Like most of the Carib family, Kuikuro is an
agglutinative language with a highly complex
morphology that effects both verbs and nouns. It is head-final and dependent marking. Its case system is ergative. A sample sentence shows the S/O V structure, the morphological richness, and the
ergativity of Kuikuro:
Plurality Kuikuro nouns can occur bare, with both number and definiteness being unmarked. Like many other neutral number languages (
Korean, for example) there is a
morpheme which - when affixed to a noun - denotes it as plural and marked. In Kuikuro this is the morpheme /-ko/. The following is demonstrative of one of the morpheme’s regular usages. {{interlinear|indent=2 {{interlinear|indent=2 Here the morpheme /-ko/ is only used on nouns that are [+
animate] as in (2) but not (3). In addition to the bound morpheme /-ko/, there is a quantifier which also serves to pluralize nouns; /tuguhu/. This quantifier is used to indicate that its entire constituent is pluralized. Unlike /-ko/ it can be used to mark plurality on nouns that are [-animate]. The following data is a minimal pair of readings that show the scope of /tuguhu/ and its usage as a pluralizer of [-animate] nouns. {{interlinear|indent=2 {{interlinear|indent=2 The preceding two morphemes are pluralizers of non-collective nouns. There is another set of morphemes which collectivize and pluralize nouns into sets that are – generally – based on the Kuikuro understanding of inter-personal relationships and kinship. Below is demonstrative of the collectivization concept, but not necessarily of the phono-morphological reality of its creation. {{interlinear|indent=2 These collective plurals and the collective plural morphemes are rich and complex and warrant further study.
Pronouns and Pronominals Pronouns and pronominal expressions in Kuikuro are bound morphemes that can be prefixed onto nouns, verbs, and certain particles. A partial set is listed below, allomorphs are not included. These pronouns - when affixed to a VP - have an
absolutive reading. {{interlinear|indent=2 To affect an ergative reading of a pronoun, it is prefixed to the ergative particle /heke/. The data below also shows that /-ko/ - as a pronominal pluralizer – is placed at the end of the verb construction. {{interlinear|indent=2 Apart from their use as arguments for VPs, pronouns are also used to denote possession on NPs. These possessive prefixes are generally the same as their pronominal counter-parts. The data below also shows how the possessive pronouns are also split if they are in the plural. {{interlinear|indent=2 Pronouns surface in Kuikuro as pronominal prefixes. They can act as arguments when attached to VPs or certain morphemes like /heke/, and they can act as possessives. They also display a number of phonologically conditioned allomorphs. Unlike its treatment of plurality, Kuikuro’s use of pronouns is largely unremarkable. == Syntax ==