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Yao language (Trinidad) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Yao language (Trinidad)
Yao (Jaoi, Yaoi, Yaio, Anacaioury) is an extinct Cariban language of Trinidad and French Guiana, attested in a single 1640 word list recorded by Joannes de Laet. It is thought that the Yao people migrated from the Orinoco to the islands perhaps a century earlier, after the Kaliña.〔Tassinari (2003) ''No Bom da Festa'', p 122–125〕 The name 'Anacaioury' is that of a number of chiefs encountered over a century or so. Yao is too poorly attested to classify within Cariban with any confidence, though Terrence Kaufman links it to the extinct Tiverikoto. A few of the attested words are: ''nonna'' or ''noene'' 'moon', ''weyo'' 'sun', ''capou'' 'céu', ''chirika'' 'star', ''pepeïte'' 'wind', ''kenape'' 'rain', ''soye'' 'earth', ''parona'' 'sea', ''ouapoto'' 'fire', ''aroua'' 'jaguar', ''pero'' 'dog' (from Spanish) ==References==
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