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Phonology: Mackay and other authors distinguish veneto/véneto/Venetan from veneziano/veneciano/Venetian. Chipileño is a variety of Venetan, as is Venetian.
 
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{{Short description|Venetian dialect of Puebla, Mexico}}
{{More citations needed|date=September 2014}}
{{More citations needed|date=September 2014}}
{{Infobox language
{{Infobox language
|name = Chipilo Venetian
| name = Chipilo Venetian
|nativename = Chipileño
| nativename = {{lang|vec-MX|Chipileño}}
|states = Mexico
| states = Mexico
|region =
| region =
|speakers = 2,500
| speakers = 2,500
|ref=<ref>{{e18|vec|Venetian (Mexico)}}</ref>
| ref = <ref>{{e18|vec|Venetian (Mexico)}}</ref>
|date=2011
| date = 2011
|familycolor = Indo-European
| familycolor = Indo-European
|fam2 = [[Italic languages|Italic]]
| fam2 = [[Italic languages|Italic]]
|fam3 = [[Romance languages|Romance]]
| fam3 = [[Latino-Faliscan languages|Latino-Faliscan]]
|fam4 = [[Western Romance languages|Western]]
| fam4 = [[Latin]]
|fam5 = [[Gallo-Romance languages|Gallo-Romance]]
| fam5 = [[Romance languages|Romance]]
|fam6 = [[Gallo-Italic]]
| fam6 = [[Italo-Western languages|Italo-Western]]
|fam7 = [[Venetian language|Venetian]]
| fam7 = [[Western Romance languages|Western Romance]]
| fam8 = (unclassified)
|isoexception = dialect
| fam9 = [[Venetian language|Venetian]]
|glotto=none
|script = Latin alphabet
| isoexception = dialect
| glotto = none
| script = Latin alphabet
| map = Chipileño in Puebla.svg
| mapcaption = Areas where Chipilo Venetian is spoken in [[Puebla]] state.
| ietf = vec-MX
}}
}}
[[File:WIKITONGUES- Nicholas speaking Chipileño.webm|thumb|A Chipileño speaker, recorded in the [[United States]].]]
'''Chipilo Venetian''', or '''Chipileño''', is a [[diaspora language]] and linguistic variant of [[Venetian language|Veneto]], a [[Romance languages|romance language]] belonging to the [[Gallo-Italic languages|Gallo-Italian group]] and native to the [[Veneto]] region of Northern Italy.
'''Chipilo Venetian''' ('''Venetan''') or '''Chipileño''', is a [[diaspora language]] and linguistic variant of [[Venetian language|Venetan]], a [[Romance languages|Romance language]] belonging to the [[Western Romance languages|Western Romance group]] and native to the [[Veneto]] region of Northern Italy, spoken in [[Chipilo]], a town in the Mexican state of [[Puebla]].


== History ==
== History ==
Immigrants mainly from the [[comune]] of [[Segusino]], some 60 km northwest of [[Venice]], arrived in the region in 1868<ref>{{Cite web|title=Italian Mexicans {{!}} Encyclopedia.com|url=https://www.encyclopedia.com/humanities/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/italian-mexicans|access-date=2021-11-10|website=www.encyclopedia.com}}</ref> during the [[Porfiriato]]. At that time, limited schooling and widespread illiteracy among poorer Italians made the use of the regional Italian languages<ref>{{Cite web|title=veneti, dialetti in "Enciclopedia dell'Italiano"|url=https://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/dialetti-veneti_(Enciclopedia-dell%27Italiano)|access-date=2021-11-10|website=www.treccani.it|language=it-IT}}</ref> predominant in both formal and informal contexts in Italy. Italians migrating to Mexico were primarily from northeastern Italy, and a large majority spoke variants of the Venetian language. Although Chipileño is very close to other Venetian dialects, it is the only Venetian dialect spoken in Mexico and can be compared to the [[Talian dialect|Venetian Talian]] of southern Brazil, another Venetian dialect spoken by non-Italians.
Immigrants mainly from the [[comune]] of [[Segusino]], some 60&nbsp;km northwest of [[Venice]], arrived in the region in 1868<ref>{{Cite web|title=Italian Mexicans {{!}} Encyclopedia.com|url=https://www.encyclopedia.com/humanities/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/italian-mexicans|access-date=2021-11-10|website=www.encyclopedia.com}}</ref> during the [[Porfiriato]]. At that time, limited schooling and widespread illiteracy among poorer Italians made the use of the regional Italian languages<ref>{{Cite web|title=veneti, dialetti in "Enciclopedia dell'Italiano"|url=https://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/dialetti-veneti_(Enciclopedia-dell%27Italiano)|access-date=2021-11-10|website=www.treccani.it|language=it-IT}}</ref> predominant in both formal and informal contexts in Italy. Italians migrating to Mexico were primarily from northeastern Italy, and a large majority spoke variants of the Venetian language. Although Chipileño is very close to other Venetian dialects, it is the only Venetian dialect spoken in Mexico and can be compared to the [[Talian dialect|Venetian Talian]] of southern Brazil, another Venetian dialect spoken by non-Italians.


