, Patience, 2009. Loanwords in Hup, a Nadahup language of Amazonia. In Haspelmath, Martin and Tadmor, Uri (eds), Loanwords in the World’s Languages: A Comparative Handbook. Berlin: de Gruyter Mouton.Google Scholar
Epps, Patience, 2012. On form and function in language contact: A case study from the Amazonian Vaupés region. In Léglise, Isabelle and Chamoreau, Claudine (eds), Dynamics of Contact-induced Language Change. Berlin: de Gruyter Mouton.Google Scholar
Epps, Patience, 2013. Inheritance, calquing, or independent innovation? Reconstructing morphological complexity in Amazonian numerals. In Epps, , Pat-El, and Huehnergard, (eds), pp. 329357.Google Scholar
Epps, Patience, 2014. Exploring traces of contact between Tupí-Guaraní languages and their neighbors. Talk given 29 May 2014, Amazónicas V, Belém, Brazil.Google Scholar
Epps, Patience, 2015. South American languages. In Bowern, Claire, Epps, Patience, Hill, Jane and McConvell, Patrick, Languages of Hunter-Gatherers and their Neighbors: Database. https://huntergatherer.la.utexas.eduGoogle Scholar
Epps, Patience, Bowern, Claire, Hansen, Cynthia, Hill, Jane and Zentz, Jason, 2012. On numeral complexity in hunter–gatherer languages. Linguistic Typology 16: 39107.Google Scholar
Epps, Patience and Neely, Kelsey, 2014. Movimiento y orientación en construcciones verbales: Una perspectiva amazónica [Movement and orientation in verbal constructions: An Amazonian perspective]. In Guerrero, Lilián (ed.), Movimiento y espacio en lenguas de América [Movement and Space in Languages of the Americas]. México: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.Google Scholar
Epps, Patience, Pat-El, Na’ama and Huehnergard, John (eds), 2013. Contact Among Genetically Related Languages. Special edition of Journal of Language Contact 6 (2).Google Scholar
Epps, Patience and Stenzel, Kristine (eds), 2013. Upper Rio Negro: Cultural and Linguistic Interaction in Northwestern Amazonia. Rio de Janeiro: Museu do Índio-FUNAI.Google Scholar
Eriksen, Love and Danielsen, Swintha, 2014. The Arawakan matrix. In O’Connor, and Muysken, (eds), pp. 152176.Google Scholar
Fausto, Carlos, Franchetto, Bruna and Heckenberger, Michael J., 2008. Language, ritual and historical reconstruction: Towards a linguistic, ethnographical and archaeological account of Upper Xingu Society. In Harrison, David K., Rood, David S. and Dwyer, Aryenne (eds), Lessons from Documented Endangered Languages, pp. 129158. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.Google Scholar
Floyd, Simeon, 2013. Semantic transparency and cultural calquing in the northwest Amazon. In Epps, and Stenzel, (eds), pp. 271309.Google Scholar
Franchetto, Bruna (ed.), 2011. Alto Xingu: Uma sociedade multilíngue [Upper Xingu: A Multilingual Society]. Rio de Janeiro: Museu do Índio-FUNAI.Google Scholar
Gomez-Imbert, Elsa, 1993. Problemas en torno a la comparación de las lenguas Tukano orientales [Problems of comparison in Eastern Tukanoan languages]. In Rodríguez de Montes, Maria Luisa (ed.), Estado actual de la clasificación de las lenguas indígenas de Colombia [Current State of Classification of the Indigenous Languages of Colombia], pp. 235267. Santafé de Bogotá: Instituto Caro y Cuervo.Google Scholar
Gomez-Imbert, Elsa, 1996. When animals become ‘rounded’ and ‘feminine’: Conceptual categories and linguistic classification in a multilingual setting. In Gumperz, John J. and Levinson, Stephen C. (eds), Rethinking Linguistic Relativity, pp. 438469. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Guillaume, Antoine, in press. Sistemas complejos de movimiento asociado en las lenguas Takana y Pano: Perspectivas descriptiva, tipológica e histórico-comparativa [Complex systems of associated motion in the Takanan and Panoan languages: Descriptive, typological and historical-comparative perspectives]. In Guillaume, A. and Valenzuela, P. M. (eds), Estudios sincrónicos y diacrónicos sobre lenguas Pano y Takana: fonología, morfología y sintaxis [Synchronic and Diachronic Studies of Panoan and Takanan Languages: Phonology, Morphology and Syntax], special edition of Amerindia.Google Scholar
