Malibu languages

The Malibu languages are a poorly attested group of extinct languages once spoken along the Magdalena River in Colombia. Material exists only for two of the numerous languages mentioned in the literature: Malibú and Mocana.

Classification

The Malibu languages have previously been grouped into a single family with the Chimila language. However, Chimila is now known to be a Chibchan language, and Adelaar & Muysken regard the grouping of Chimila with the Malibu languages as "without any factual basis".

Family division

Rivet listed three Malibu tribes, each with its own language:

  • Malibú, spoken near the Magdalena River from Tamalameque to Tenerife
  • Mocaná, spoken by the Mokaná people in the region east of Cartagena (Rivet 1947b; Simón 1882-1892, vol. 4, p. 298, only two words.)
  • Pacabuey, also known as Sompallón or Laguna Malibu, spoken near the Zapatoza lagoon (Unattested.)

To this list, Loukotka adds six more languages, all of which are unattested (excluding Chimila):

Vocabulary

Rivet gives a brief list of words from Malibú and Mocana. A selection of these is provided below:

  • tahanamanzanilla tree
  • malibu – chief
  • man – small boat
  • ytaylaco / yteylaco / yntelas / ytaylas – devil, deity
  • entaha / enbutaccassava

References

Uses material from the Wikipedia article Malibu languages, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.