More than 100 years after the arrival of the settlers, the Venetian dialect is widespread throughout its main city and nationwide. This dialect joins other Mexican languages ​​that lack official status, such as [[Basque language|Euskera]], [[Galician language|Galician]], [[Catalan language|Catalan]], [[Plautdietsch language|Plautdietsch]], and [[Romani language|Romani]], among other unrecognized ones, which are spoken by some 6.7 million members of the Mexican population.
More than 100 years after the arrival of the settlers, the Venetian dialect is widespread throughout its main city and nationwide. This dialect joins other Mexican languages that lack official status, such as [[Basque language|Euskera]], [[Galician language|Galician]], [[Catalan language|Catalan]], [[Plautdietsch language|Plautdietsch]], and [[Romani language|Romani]], among other unrecognized ones, which are spoken by some 6.7 million members of the Mexican population.


The community has maintained its unique culture and language as a linguistic enclave in contact with Spanish. Although the city of Puebla has grown to include the dialect and its speakers, the city of Chipilo remained isolated for much of the 20th century. Because of this, the Chipileños, unlike other European immigrants who arrived in Mexico, did not absorb as much Mexican culture, preserving many of their traditions and their language while mixing with the culture of Mexico as well.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Mariana|first=Diambra|date=2014|title=The Big Men from Chipilo|url=https://www.diambramariani.it/the_big_men_from_chipilo#1|url-status=live|archive-url=https://www.diambramariani.it/the_big_men_from_chipilo#1|access-date=11/10/21}}</ref>
The community has maintained its unique culture and language as a linguistic enclave in contact with Spanish. Although the city of Puebla has grown to include the dialect and its speakers, the city of Chipilo remained isolated for much of the 20th century. Because of this, the Chipileños, unlike other European immigrants who arrived in Mexico, did not absorb as much Mexican culture, preserving many of their traditions and their language while mixing with the culture of Mexico as well.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Mariana|first=Diambra|date=2014|title=The Big Men from Chipilo|url=https://www.diambramariani.it/the_big_men_from_chipilo#1|access-date=2021-11-10}}</ref>


The language and culture were rooted in Mexican soil due to the isolation they had from the local inhabitants, many of whom spoke the indigenous language of Nahuatl and Spanish. Over time, the language was influenced by [[Mexican Spanish]] and [[Nahuatl]], due to its contact with other communities near the south of the City of Puebla.
The language and culture were rooted in Mexican soil due to the isolation they had from the local inhabitants, many of whom spoke the indigenous language of Nahuatl and Spanish. Over time, the language was influenced by [[Mexican Spanish]] and [[Nahuatl]], due to its contact with other communities near the south of the City of Puebla.


The American linguist Carolyn MacKay<ref>{{Cite web|title=Mackay Carolyn|url=https://www.bsu.edu/academics/collegesanddepartments/english/connect-with-us/faculty-staff/emeritus-faculty/mackay-carolyn|access-date=2021-11-10|website=www.bsu.edu|language=en}}</ref> wrote ''Cipilo'' and ''Cipilegno'' when proposing a script for the Venetian dialect that is spoken in this locality. The writer Eduardo Montagner, who was the first to publish a novel in Chipilo Venetian, proposed that the Mexican government include this language in the catalog of minority languages, but has not yet succeeded.<ref>{{Cite web|date=2017-12-27|title=Chipilo: el pueblo de los tres mil mexicanos que hablan véneto|url=https://www.elmundo.es/papel/historias/2017/12/27/5a42455e268e3e570f8b457b.html|access-date=2021-11-10|website=ELMUNDO|language=es}}</ref>
The American linguist Carolyn MacKay<ref>{{Cite web|title=Mackay Carolyn|url=https://www.bsu.edu/academics/collegesanddepartments/english/connect-with-us/faculty-staff/emeritus-faculty/mackay-carolyn|access-date=2021-11-10|website=www.bsu.edu|language=en}}</ref> wrote {{lang|vec-MX|Cipilo}} and {{lang|vec-MX|Cipilegno}} when proposing a script for the Venetian dialect that is spoken in this locality. The writer [[Eduardo Montagner Anguiano|Eduardo Montagner]], who was the first to publish a novel in Chipilo Venetian, proposed that the Mexican government include this language in the catalog of minority languages, but has not yet succeeded.<ref>{{Cite web|date=2017-12-27|title=Chipilo: el pueblo de los tres mil mexicanos que hablan véneto|url=https://www.elmundo.es/papel/historias/2017/12/27/5a42455e268e3e570f8b457b.html|access-date=2021-11-10|website=ELMUNDO|language=es}}</ref>


