This articleneeds additional citations forverification.(February 2007) |
Southern Quechua(Quechua:Urin qichwa,Spanish:quechua sureño), or simplyQuechua(QichwaorQhichwa), is the most widely spoken of the major regional groupings ofmutually intelligibledialectswithin theQuechua language family,with about 6.9 million speakers.[citation needed]BesidesGuaraníit is the only indigenous language of America with more than 5 million speakers. The termSouthern Quechuarefers to the Quechuan varieties spoken in regions of theAndessouth of a line roughly east–west between the cities ofHuancayoandHuancavelicain centralPeru.It includes the Quechua varieties spoken in the regions ofAyacucho,CuscoandPunoin Peru, in much ofBoliviaand parts of north-westArgentina.The most widely spoken varieties are Cusco, Ayacucho, Puno (Collao), and South Bolivian.
Southern Quechua | |
---|---|
Quechua II-C | |
Qhichwa | |
Pronunciation | Quechua pronunciation:[qʰɛtʃwa] |
Native to | Peru,Bolivia,ChileandArgentina |
Region | Countries of the Andean highlands of South America, minorities in neighboring countries and some parts of Asia and Europe |
Ethnicity | In the Andes:Quechua·Diaguita·Qulla In Santiago:Lule·Vilela·Tonocotés·Spaniards |
Native speakers | (5 million cited 1987–2014)[1] |
Quechuan
| |
Early form | |
Dialects | |
Latin script(Quechua Alpha bet) | |
Official status | |
Official language in |
List of countries where Southern Quechua is a minority native language |
Regulated by | none |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | Variously:qwc – Classical Quechuaquy –Ayacucho Quechuaqxu – Arequipa-La Unión Quechuaquz –Cusco Quechuaqve – Eastern Apurímac Quechuaqxp –Puno Quechua(Collao)qul –North Bolivian Quechua(Apolo)quh –South Bolivian Quechuaqus –Santiagueño Quechua |
Glottolog | quec1389 |
ELP | Catamarca and La Rioja Quechua (extinct variety in Argentina) |
Linguasphere | 84-FAA-h |
Majority of Southern Quechua speakers
Minority of Southern Quechua speakers |
People | Qulla |
---|---|
Language | Qichwa |
Country | Qullaw |
In the traditional classification of theQuechua language familybyAlfredo Torero,Southern Quechua is equivalent to Torero's 'QuechuaIIc' (or just 'QIIc'). It thus stands in contrast to its many sister varieties within the wider Quechuan family that are spoken in areas north of the Huancayo–Huancavelica line: Central Quechua (Torero's QI) spoken from Huancayo northwards to theAncash Region;North Peruvian Quechua aroundCajamarcaandIncahuasi(Torero'sIIa); andKichwa(part of Torero's QuechuaIIb).
Dialects
editDialects areAyacucho Quechua,Cusco Quechua,Puno Quechua(CollaoQuechua),North Bolivian Quechua(Apolo Quechua), andSouth Bolivian Quechua.Santiagueño Quechuain Argentina is divergent, and appears to derive from a mix of dialects, including South Bolivian.[4]The Argentinian dialects of Catamarca and La Rioja are extinct.[5]
The most salient distinction between Ayacucho Quechua and the others is that it lacks theaspirated(tʃʰ, pʰ, tʰ, kʰ, qʰ) andejective(tʃʼ, pʼ, tʼ, kʼ, qʼ) series ofstop consonants.The other varieties of Bolivia and Southern Peru taken together have been calledCusco–Collao Quechua(or "Qusqu–Qullaw" ); they are not monolithic. For instance, Bolivian Quechua is morphologically distinct from Cusco and Ayacucho Quechua, while North Bolivian is phonologically quite conservative compared to both South Bolivian and Cusco so there is no bifurcation between Ayacucho and Cusco–Collao.
Santiagueño also lacks the aspirated and ejective series, but it was a distinct development in Argentina. It also maintains remnants of the Quechuas–šdistinction, which has otherwise been lost from Southern Quechua, which suggests other varieties of Quechua in its background.
