Phonology Yanomaman languages have a phonological distinction between oral and nasal vowels. There are seven basic vowel qualities: /a e i o u ɨ ə/, which can occur as oral or nasal sounds. In the table above, the practical orthography is shown in angle brackets below the phoneme, if different. The Yanomaman languages present extensive
nasal harmony. When in Yanomaman words, a
vowel is phonetically
nasalized, all vowels that follow within the same word are also nasalized. The consonants of Yanomama are shown in the table below:
Syntax Yanomaman languages are SOV, suffixing, predominantly
head-marking with elements of
dependent-marking. Its typology is highly
polysynthetic. Adjectival concepts are expressed using stative verbs, there are no true adjectives. Adjectival stative verbs follow their noun. There are five demonstratives which have to be chosen according to distance from speaker and hearer and also according to visibility, a feature shared by many native Brazilian languages such as
Tupian ones including
Old Tupi. Demonstratives, numerals, classifiers and quantifiers precede the head noun. There is a distinction between
alienable and inalienable possession, again a common areal feature, and a rich system of verbal classifiers, almost a hundred, they are obligatory and appear just before the verb root. The distinction between inclusive and exclusive 1st person plural, a feature shared by most Native American languages, has been lost in Yanam and Yanomam dialects, but retained in the others. Yanomami morphosyntactic alignment is
ergative–absolutive, which means that the subject of an intransitive verb is marked the same way as the object of a transitive verb, while the subject of a transitive verb is marked differently. The ergative case marker is
-ny. The verb agrees with both the subject and object.
Evidentiality in the Yanomami dialect is marked on the verb and has four levels: eyewitness, deduced, reported, and assumed. Other dialects have fewer levels. The object of the verb can be incorporated into it, especially if it is not in focus:
Non-incorporated: {{interlinear|indent=3
Incorporated: {{interlinear|indent=3 Relative clauses are formed by adding a relativizing ('REL' below) suffix to the verb: {{interlinear|indent=3 Sanuma dialect also has a relative pronoun
ĩ. ==References==