== Chipileño Veneto Orthography ==
== Chipileño Veneto orthography ==
[[File:Chipilo Venetian sign.jpg|thumb|This sign, located at the entrance of the ''Parco del Paese'' in Chipilo, is written in Chipileño and urges visitors to keep the park clean and to respect the green areas and the monuments.]]
As with all languages that do not have a current written tradition, Chipileño Veneto has various issues. One of those is the problem of finding a comprehensive orthography. There have been several attempts to establish a writing system for the language spoken in Chipilo. One such system was created by Carolyn McKay, an American linguist who conducted postgraduate research at the [[Universidad de las Américas (Mexico)|Universidad de las Américas]]. Her proposed system, based entirely on the [[Italian alphabet]], was published in a book entitled ''Il dialetto veneto di Segusino e Chipilo''. This system has been used in some publications made by Cipiłàn/''chipileños'', but it has not received wide acceptance because of the striking differences between Venetian and Italian orthographic representation of phonemes. Most of the speakers use the [[Spanish orthography|Spanish system]] they learn at school, even though it does not have letters for specific sounds such as the voiced-S (written {{angbr|x}} in modern Venetan), or the {{IPAblink|θ}} (written {{angbr|th}} in modern Venetan), and {{IPAblink|ð}} (written {{angbr|dh}} in modern Venetan). Nevertheless, [[Eduardo Montagner Anguiano]], linguist and writer from Chipilo, has developed a system based on the Spanish orthography making a diagnosis of literacy in his hometown, with street surveys, interviews at a meeting where residents were called to discuss the problem and analyzing both written texts and everyday handwritten messages in his 2006 university thesis<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.academia.edu/70828910|title=Funcionalismo contra connotación gráfica en la escritura del véneto en Chipilo - Correspondencias fonema/Grafema |date=January 2006 |last1=Anguiano |first1=Eduardo Montagner }}</ref> and publishing literature<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.elem.mx/obra/datos/220908|title=Ancora fon ora - Detalle de la obra - Enciclopedia de la Literatura en México - FLM - CONACULTA }}</ref> with that graphic proposal. MacKay also developed a system based on the Spanish orthography, which she presents in her Spanish book "El Véneto de Segusino y Chipilo" (2017), in which she states that one of the issues of orthography development is the problem of finding one that is comprehensive. But this system was presented 24 years after publishing her book several times, a system almost identical to Montagner's, but without diagnosis or the work that Montagner and the inhabitants of Chipilo did for themselves in 2006, and she makes no reference to this in the foreword to her book, despite the existence in Chipilo of a book written entirely in ethnic language using this graphic system.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://archive.org/details/AncoraFonOra-EduardoMontagner2010|title=Ancora fon ora - Eduardo Montagner (2010) }}</ref> She does not even mention her own analysis made years before of the Spanish based writing of the inhabitants of Chipilo in a paper he presented in Modena, Italy. Montagner found out about this study on the internet, which caused annoyance not only for him but also for the other works of locals mentioned in that study, like the group that produced the ''Al Nostro'' cultural bulletin for years, adopting Montagner's proposal.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://literatura.inba.gob.mx/puebla/4612-montagner-anguiano-eduardo.html|title=Montagner Anguiano, Eduardo }}</ref> Until now, the system presented by Mackay has not produced any book or follower of his graphic proposal, so it has remained only within the academic field, which is perhaps the only reason for its existence.


For linguists, that each sound is represented by a symbol (or letter) that distinguishes it from others is important; nevertheless, a phonetic transcription would have to use symbols that are alien to those who are not linguists. Mackay's transcription adopts a simple to use orthography which also maintains necessary distinctions, reflections that Montagner had already made precisely by opposing graphic functionality against the graphic connotation that MacKay used for years in his publications. In the graphic functionality, according to Montagner, each phoneme corresponds to the grapheme with which the speakers have been alphabetized, while the graphic connotation prioritizes other interests away from reading and writing comprehension. For these reflections, Montagner based himself on the graphematic science of [[Nina Catach]], on [[Walter J. Ong]], on [https://www.upf.edu/es/web/daniel%20cassany/biografia Daniel Cassany], among others. He also had the approval and advice of the Italian linguist Flavia Ursini, co-author of the book [https://historiamexicana.colmex.mx/index.php/RHM/article/view/1943/1761 Cent'anni di emigrazione], 1983, on which MacKay also relies for the Italian-style writing of the Chipilo language. In short, Montagner's graphic proposal came from a local who studied at the university and was discussed and read among locals who saw this proposal reflected in books, advertisements and all kinds of writings in their community [https://www.bibliotecademexico.gob.mx/revistabm/RBMX176/].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.bibliotecademexico.gob.mx/revistabm/RBMX176/_HTML/04_creacion_escrituraOlvidada.html|title=Scritura desmentegada / Escritura olvidada, Eduardo Montagner Anguiano }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://espejohumeanterevista.wordpress.com/2022/03/11/a-ti-me-encomiendo-a-ti-me-racomande/|title=A ti me encomiendo / A ti me racomande |date=11 March 2022 }}</ref> Apparently MacKay did not think this proposal was enough. In Chipilo an Italian-based orthography is not used, instead one based principally on Spanish is preferred. This is easier to use on a keyboard, and the familiarity of [[grapheme]]s used for Spanish reduces the possibility of confusion. For example, to represent the [[palatal nasal]] /ɲ/ in the word meaning 'nothing', Italian norms require a [[Digraph (orthography)|digraph]], thus {{lang|vec-MX|gnent}}, whereas the Spanish system provides a uniquely interpretable single grapheme familiar to Chipileños schooled in Mexico: {{lang|vec-MX|ñent}}.
As with all languages that do not have a current written tradition, Chipileño Veneto has various issues. One of those is the problem of finding a comprehensive orthography. There have been several attempts to establish a writing system for the language spoken in Chipilo. One such system was created by Carolyn McKay, an American linguist who conducted postgraduate research at the [[Universidad de las Américas (Mexico)|Universidad de las Américas]]. Her proposed system, based entirely on the [[Italian alphabet]], was published in a book entitled ''Il dialetto veneto di Segusino e Chipilo''. This system has been used in some publications made by Cipiłàn/''chipileños'', but it has not received wide acceptance because of the striking differences between Venetian and Italian orthographic representation of phonemes. Most of the speakers use the [[Spanish orthography|Spanish system]] they learn at school, even though it does not have letters for specific sounds such as the voiced-S (written {{angbr|x}} in modern Venetan), or the {{IPAblink|θ}} (written {{angbr|th}} in modern Venetan), and {{IPAblink|ð}} (written {{angbr|dh}} in modern Venetan). Nevertheless, Eduardo Montagner, an [[Italo-Mexican]] from Chipilo, has suggested the standardization of a writing system based on the Spanish alphabet. In response to this, MacKay developed a system based on the Spanish orthography, which she presents in her Spanish book "El Véneto de Segusino y Chipilo" (2017), in which she states that one of the issues of orthography development is the problem of finding one that is comprehensive.