Standard Quechua
editThe Peruvian linguistRodolfo Cerrón Palominohas devised a standardorthographyintended to be viable for all the different regional forms of Quechua that fall under the umbrella term Southern Quechua. It is a compromise of conservative features in the pronunciations of the various regions that speak forms of Southern Quechua. It has been accepted by many institutions in Peru and Bolivia and is also used on Wikipedia Quechua pages, and by Microsoft in its translations of software into Quechua.
Here are some examples of regional spellings different from the standard orthography:
Ayacucho | Cuzco | Standard | Translation |
---|---|---|---|
upyay | uhyay | upyay | "to drink" |
llamkay | llank'ay | llamk'ay | "to work" |
ñuqanchik | nuqanchis | ñuqanchik | "we (inclusive)" |
-chka- | -sha- | -chka- | (progressive suffix) |
punchaw | p'unchay | p'unchaw | "day" |
In Bolivia, the same standard is used except for "j", which is used instead of "h" for the sound [h] (like inSpanish).
The following letters are used for the inherited Quechua vocabulary and forloanwordsfromAymara:
a, ch, chh, ch', h, i, k, kh, k', l, ll, m, n, ñ, p, ph, p', q, qh, q', r, s, t, th, t', u, w, y.
Instead of "sh" (appearing in the northern and central Quechua varieties), "s" is used.
Instead of "ĉ" (appearing in the Quechua varieties of Junín, Cajamarca, and Lambayeque), "ch" is used.
The following letters are used in loanwords from Spanish and other languages (not from Aymara):
b, d, e, f, g, o.
The letters e and o are not used for native Quechua words because the corresponding sounds are simplyallophonesof i and u that appear predictably next to q, qh, and q'. This rule applies to the official Quechua orthography for all varieties. Thus, the spellings⟨qu⟩and⟨qi⟩are pronounced [qo] and [qe].
The letters appear, however, in proper names or words adopted directly from Spanish:
c, v, x, z; j (in Peru; in Bolivia, it is used instead of h).
Grammar
editMorphological type
editQuechua is anagglutinating language,meaning that words are built up from basic roots followed by severalsuffixes,each of which carry one meaning. Their large number ofsuffixeschanges both the overall meaning of words and their subtle shades of meaning. All varieties of Quechua are very regular agglutinative languages, as opposed toisolatingorfusionalones [Thompson]. Their normal sentence order is SOV (subject–object–verb). Notable grammatical features include bipersonalconjugation(verbs agree with both subject and object),evidentiality(indication of the source and veracity of knowledge), a set oftopicparticles,and suffixes indicating who benefits from an action and the speaker's attitude toward it, but some varieties may lack some of the characteristics.
Pronouns
editNumber | |||
Singular | Plural | ||
Person | First | Ñuqa | Ñuqanchik(inclusive)
Ñuqayku(exclusive) |
Second | Qam | Qamkuna | |
Third | Pay | Paykuna |
In Quechua, there are sevenpronouns.First-person plural pronouns (equivalent to "we" ) may beinclusive or exclusive;which mean, respectively, that theaddressee( "you" ) is and is not part of the "we". Quechua also adds the suffix-kunato the second and third person singular pronounsqamandpayto create the plural forms,qam-kunaandpay-kuna.
Adjectives
editAdjectivesin Quechua are always placed before nouns. They lack gender and number and are not declined to agree withsubstantives.
Numbers
edit- Cardinal numbers.ch'usaq(0),huk(1),iskay(2),kimsa(3),tawa(4),pichqa(5),suqta(6),qanchis(7),pusaq(8),isqun(9),chunka(10),chunka hukniyuq(11),chunka iskayniyuq(12),iskay chunka(20),pachak(100),waranqa(1,000),hunu(1,000,000),lluna(1,000,000,000,000).
- Ordinal numbers. To form ordinal numbers, the wordñiqinis put after the appropriate cardinal number (iskay ñiqin= "second" ). The only exception is that, in addition tohuk ñiqin( "first" ), the phraseñawpaqis also used in the somewhat more restricted sense of "the initial, primordial, the oldest".
Nouns
editNounroots accept suffixes that indicateperson(defining of possession, not identity),number,andcase.In general, the personal suffix precedes that of number. In theSantiago del Esterovariety, however, the order is reversed.[6]From variety to variety, suffixes may change.
