Catio language

Catío
Emberá-Catío
Native toColombia, Panama
Native speakers
(15,000 cited 1992)[1]
Chocoan
Language codes
ISO 639-3cto
Glottologembe1260
ELPEmberá-Catío

Catío Emberá (Catío, Katío) is an indigenous American language spoken by the Embera people of Colombia and Panama.[2]

The language was spoken by 15,000 people in Colombia, and a few dozen in Panama, according to data published in 1992.[2] 90 to 95% of the speakers are monolingual with a 1% literacy rate.[2] The language is also known as Eyabida, and like most Embera languages goes by the name Embena 'human'.[2]

Writing system

Catio is written with the Latin script.[3]

Vowels
aãeiĩoõuũʉʉ̃
Consonants
mkbptchszgjrrrdnywñ

Phonology

Consonants

Consonants[4]
BilabialAlveolarPalatalVelarGlottal
Plosive/
Affricate
aspiratedt͡ʃʰ
ejectivet͡ʃʼ
voicedbdd͡ʒ
Fricativeaspiratedh
ejective
Nasalmn
Rhotictrillr
tapɾ
Semivowelw

Vowels

Vowels[4]
FrontCentralBack
unroundedrounded
Highi ĩɯ ɯ̃u ũ
Mide o õ
Lowa ã

Notes

  1. ^ Catío at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. ^ a b c d Catio language at Ethnologue (12th ed., 1992).
  3. ^ Silva Vallejo & Majore 2018, p. 77-78.
  4. ^ a b Mortensen, Charles Arthur (1994). Nasalization in a revision of Embera-Katio phonology (MA thesis). Arlington: University of Texas.

Bibliography

  • Silva Vallejo, Fabio; Majore, Iván Antonio Dominico (2018). "Los emberá katio del Alto Sinú-Córdoba". Oraloteca (in Spanish). 9: 64–84.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Catio_language&oldid=1330596533"