For linguists it is important that each sound is represented by a symbol (or letter) that distinguishes from others; nevertheless, a phonetic transcription would have to use symbols that are alien to those who are not linguists. Mackay's transcription adopts a simple to use orthography which also maintains necessary distinctions. In Chipilo an Italian-based orthography is not used, instead one based principally on Spanish is preferred. This is easier to use on a keyboard, and the familiarity of [[grapheme]]s used for Spanish reduces the possibility of confusion. For example, to represent the [[palatal nasal]] /ɲ/ in the word meaning 'nothing', Italian norms require a [[Digraph (orthography)|digraph]], thus ''gnent'', whereas the Spanish system provides a uniquely interpretable single grapheme familiar to Chipileños schooled in Mexico: ''ñent''.


Some considerations:
Some considerations:


a) the grave accent is used with è and ò to indicate that the pronunciation of the vowel is open, e.g. [<nowiki/>[[Open-mid front unrounded vowel|ɛ]]] spècho (mirror) and [<nowiki/>[[Open-mid back rounded vowel|ɔ]]] stòrder (twist);
a) the grave accent is used with è and ò to indicate that the pronunciation of the vowel is open, e.g. [<nowiki/>[[Open-mid front unrounded vowel|ɛ]]] ''spècho'' (mirror) and [<nowiki/>[[Open-mid back rounded vowel|ɔ]]] {{lang|vec-MX|stòrder}} (twist);


b) the acute accent is used to indicate an undetermined tonic accent
b) the acute accent is used to indicate an undetermined tonic accent


c) ‘zh’ is used to indicate the voiceless dental fricative ([[Dental ejective fricative|θ]]) e.g. giazh (ice)
c) ‘zh’ is used to indicate the voiceless dental fricative ([[Dental ejective fricative|θ]]) e.g. {{lang|vec-MX|giazh}} (ice)

d) ‘ch’ is used to represent the voiceless postalveolar affricate (t͡ʃ) e.g., {{lang|vec|italic=no|chacholar}} (converse), ranch (spider) or {{lang|vec|italic=no|schec}} (cheese)


d) ‘ch’ is used to represent the voiceless postalveolar affricate (t͡ʃ) e.g., {{lang|vec|italic=no|chacholar}} (converse), ''ranch'' (spider) or {{lang|vec|italic=no|schec}} (cheese)
e) ‘ge’ or ‘gi’ is used for the voiced postalveolar affricate (ʤ) which does not exist in Spanish orthography. Thus, Chipileño Veneto orthography follows the Italian model in this respect e.g. génderna (nit), giazh (ice), giozh (drop) or giust (right)


e) ‘ge’ or ‘gi’ is used for the voiced postalveolar affricate (d͡ʒ) which does not exist in Spanish orthography. Thus, Chipileño Veneto orthography follows the Italian model in this respect e.g. ''génderna'' (nit), ''giazh'' (ice), ''giozh'' (drop) or ''giust'' (right)
f) ‘que’ or ‘qui’ represent the voiceless velar stop (k) when followed by ‘e’ or ‘i’ and with ‘c’ when followed by ‘a’, ‘o’, and ‘u’. This follows the Spanish model e.g. quizha (glandular inflammation), cavar su (tear), bianc (white)


g) ‘gue’ and ‘gui’ represent the voiced velar stop (ɡ) when followed by ‘e’ and ‘i’ and ‘g’ when followed by ‘a’, ‘o’, and ‘u’ e.g. {{lang|vec|italic=no|guirla}} (swirl), galozhada (kick), góder (enjoy), guzá (sharp)
f) ‘que’ or ‘qui’ represent the voiceless velar stop (k) when followed by ‘e’ or ‘i’ and with ‘c’ when followed by ‘a’, ‘o’, and ‘u’. This follows the Spanish model e.g. {{lang|vec-MX|quizha}} (glandular inflammation), ''cavar su'' (tear), ''bianc'' (white)