Function | Suffix | Example | (translation) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
suffix indicating number | plural | -kuna | wasikuna | houses |
possessive suffix | 1.person singular | -y, -: | wasiy,wasii | my house |
2.person singular | -yki | wasiyki | your house | |
3.person singular | -n | wasin | his/her/its house | |
1.person plural (incl) | -nchik | wasinchik | our house (incl.) | |
1.person plural (excl) | -y-ku | wasiyku | our house (excl.) | |
2.person plural | -yki-chik | wasiykichik | your (pl.) house | |
3.person plural | -n-ku | wasinku | their house | |
suffixes indicating case | nominative | – | wasi | the house (subj.) |
accusative | -(k)ta | wasita | the house (obj.) | |
instrumental | -wan | wasiwan | with the house, and the house | |
abessive | -naq | wasinaq | without the house | |
dative | -paq | wasipaq | to the house | |
genitive | -p(a) | wasip(a) | of the house | |
causative | -rayku | wasirayku | because of the house | |
benefactive | -paq | wasipaq | for the house | |
locative | -pi | wasipi | at the house | |
directional | -man | wasiman | towards the house | |
inclusive | -piwan, puwan | wasipiwan,wasipuwan | including the house | |
terminative | -kama, -yaq | wasikama,wasiyaq | up to the house | |
transitive | -(rin)ta | wasinta | through the house | |
ablative | -manta, -piqta | wasimanta,wasipiqta | off/from the house | |
comitative | -(ni)ntin | wasintin | along with the house | |
immediate | -raq | wasiraq | first the house | |
intrative | -pura | wasipura | among the houses | |
exclusive | -lla(m) | wasilla(m) | only the house | |
comparative | -naw, -hina | wasinaw,wasihina | than the house |
Adverbs
editAdverbscan be formed by adding-taor, in some cases,-llato an adjective:allin – allinta( "good – well" ),utqay – utqaylla( "quick – quickly" ). They are also formed by adding suffixes todemonstratives:chay( "that" ) –chaypi( "there" ),kay( "this" ) –kayman( "hither" ).
There are several original adverbs. For Europeans, it is striking that the adverbqhipameans both "behind" and "future" andñawpameans "ahead, in front" and "past".[7]Local and temporal concepts of adverbs in Quechua (as well as inAymara) are associated to each other reversely, compared to European languages. For the speakers of Quechua, we are moving backwards into the future (we cannot see it: it is unknown), facing the past (we can see it: it is remembered).
Verbs
editTheinfinitiveforms have the suffix-y(e.g.., much'a'kiss';much'a-y'to kiss'). These are the endings for theindicative:
Present | Past | Past Habitual | Future | Pluperfect | Optative | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ñuqa | -ni | -rqa-ni | -qka-ni | -saq | -sqa-ni | -yman |
Qam | -nki | -rqa-nki | -qka-nki | -nki | -sqa-nki | -nki-man |
Pay | -n | -rqa(-n) | -q | -nqa | -sqa | -nman |
Ñuqanchik | -nchik | -rqa-nchik | -qka-nchik | -su-nchik | -sqa-nchik | -nchik-man
-swan |
Ñuqayku | -yku | -rqa-yku | -qka-yku | -saq-ku | -sqa-yku | -yku-man |
Qamkuna | -nki-chik | -rqa-nki-chik | -qka-nki-chik | -nki-chik | -sqa-nki-chik | -nki-chik-man
-waq-chik |
Paykuna | -n-ku | -rqa-(n)ku | -q-ku | -nqa-ku | -sqa-ku | -nku-man |
The suffixes shown in the table above usually indicate thesubject;the person of theobjectis also indicated by a suffix (-a-for first person and-su-for second person), which precedes the suffixes in the table. In such cases, the plural suffixes from the table (-chikand-ku) can be used to express the number of the object rather than the subject.
Various suffixes are added to the stem to change the meaning. For example,-chiis acausativesuffix and-kuis areflexivesuffix (example:wañuy'to die';wañuchiy'to kill';wañuchikuy'to commit suicide');-nakuis used for mutual action (example:marq'ay'to hug';marq'anakuy'to hug each other'), and-chkais a progressive, used for an ongoing action (e.g.,mikhuy'to eat';mikhuchkay'to be eating').
