|
Pijao (''Piajao'') is an unclassified indigenous American language that was spoken in the villages of Orrega, Coyaima and Natagaima in the Magdalena River Valley of Colombia until the 1950s. A small vocabulary list was collected in 1943; only 30 Pijao words and expressions are known. The few words which resemble Carib are thought to be loans; toponyms in Pijao country are also Carib. Marshall & Seijas (1973) did not detect significative connections between Pijao and other unclassified languages of the area: Colima, Muzo, Pantágora, and Panche, but these are even more poorly attested than Pijao. ==Vocabulary== : ''amé'' tree : ''homéro'' bow : ''sumén'' to drink : ''čaguála'' canoe : ''kahírre'' dog : ''alamán'' crocodile : ''tínki'' tooth : ''tána'' water : ''nasés'' house : ''hoté'' star : ''nuhúgi'' woman : ''oréma'' man : ''yaguáde'' jaguar : ''núna'' moon : ''ñáma'' hand : ''golúpa'' cassava : ''lún'' eye : ''oléma'' ear : ''pegil'' foot : ''tápe'' stone : ''orái'' red : ''toléma'' snake : ''huíl'' sun : ''tenú'' tobacco 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Pijao language」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|