g) ‘gue’ and ‘gui’ represent the voiced velar stop (ɡ) when followed by ‘e’ and ‘i’ and ‘g’ when followed by ‘a’, ‘o’, and ‘u’ e.g. {{lang|vec|italic=no|guirla}} (swirl), {{lang|vec-MX|galozhada}} (kick), {{lang|vec-MX|góder}} (enjoy), ''guzá'' (sharp)
h) represents the semiconsonant (j/y) when it is in a clear consonantal position e.g. yozha (drop), it does not form part of a diphthong.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Mackay|first=Carolyn J.|date=1992|title=Language maintenance in Chipilo: a Veneto dialect in Mexico|journal=International Journal of the Sociology of Language|volume=96|issue=1|doi=10.1515/ijsl.1992.96.129|s2cid=144023111|issn=0165-2516}}</ref>


h) represents the semiconsonant (j/y) when it is in a clear consonantal position e.g. {{lang|vec-MX|yozha}} (drop), it does not form part of a diphthong.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Mackay|first=Carolyn J.|date=1992|title=Language maintenance in Chipilo: a Veneto dialect in Mexico|journal=International Journal of the Sociology of Language|issue=96|pages=129–146 |doi=10.1515/ijsl.1992.96.129|s2cid=144023111|issn=0165-2516}}</ref>


=== Vowels ===
=== Vowels ===
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|'''ORTHOGRAPHY'''
!ORTHOGRAPHY
|'''PRONUNCIATION (IPA)'''
!PRONUNCIATION (IPA)
|'''CHIPILO VÉNETO'''
!CHIPILO VÉNETO
|'''SPANISH'''
!SPANISH
|'''ITALIAN'''
!ITALIAN
|'''ENGLISH'''
!ENGLISH
|-
|-
|a
|a
Line 119: Line 124:
=== Consonants ===
=== Consonants ===
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|'''ORTHOGRAPHY'''
!ORTHOGRAPHY
|'''PRONUNCIATION (IPA)'''
!PRONUNCIATION (IPA)
|'''CHIPILO VÉNETO'''
!CHIPILO VÉNETO
|'''SPANISH'''
!SPANISH
|'''ITALIAN'''
!ITALIAN
|'''ENGLISH'''
!ENGLISH
|-
|-
|b
|b
Line 162: Line 167:
|-
|-
|che/chi
|che/chi
|[t͡ʃe, t͡ʃi]
|[t͡ʃ]
|cheza
|cheza
|iglesia
|iglesia
Line 168: Line 173:
|church
|church
|-
|-
|ch
|cha/cho/chu
|[t͡ʃ]
|[t͡ʃ]
|pedòcho
|pedòcho
Line 204: Line 209:
|-
|-
|gi/ge
|gi/ge
|[d͡ʒi, d͡ʒe]
|[ʤ]
|gelos
|gelos
|celoso
|celoso
Line 210: Line 215:
|jealous
|jealous
|-
|-
|gi
|gia/gio/giu
|[ʤ]
|[d͡ʒ]
|giazh
|giazh
|hielo
|hielo
Line 280: Line 285:
|thus
|thus
|-
|-
|s
|s*
|[s]
|[s]
|mascho
|mascho
Line 287: Line 292:
|male
|male
|-
|-
|s
|s*
|[z]
|[z]
|sbayar
|sbayar
Line 300: Line 305:
|padella
|padella
|pan
|pan
|-
|?
|[d]
| colspan="2" |?
|dente
|tooth
|-
|-
|v
|v
Line 329: Line 340:
|sugar
|sugar
|}
|}

=== Phonology ===
Chipileño has 21 consonants, one more consonant (/x/) than in Segusino Venetan. The consonants in IPA (International Phonetic Alphabet) are the following:
{| class="wikitable"
!<small>CONSONANTS</small>
!Bilabial
!Labiodental
!Dental
!Alveolar
!Alveopalatal
!Palatal
!Velar
|-
!plosives
|p  b
|
|
|t  d
|
|
|k  g
|-
!fricatives
|
|f  v
|s  z
|
|
|(x)
|-
!affricates
|
|
|
|
|t͡ʃ  d͡ʒ
|
|
|-
!lateral
|
|
|
|l
|
|
|
|-
!rotic
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
!nasal
|m
|
|
|n
|
|
|-
!semivowels
|w
|
|
|
|
|j
|
|}
Furthermore, there is no longer the opposition between /b/ and /v/ between the younger generations of speakers due to the influence of Spanish.

=== Grammar ===
Chipilo Venetan follows the common word order of Romance languages, subject-verb-object. This is used in common declarative clauses, although the subject after the verb is common as well. Nonetheless, the language presents SVO order as the least marked and most common.

Articles are divided into definite and indefinite. The definite articles of this variant are:

* ''al'' "the" (masculine singular)
* ''i'' "the" (masculine plural)
* ''la'' "the" (feminine singular)
* ''le'' "the" (feminine plural).

Indefinite articles are:

* ''an'' "a", (masculine singular)
* ''ni'' "some" (masculine plural)
* ''na'' "a", or 'some' (feminine singular and plural).