Grammatical particles
editParticlesare indeclinable: they do not accept suffixes. They are relatively rare, but the most common arearí'yes' andmana'no', althoughmanacan take some suffixes, such as-n/-m(manan/manam),-raq(manaraq'not yet') and-chu(manachu?'or not?'), to intensify the meaning. Other particles areyaw'hey, hi', and certain loan words from Spanish, such aspiru(from Spanishpero'but') andsinuqa(fromsino'rather').
Evidentiality
editThe Quechuan languages have three different morphemes that markevidentiality.Evidentiality refers to a morpheme whose primary purpose is to indicate the source of information.[8]In Quechuan languages, evidentiality is a three-term system: there are three evidential morphemes that mark varying levels of source information. The markers can apply to first, second, and third persons.[9]The chart below depicts an example of these morphemes fromWanka Quechua:[10]
Evidential morphemes | -m(i) | -chr(a) | -sh(i) |
Meaning | Direct evidence | Inferred; conjecture | Reported; hearsay |
The parentheses around the vowels indicate that the vowel can be dropped in when following an open vowel. For the sake of cohesiveness, the above forms are used to discuss the evidential morphemes. There are dialectal variations to the forms. The variations will be presented in the following descriptions.
See also
editBibliography
edit- Rodolfo Cerrón-Palomino (1994). Quechua sureño, diccionario unificado quechua–castellano, castellano–quechua [Southern Quechua, Quechua–Spanish, Spanish–Quechua Unified Dictionary]. Lima, Biblioteca Nacional del Perú.
- Óscar Chávez Gonzales (2017). Urin Qichwa. Siminchik allin qillqanapaq: chankakunapaq qullawkunapaqwan. Lima, Editorial Textos. 72 pp.,ISBN9786124686832
- César Itier (2017). Diccionario Quechua Sureño – Castellano. Lima, Editorial Commentarios. 303 pp., 3900 entries,ISBN9789972947094
References
edit- ^Classical QuechuaatEthnologue(24th ed., 2021)
Ayacucho QuechuaatEthnologue(24th ed., 2021)
Arequipa-La Unión QuechuaatEthnologue(24th ed., 2021)
Cusco QuechuaatEthnologue(24th ed., 2021)
Eastern Apurímac QuechuaatEthnologue(24th ed., 2021)
Puno Quechua (Collao)atEthnologue(24th ed., 2021)
(Additional references under 'Language codes' in the information box) - ^"Justia Bolivia:: Nueva Constitución Política Del Estado > PRIMERA PARTE > TÍTULO I > CAPÍTULO PRIMERO:: Ley de Bolivia".bolivia.justia.Archivedfrom the original on 25 February 2017.Retrieved24 February2017.
- ^La educación intercultural bilingüe en Santiago del Estero, ¿mito o realidad?[La cámara de diputados de la provincia sanciona con fuerza de ley.] (in Spanish). Cámara de Diputados de la Nación. p. 1.
Declárase de interés oficial la preservación, difusión, estímulo, estudio y práctica de la lengua Quíchua en todo el territorio de la provincia [..]
- ^Adelaar (2004)
- ^"Did you know Catamarca and la Rioja Quechua is dormant?".
- ^ Alderetes, Jorge R. (1997)."Morfología nominal del quechua santiagueño".
- ^This occurs in English, where "before" means "in the past", and Shakespeare's Macbeth says "The greatest is behind", meaning in the future.
- ^Aikhenvald 2004, p. 3.
- ^Aikhenvald 2004, p. 377.
- ^Aikhenvald 2004, p. 42.
External links
edit- Qayna Kunan Paqarin: Una introducción al quechua chanca. 2011(Archive) Electronic book of the complete course of the grammar of quechua, R. Zariquiey, G. Córdova.(in Spanish)
- Vocabulario de la lengva general de todo el Perv llamada lengva Qquichua o del Inca(in Spanish)The Quechua language spoken by the Inca nobility in Cusco, 1608Diego González Holguín
- Iskay Simipi yuyayk'ancha(in Spanish)Standardized Southern Quechua of Bolivia, 2007. The only difference in orthography is that Bolivians use a J instead of a H.
- Official Quechua Alphabet for Cusco
- Quechua Orthography
- Quechua Spelling and PronunciationExplanation of some of the key issues in unified Southern Quechua spelling