Macorix language

Category:Articles with short descriptionCategory:Short description matches Wikidata
Macorix
Mazorij
Native toDominican Republic, possibly neighboring Haiti
Regiontwo populations: northern coast, bordering the Peninsula of Samaná
EthnicityMacorix
Extinct16th century
Dialects
  • Upper
  • Lower
Language codes
ISO 639-3None (mis)
GlottologNoneCategory:Languages without Glottolog code
Precolombian languages of the Antilles.
  Macorix
Ciboney Taíno, Classic Taíno, and Iñeri were Arawakan, Karina and Yao were Cariban. Guanahatabey, Ciguayo, and Macorix are unclassified.
Category:Language articles with unreferenced extinction dateCategory:Languages with neither ISO nor Glottolog code

Macorix (also spelled Maçorís or Mazorij) was the language of the northern coast of what is today the Dominican Republic. Spanish accounts only refer to three languages on the island: Taíno, Macorix, and neighboring Ciguayo. The Macorix people appear to have been semi-sedentary and their presence seems to have predated the agricultural Taíno who came to occupy much of the island. For the early European writers, they shared similarities with the nearby Ciguayos.[1] Their language appears to have been moribund at the time of the Spanish Conquest, and within a century it was extinct.[2]

Dialects

Upper Macoris was spoken on the north-central coast of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Magua from Puerto Plata to Nagua, and inland to San Francisco de Macorís and further. It was also distributed on the southeast coast of Hispaniola around San Pedro de Macorís.[3]

Lower Macoris was spoken in the northwestern part of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Magua from Monte Cristi to Puerto Plata, and from the coast inland to the area of Santiago de los Caballeros.[3]

Lexicon

Little is known of Macorix apart from it being a distinct language from Taino and neighboring Ciguayo. A negative form, baeza [baˈesa]Category:Pages with plain IPA, is the only element of the language that is directly attested. Baeza could be Arawakan (though not Taino or Iñeri), analyzable as ba-ésa 'no-thing' = 'nothing'. (Cf. Manao ma-esa 'no, not', Paresis ma-isa 'not'. The negative prefix is ba- in Amarakaeri which, even if it is related to the Arawakan languages, is not close enough to be relevant here.)

Toponyms

There are also some non-Taino toponyms from the area that Granberry & Vescelius (2004) suggest may be Waroid:

Possible Macorix toponyms[4]
Name Warao parallel Warao meaning
Baho (river)baho-ro'shroud, dense (forest)'
Bahoruco (region)baho-ro-eku'within the forest'
Mana (river)mana'two, double'
Haina (river)ha-ina'many nets'
Saona (island)sa-ona'full of bats'

(Cf. a similar list at Guanahatabey language.)

See also

References

  1. García Bidó, Rafael (2010). Voces de bohío Vocabulario de la cultura taína. Santo Domingo, DR: Archivo General de la Nación. pp. 7, 25, 32. ISBN 978-9945-020-95-3.
  2. Wilson, Samuel M. (1999). Cultural Pluralism and the Emergence of Complex Society in the Greater Antilles. XVIII International Congress for Caribbean Archaeology. St. George's, Grenada: University of Texas, Department of Anthropology. Retrieved January 31, 2016.
  3. 1 2 Granberry, Julian; Vescelius, Gary (2004). Languages of the Pre-Columbian Antilles. Tuscaloosa, AL: University of Alabama Press. ISBN 0-8173-5123-X.
  4. Granberry & Vescelius (2004:76, Table 6)
  • Granberry, Julian, & Gary Vescelius (2004) Languages of the Pre-Columbian Antilles, University Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa, ISBN 0-8173-5123-X
Category:Languages of the Dominican Republic Category:Languages of Haiti Category:Pre-Arawakan languages of the Greater Antilles Category:Extinct languages of North America Category:Languages extinct in the 16th century Category:Indigenous peoples in Haiti Category:Indigenous peoples in the Dominican Republic
Category:Articles with short description Category:Extinct languages of North America Category:Indigenous peoples in Haiti Category:Indigenous peoples in the Dominican Republic Category:Language articles with unreferenced extinction date Category:Languages extinct in the 16th century Category:Languages of Haiti Category:Languages of the Dominican Republic Category:Languages with neither ISO nor Glottolog code Category:Languages without Glottolog code Category:Pages with plain IPA Category:Pre-Arawakan languages of the Greater Antilles Category:Short description matches Wikidata