The independent personal pronouns in Chipileño have their own accent. These are:

* ''me'' "I"
* ''tí'' "you" (informal)
* ''vú'' "you" (formal)
* ''lú'' "he" (informal)
* ''éla'' "her" (formal)
* {{lang|vec-MX|nuatri}} "we" (formal)
* {{lang|vec-MX|nuatre}} "us" (formal)
* {{lang|vec-MX|vuatri}} "you" (masculine plural)
* {{lang|vec-MX|vuatre}} "you" (feminine plural)
* {{lang|vec-MX|luri}} "they" (plural)
* {{lang|vec-MX|ele}} "them" (plural).<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Rodríguez|first=José Jared Galván|title=Cláusulas relativas en el Véneto de Chipilo|url=https://www.academia.edu/31597798}}</ref>

== Literature ==
The novel ''Al prim (The first)'', written by Eduardo Montagner Anguiano, is the first prose book written in Veneto Chipileño. With this work, great steps have been taken in the graphization<ref>{{Cite web|date=2012-11-20|title=Language Development|url=https://www.ethnologue.com/language-development|access-date=2021-11-10|website=Ethnologue|language=en}}</ref> of a minority language that was in the process of disappearing. Montagner also writes poetry in Chipileño. In 2010, he published ''Ancora fon ora'', a compilation of his stories and poems in Chipileño.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Eduardo Montagner Anguiano|url=https://archive.org/details/AncoraFonOra-EduardoMontagner2010|title=Ancora fon ora - Eduardo Montagner (2010)|language=vec}}</ref>


==See also==
==See also==
Line 334: Line 455:
* [[Talian dialect]] (Brazilian Venetian)
* [[Talian dialect]] (Brazilian Venetian)
* [[Venetian language]]
* [[Venetian language]]
*[[Italian immigration to Mexico|Italian Immigration to Mexico]]


== References ==
== References ==
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==External links==
==External links==
* {{in lang|es}} [https://web.archive.org/web/20110606110821/http://www.orbilat.com/Languages/Venetan/Dialects/Chipilo.html Chipilo Venetian dialect] by Eduardo Montagner
* {{in lang|es}} [https://web.archive.org/web/20110606110821/http://www.orbilat.com/Languages/Venetan/Dialects/Chipilo.html ''El dialecto véneto de Chipilo'' (Chipilo Venetan dialect)] by Eduardo Montagner


{{Italian language in the world|state=expanded}}
{{Italian language in the world|state=expanded}}
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[[Category:Endangered diaspora languages]]
[[Category:Endangered diaspora languages]]
[[Category:Mexican people of Italian descent| ]]
[[Category:Mexican people of Italian descent| ]]
[[Category:Geographical distribution of the Italian language]]
[[Category:Italian language in the Americas]]
[[Category:Languages of Mexico|Venetian]]
[[Category:Languages of Mexico|Venetian]]
[[Category:Venetian language]]
[[Category:Venetian language]]

Latest revision as of 16:38, 28 August 2024

Chipilo Venetian
Chipileño
Native toMexico
Native speakers
2,500 (2011)[1]
Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-3
GlottologNone
IETFvec-MX
Areas where Chipilo Venetian is spoken in Puebla state.

Chipilo Venetian (Venetan) or Chipileño, is a diaspora language and linguistic variant of Venetan, a Romance language belonging to the Western Romance group and native to the Veneto region of Northern Italy, spoken in Chipilo, a town in the Mexican state of Puebla.

History

[edit]

Immigrants mainly from the comune of Segusino, some 60 km northwest of Venice, arrived in the region in 1868[2] during the Porfiriato. At that time, limited schooling and widespread illiteracy among poorer Italians made the use of the regional Italian languages[3] predominant in both formal and informal contexts in Italy. Italians migrating to Mexico were primarily from northeastern Italy, and a large majority spoke variants of the Venetian language. Although Chipileño is very close to other Venetian dialects, it is the only Venetian dialect spoken in Mexico and can be compared to the Venetian Talian of southern Brazil, another Venetian dialect spoken by non-Italians.

More than 100 years after the arrival of the settlers, the Venetian dialect is widespread throughout its main city and nationwide. This dialect joins other Mexican languages that lack official status, such as Euskera, Galician, Catalan, Plautdietsch, and Romani, among other unrecognized ones, which are spoken by some 6.7 million members of the Mexican population.

The community has maintained its unique culture and language as a linguistic enclave in contact with Spanish. Although the city of Puebla has grown to include the dialect and its speakers, the city of Chipilo remained isolated for much of the 20th century. Because of this, the Chipileños, unlike other European immigrants who arrived in Mexico, did not absorb as much Mexican culture, preserving many of their traditions and their language while mixing with the culture of Mexico as well.[4]

The language and culture were rooted in Mexican soil due to the isolation they had from the local inhabitants, many of whom spoke the indigenous language of Nahuatl and Spanish. Over time, the language was influenced by Mexican Spanish and Nahuatl, due to its contact with other communities near the south of the City of Puebla.

The American linguist Carolyn MacKay[5] wrote Cipilo and Cipilegno when proposing a script for the Venetian dialect that is spoken in this locality. The writer Eduardo Montagner, who was the first to publish a novel in Chipilo Venetian, proposed that the Mexican government include this language in the catalog of minority languages, but has not yet succeeded.[6]

Chipileño Veneto orthography

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This sign, located at the entrance of the Parco del Paese in Chipilo, is written in Chipileño and urges visitors to keep the park clean and to respect the green areas and the monuments.

