Wariʼ dialects listed by Angenot (1997): ;Northern dialects • Wari’-’Oro Waram 'the monkeys' • Wari’-’Oro Mon 'the feces' • Wari’-’Oro Waram Xijen 'the other monkeys' ;Southern dialects • Wari’-’Oro Não’ 'the bats' • Wari’-’Oro ’Eo 'the burpers' • Wari’-’Oro ’At 'the bones' • Wari’-’Oro Jowin 'the monkeys' • Wari’-’Oro Kao Oro Aje 'the eaters of green things' == Phonology == None of the segments described below only occur in borrowed words or only in specific word classes. There are some sounds not listed which are only used in onomatopoeia and can violate the usual
phonotactic and phonological constraints.
Consonants The ’Oro Nao’ dialect of Wariʼ as described by Everett & Kern (1997) has the following consonant
phonemes. It is a relatively large inventory by Lowland Amazonian standards. The angled brackets represent the spellings associated with each sound. is made up of a
bilabial trill preceded by a
dental stop. In ’Oro Não’, this sound only occurs before and , appears almost exclusively in older speakers, and is sometimes
allophonic with , being entirely replaced by in some
idiolects. In some dialects it is a separate phoneme; however, only about 24 words contain the sound, some of which are
onomatopoeic.
Consonant alternations • can become , with a tendency to surface as more before unrounded vowels than rounded ones. • : 'he is thin' can be or . • can become (a sequence of the bilabial nasal followed by the voiced bilabial stop) syllable initially, most frequently before } but also before other vowels. The tendency to realise it as a sequence is greater if the syllable is stressed. • : 'its filth' can be or . • can become (a sequence of the voiced alveolar nasal followed the voiced alveolar stop) syllable initially, most frequently before but also before other vowels. The tendency to realise it as a sequence is greater if the syllable is stressed. • : 'my head' can be or . • can become before . • : 'let's go!' can be or . • can become word initially. • : 'I am afraid' can be or .
Vowels Wariʼ has one of the world's most asymmetrical vowel systems. Vowels are generally expected to be somewhat evenly distributed in the
vowel space, not bunched into a corner. Additionally, vowels are expected to be
unrounded when front and rounded when back until "gaps" in the vowel systems have been filled. Although Wariʼ has only six vowels, four of these are close/close-mid front vowels, of which two are rounded (although is uncommon). Non-native speakers have marked difficulty in distinguishing these front vowels, that contrast with only a single back vowel . Vowel nasalisation occurs on diphthongs only; the few which are not nasalised all end in . The following diphthongs occur in the Oro Nao dialect: , , , , , , , , .
Vowel alternations • can become in unstressed syllables if the vowel in the following syllable is . • : 'it is rocking' can be or . • /e/ becomes before all stops other than , and in unstressed syllables in harmony with /e/ becoming in the stressed syllable. • : 'day' is because of the • : 'they went out' is because the in the stressed syllable causes /e/ to become and the preceding ones change in harmony. • /e/ becomes before nasals, and in harmony with a /e/ becoming in the stressed syllable. • : 'it is numb' is . • can become in unstressed syllables when the vowel in the stressed syllable is not . • : 'its seed' can be or . • is a rare segment and for some speakers is evolving into in open syllables and in closed ones.
Syllables The basic syllable in Wari' is CV(C)(C), but suffixes can be of the form VC, VCVC or V. Only stops and nasals can occur in syllable
codas. Consonant clusters are rare: /n/ is the only first segment found, and /t/, /k/ and /t͡ʃ/ are the only second segments found in non-compound words. Wariʼ has words ending in the consonant clusters and . These have been analysed as single sounds, but apparently only to avoid complicating syllable structure. If these are separate phonemes, these clusters only occur word finally. In the Oro Nao dialect, many consonants alternate with [ʔC] at the beginning of monosyllabic words, and always precedes word initial semivowels ( and ), including in polysyllabic words. There is a correlation between words that begin [ʔC] in Oro Nao and words that begin [ʔaC] in other dialects. For example, 'water' is [ʔkom] in Oro Nao and [ʔaˈkom] in other dialects. Loss of this initial syllable is a potential explanation of why these words have variants that break the
phonotactic rules. However, these generalisations do not always hold; for instance 'thorn' [ʔpi] is pronounced the same in all dialects.
Stress The final syllable of words in major lexical categories is stressed. The verb tends to take the primary stress, with secondary stress on the others. However, emphasis of a particular word can cause transfer of the primary stress. == Morphology ==