Guillaume, Antoine and Rose, Françoise, 2010. Sociative causative markers in South American languages: A possible areal feature. In Floricic, Franck (ed.), Essais de typologie et de linguistique générale: Mélanges offerts à Denis Creissels, pp. 383402. Lyon: ENS Éditions.Google Scholar
Guirardello-Damien, Raquel, 2011. Léxico comparativo: Explorando aspectos da história trumai [Lexical comparison: Exploring aspects of Trumai history]. In Franchetto, (ed.), pp. 113154.Google Scholar
Haspelmath, Martin, 2004. How hopeless is genealogical linguistics, and how advanced is areal linguistics? Studies in Language 28 (1): 209223.Google Scholar
Haynie, Hannah, Bowern, Claire, Epps, Patience, Hill, Jane and McConvell, Patrick, 2014. Wanderwörter in languages of the Americas and Australia. Ampersand 1: 118.Google Scholar
Heckenberger, Michael and Neves, Eduardo Góes, 2009. Amazonian archaeology. Annual Review of Anthropology 38: 251266.Google Scholar
Hill, Jonathan, 1996. Ethnogenesis in the northwest Amazon: An emerging regional picture. In History, Power, and Identity: Ethnogenesis in the Americas, 1492–1992, pp. 142160. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press.Google Scholar
Hornborg, Alf, 2005. Ethnogenesis, regional integration, and ecology in prehistoric Amazonia: Toward a system perspective. Current Anthropology 46 (4): 589620.Google Scholar
Hornborg, Alf and Eriksen, Love, 2011. An attempt to understand Panoan ethnogenesis in relation to long-term patterns and transformations of regional interaction in western Amazonia. In Hornborg, and Hill, (eds), pp. 129154.Google Scholar
Hornborg, Alf and Hill, Jonathan D. (eds), 2011a. Ethnicity in Ancient Amazonia: Reconstructing Past Identities from Archeology, Linguistics, and Ethnohistory. Boulder, CO: University Press of Colorado.Google Scholar
Hornborg, Alf and Hill, Jonathan, 2011b. Introduction. In Hornborg, and Hill, (eds), pp. 130.Google Scholar
Howard, Catherine Vaughan, 2001. Wrought Identities: The Waiwai Expeditions In Search of the ‘Unseen Tribes’ of Northern Amazonia. PhD dissertation, University of Chicago.Google Scholar
Jackson, Jean, 1983. The Fish People: Linguistic Exogamy and Tukanoan Identity in Northwest Amazonia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Krashnoukhova, Olga, 2012. The Noun Phrase in the Languages of South America. PhD dissertation, Radboud Universiteit, Nijmegen.Google Scholar
Lathrap, Donald, 1973. The antiquity and importance of long-distance trade relationships in the moist tropics of pre-Columbian South America. World Archaeology 5 (2): 170186.Google Scholar
Lévi-Strauss, C., 1948. Tribes of the right bank of the Guaporé river. In Steward, J. H. (ed.), Handbook of South American Indians, vol. 3, pp. 370379. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution.Google Scholar
Londoño Sulkin, Carlos, 2012. People of Substance: An Ethnography of Morality in the Colombian Amazon. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Maldi, Denise, 1991. O complexo cultural do marico: Sociedades indígenas do rio Branco, Colorado e Mequens, afluentes do médio Guaporé [The marico cultural complex: Indigenous societies of the Rio Branco, Colorado, and Mequens]. Boletim do Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi 7: 209269.Google Scholar
Michael, Lev, Chang, William and Stark, Tammy, 2014. Exploring phonological areality in the circum-Andean region using a naive Bayes classifier. Language Dynamics and Change 4 (1): 2786.Google Scholar