As with all languages that do not have a current written tradition, Chipileño Veneto has various issues. One of those is the problem of finding a comprehensive orthography. There have been several attempts to establish a writing system for the language spoken in Chipilo. One such system was created by Carolyn McKay, an American linguist who conducted postgraduate research at the Universidad de las Américas. Her proposed system, based entirely on the Italian alphabet, was published in a book entitled Il dialetto veneto di Segusino e Chipilo. This system has been used in some publications made by Cipiłàn/chipileños, but it has not received wide acceptance because of the striking differences between Venetian and Italian orthographic representation of phonemes. Most of the speakers use the Spanish system they learn at school, even though it does not have letters for specific sounds such as the voiced-S (written ⟨x⟩ in modern Venetan), or the [θ] (written ⟨th⟩ in modern Venetan), and [ð] (written ⟨dh⟩ in modern Venetan). Nevertheless, Eduardo Montagner Anguiano, linguist and writer from Chipilo, has developed a system based on the Spanish orthography making a diagnosis of literacy in his hometown, with street surveys, interviews at a meeting where residents were called to discuss the problem and analyzing both written texts and everyday handwritten messages in his 2006 university thesis[7] and publishing literature[8] with that graphic proposal. MacKay also developed a system based on the Spanish orthography, which she presents in her Spanish book "El Véneto de Segusino y Chipilo" (2017), in which she states that one of the issues of orthography development is the problem of finding one that is comprehensive. But this system was presented 24 years after publishing her book several times, a system almost identical to Montagner's, but without diagnosis or the work that Montagner and the inhabitants of Chipilo did for themselves in 2006, and she makes no reference to this in the foreword to her book, despite the existence in Chipilo of a book written entirely in ethnic language using this graphic system.[9] She does not even mention her own analysis made years before of the Spanish based writing of the inhabitants of Chipilo in a paper he presented in Modena, Italy. Montagner found out about this study on the internet, which caused annoyance not only for him but also for the other works of locals mentioned in that study, like the group that produced the Al Nostro cultural bulletin for years, adopting Montagner's proposal.[10] Until now, the system presented by Mackay has not produced any book or follower of his graphic proposal, so it has remained only within the academic field, which is perhaps the only reason for its existence.

For linguists, that each sound is represented by a symbol (or letter) that distinguishes it from others is important; nevertheless, a phonetic transcription would have to use symbols that are alien to those who are not linguists. Mackay's transcription adopts a simple to use orthography which also maintains necessary distinctions, reflections that Montagner had already made precisely by opposing graphic functionality against the graphic connotation that MacKay used for years in his publications. In the graphic functionality, according to Montagner, each phoneme corresponds to the grapheme with which the speakers have been alphabetized, while the graphic connotation prioritizes other interests away from reading and writing comprehension. For these reflections, Montagner based himself on the graphematic science of Nina Catach, on Walter J. Ong, on Daniel Cassany, among others. He also had the approval and advice of the Italian linguist Flavia Ursini, co-author of the book Cent'anni di emigrazione, 1983, on which MacKay also relies for the Italian-style writing of the Chipilo language. In short, Montagner's graphic proposal came from a local who studied at the university and was discussed and read among locals who saw this proposal reflected in books, advertisements and all kinds of writings in their community [1].[11][12] Apparently MacKay did not think this proposal was enough. In Chipilo an Italian-based orthography is not used, instead one based principally on Spanish is preferred. This is easier to use on a keyboard, and the familiarity of graphemes used for Spanish reduces the possibility of confusion. For example, to represent the palatal nasal /ɲ/ in the word meaning 'nothing', Italian norms require a digraph, thus gnent, whereas the Spanish system provides a uniquely interpretable single grapheme familiar to Chipileños schooled in Mexico: ñent.

Some considerations:

a) the grave accent is used with è and ò to indicate that the pronunciation of the vowel is open, e.g. [ɛ] spècho (mirror) and [ɔ] stòrder (twist);

b) the acute accent is used to indicate an undetermined tonic accent

c) ‘zh’ is used to indicate the voiceless dental fricative (θ) e.g. giazh (ice)

d) ‘ch’ is used to represent the voiceless postalveolar affricate (t͡ʃ) e.g., chacholar (converse), ranch (spider) or schec (cheese)

e) ‘ge’ or ‘gi’ is used for the voiced postalveolar affricate (d͡ʒ) which does not exist in Spanish orthography. Thus, Chipileño Veneto orthography follows the Italian model in this respect e.g. génderna (nit), giazh (ice), giozh (drop) or giust (right)

f) ‘que’ or ‘qui’ represent the voiceless velar stop (k) when followed by ‘e’ or ‘i’ and with ‘c’ when followed by ‘a’, ‘o’, and ‘u’. This follows the Spanish model e.g. quizha (glandular inflammation), cavar su (tear), bianc (white)

g) ‘gue’ and ‘gui’ represent the voiced velar stop (ɡ) when followed by ‘e’ and ‘i’ and ‘g’ when followed by ‘a’, ‘o’, and ‘u’ e.g. guirla (swirl), galozhada (kick), góder (enjoy), guzá (sharp)

h) represents the semiconsonant (j/y) when it is in a clear consonantal position e.g. yozha (drop), it does not form part of a diphthong.[13]