Michael, Lev, Stark, Tammy and Chang, Will (compilers), 2012. South American Phonological Inventory Database v1.1.2. Survey of California and Other Indian Languages Digital Resource. Berkeley, CA: University of California. http://linguistics.berkeley.edu/~saphon/en/Google Scholar
Migliazza, Ernesto, 1985. Languages of the Orinoco-Amazonia region: Current status. In Klein, Harriet E. M. and Stark, Louisa R. (eds), South American Indian Languages: Retrospect and Prospect, pp. 17139. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Muysken, Pieter, 2012. Contacts between indigenous languages in South America. In Campbell, and Grondona, (eds), pp. 235258.Google Scholar
Muysken, Pieter, Hammarström, Harald, Birchall, Joshua, van Gijn, Rik, Krasnoukhova, Olga and Müller, Neele, 2015. Linguistic areas, bottom up or top down? The case of the Guaporé-Mamoré region. In Comrie, Bernard and Golluscio, Lucía (eds), Language Contact and Documentation / Contacto Lingüístico y Documentación, pp. 205238. Berlin: de Gruyter.Google Scholar
Muysken, Pieter, et al., 2014. South American Indigenous Language Structures (SAILS) Online. Leipzig: Online Publication of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. http://sails.clld.orgGoogle Scholar
Nordenskiöld, Erland, 1922. Deductions Suggested by the Geographical Distribution of Some Post-Columbian Words Used by the Indians of South America. Göteborg: Elanders Boktryckeri Aktiebolag.Google Scholar
O’Connor, Loretta and Muysken, Pieter (eds), 2014. The Native Languages of South America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Ospina Bozzi, Ana Maria and Gomez-Imbert, Elsa, 2013. Predicados complejos en el Noroeste Amazónico: El caso del Yuhup, el Tatuyo y el Barasana [Complex predicates in the northwest Amazon: The case of Yuhup, Tatuyo, and Barasana]. In Epps, and Stenzel, (eds), pp. 309352.Google Scholar
de Oviedo y Valdés, Gonzalo Fernández, 1851–1855 [1535]. Historia general de las indias [General History of the Indies]. Madrid.Google Scholar
Payne, Doris, 1990. Introduction. In Payne, Doris (ed.), Amazonian Linguistics: Studies in Lowland South American Languages, pp. 110. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Rivière, Peter, 1984. Individual and Society in Guiana: A Comparative Study of Amerindian Social Organization. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Rodrigues, Aryon, 2000. Panorama das línguas indígenas da Amazônia. In Queixalós, Francesc and Renault-Lescure, Odile (eds), As línguas amazônicas hoje [Amazonian Languages Today], pp. 1528. São Paulo: Instituto Socioambiental, Museu Parense Emílio Goeldi.Google Scholar
Roth, W. E., 1924. An introductory study of the arts, crafts, and customs of the Guiana Indians. In Thirty-Eighth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology, pp. 26745.Google Scholar
Rydén, Stig, 1962 . Salt trading in the Amazon Basin: Conclusions suggested by the distribution of Guaraní terms for salt. Anthropos 57 (3/6): 644659.Google Scholar
Seifart, Frank, 2007. The prehistory of nominal classification in Witotoan languages. International Journal of American Linguistics 73: 411445.Google Scholar
Seifart, Frank, 2011. Bora Loans in Resígaro: Massive Morphological and Little Lexical Borrowing in a Moribund Arawakan Language. Cadernos de Etnolingüística, Série Monografias, 2.Google Scholar
Seifart, Frank, 2012. The principle of morphosyntactic subsystem integrity in language contact: Evidence from morphological borrowing in Resígaro (Arawakan). Diachronica 29 (4): 471504.Google Scholar
Seifart, Frank, Fagua, Doris, Gasché, Jürg and Echeverri, Juan Alvaro (eds), 2009. A Multimedia Documentation of the Languages of the People of the Center. Online publication of transcribed and translated Bora, Ocaina, Nonuya, Resígaro, and Witoto audio and video recordings with linguistic and ethnographic annotations and descriptions. Nijmegen: DOBES-MPI.Google Scholar
Seifart, Frank and Payne, Doris, 2007. Nominal classification in the northwest Amazon: Issues in areal diffusion and typological characterization. International Journal of American Linguistics 73 (4): 381387.Google Scholar
Seki, Lucy, 1999. The Upper Xingu as an incipient linguistic area. In Dixon, and Aikhenvald, (eds), pp. 417430.Google Scholar
Seki, Lucy, 2011. Alto Xingu: Uma sociedade multilíngue? In Franchetto, (ed.), pp. 5786.Google Scholar
Sicoli, Mark A. and Holton, Gary, 2014. Linguistic phylogenies support back-migration from Beringia to Asia. PLoS ONE 9 (3): e91722.Google Scholar
Silverstein, Michael, 1981. The limits of awareness. Working Papers in Sociolinguistics 84. Austin, TX: Southwest Educational Development Laboratory.Google Scholar
Sorensen, Arthur P. Jr, 1967. Multilingualism in the Northwest Amazon. American Anthropologist 69: 670684.Google Scholar
Stenzel, Kristine, 2005. Multilingualism in the Northwest Amazon, revisited. Memorias del Congreso de Idiomas Indígenas de Latinoamérica-II, University of Texas at Austin. www.ailla.utexas.org/site/cilla2/Stenzel_CILLA2_vaupes.pdfGoogle Scholar
Stenzel, Kristine, 2008. Kotiria ‘differential object marking’ in cross-linguistic perspective. Amerindia 32: 154181.Google Scholar
Stenzel, Kristine, 2013a. Contact and innovation in Vaupés possession-marking strategies. In Epps, and Stenzel, (eds), pp. 353402.Google Scholar
Stenzel, Kristine, 2013b. Butterflies ‘leaning’ on the doorframe: Expressions of location and position in Kotiria and Wa’ikhana. In Bozzi, Ana Maria Ospina (ed.), Expresión de nociones espaciales en lenguas amazónicas, pp. 85107. Bogotá: Instituto Caro y Cuervo/Universidad Nacional de Colombia.Google Scholar
Stenzel, Kristine and Gomez-Imbert, Elsa, 2009. Contato linguístico e mudança linguística no noroeste amazônico: o caso do Kotiria (Wanano) [Language contact and language change in the northwest Amazon: The case of Kotiria]. Revista da ABRALIN 8: 71100.Google Scholar
Thomason, Sarah G. and Kaufman, Terrence, 1988. Language Contact, Creolization, and Genetic Linguistics. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.Google Scholar
Vidal, Alejandra and Nercesian, Verónica, 2009. Loanwords in Wichí, a Mataco-Mataguayan language of Argentina. In Haspelmath, Martin and Tadmor, Uri (eds), Loanwords in the World’s Languages: A Comparative Handbook, pp. 10151034. Berlin and New York: de Gruyter Mouton.Google Scholar
Vidal, Sílvia M., 2000. Kuwé Duwákalumi: The Arawak sacred routes of migration, trade, and resistance. Ethnohistory 47 (3/4): 635667.Google Scholar
Viveiros de Castro, Eduardo, 1998. Cosmological deixis and Amerindian perspectivism. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 4 (3): 469488.Google Scholar
Viveiros de Castro, Eduardo, 2002. A inconstância da alma selvagem [The Inconstancy of the Savage Soul]. São Paulo (Brazil): Cosac and Naify Edições.Google Scholar
Viveiros de Castro, Eduardo, 2012. Cosmological Perspectivism in Amazonia and Elsewhere. HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory, Masterclass Series, vol. 1.Google Scholar
van der Voort, Hein, 2005. Kwaza in comparative perspective. International Journal of American Linguistics 71: 365412.Google Scholar
Whiffen, Thomas 1915. The North-West Amazons: Notes of Some Months Spent Among Cannibal Tribes. London: Constable.Google Scholar
Zuñiga, Fernando, 2007. The discourse–syntax interface in northwestern Amazonia: Differential object marking in Makú and some Tucanoan languages. In Wetzels, W. Leo (ed.), Language Endangerment and Endangered Languages: Linguistic and Anthropological Studies with Special Emphasis on the Languages and Cultures of the Andean–Amazonian Border Area, pp. 209227. Leiden: University of Leiden.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×