Vowels

[edit]
ORTHOGRAPHY PRONUNCIATION (IPA) CHIPILO VÉNETO SPANISH ITALIAN ENGLISH
a [a] adès ahora adesso now
e [e] vert verde verde green
è [ɛ] vèrt abierto aperto open
i [i] instès lo mismo lo stesso the same
o [o] vodo vacio vuoto empty
ò [ɔ] còt cocido cotto cooked
u [u] uvi huevos uova eggs

Consonants

[edit]
ORTHOGRAPHY PRONUNCIATION (IPA) CHIPILO VÉNETO SPANISH ITALIAN ENGLISH
b [b] baset bajito basso (diminutive) shortish
c [k] calt caliente caldo hot
c [k] zhonc hongo fungo mushroom
c [k] cuant cuanto quanto how much
qui/que [ki, ke] qui quien chi who
che/chi [t͡ʃe, t͡ʃi] cheza iglesia chiesa church
ch [t͡ʃ] pedòcho piojo pidocchio louse
d [ð] mèdo medio mezzo medium
f [f] fogo fuego fuoco fire
g [g] gucha suéter maglione sweater
gui/gue [gi, ge] brague pantalones pantaloni trousers
gi/ge [d͡ʒi, d͡ʒe] gelos celoso geloso jealous
gi [d͡ʒ] giazh hielo ghiaccio ice
l [l] laorar trabajar lavorare to work
m [m] mare madre madre mother
n [n] naranzha naranja arancia orange
ñ [ɲ] ñir venir venire come
p [p] poaret pobrecito poverino poor
r [r] reoltar revolver mescolare mix
s- [s] sántola madrina madrina godmother
-s [s] filos afilado affilato sharp
-s- [s] cusí así così thus
s* [s] mascho macho maschio male
s* [z] sbayar ladrar abbaiare to bark
t [t] techa cacerola padella pan
? [d] ? dente tooth
v [v, b] volp zorra cagna vixen
y [j, y] yeya tia zia aunt
z-, -z-, -z [z] paeze pueblo paese village
zh [θ] zhúquero azúcar zucchero sugar

Phonology

[edit]

Chipileño has 21 consonants, one more consonant (/x/) than in Segusino Venetan. The consonants in IPA (International Phonetic Alphabet) are the following:

CONSONANTS Bilabial Labiodental Dental Alveolar Alveopalatal Palatal Velar
plosives p  b t  d k  g
fricatives f  v θ s  z (x)
affricates t͡ʃ  d͡ʒ
lateral l
rotic ɾ
nasal m n ɲ
semivowels w j

Furthermore, there is no longer the opposition between /b/ and /v/ between the younger generations of speakers due to the influence of Spanish.

Grammar

[edit]

Chipilo Venetan follows the common word order of Romance languages, subject-verb-object. This is used in common declarative clauses, although the subject after the verb is common as well. Nonetheless, the language presents SVO order as the least marked and most common.

Articles are divided into definite and indefinite. The definite articles of this variant are:

  • al "the" (masculine singular)
  • i "the" (masculine plural)
  • la "the" (feminine singular)
  • le "the" (feminine plural).

Indefinite articles are:

  • an "a", (masculine singular)
  • ni "some" (masculine plural)
  • na "a", or 'some' (feminine singular and plural).

The independent personal pronouns in Chipileño have their own accent. These are:

  • me "I"
  • "you" (informal)
  • "you" (formal)
  • "he" (informal)
  • éla "her" (formal)
  • nuatri "we" (formal)
  • nuatre "us" (formal)
  • vuatri "you" (masculine plural)
  • vuatre "you" (feminine plural)
  • luri "they" (plural)
  • ele "them" (plural).[14]

Literature

[edit]

The novel Al prim (The first), written by Eduardo Montagner Anguiano, is the first prose book written in Veneto Chipileño. With this work, great steps have been taken in the graphization[15] of a minority language that was in the process of disappearing. Montagner also writes poetry in Chipileño. In 2010, he published Ancora fon ora, a compilation of his stories and poems in Chipileño.[16]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Venetian (Mexico) at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. ^ "Italian Mexicans | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  3. ^ "veneti, dialetti in "Enciclopedia dell'Italiano"". www.treccani.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  4. ^ Mariana, Diambra (2014). "The Big Men from Chipilo". Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  5. ^ "Mackay Carolyn". www.bsu.edu. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  6. ^ "Chipilo: el pueblo de los tres mil mexicanos que hablan véneto". ELMUNDO (in Spanish). 2017-12-27. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  7. ^ Anguiano, Eduardo Montagner (January 2006). "Funcionalismo contra connotación gráfica en la escritura del véneto en Chipilo - Correspondencias fonema/Grafema".
  8. ^ "Ancora fon ora - Detalle de la obra - Enciclopedia de la Literatura en México - FLM - CONACULTA".
  9. ^ "Ancora fon ora - Eduardo Montagner (2010)".
  10. ^ "Montagner Anguiano, Eduardo".
  11. ^ "Scritura desmentegada / Escritura olvidada, Eduardo Montagner Anguiano".
  12. ^ "A ti me encomiendo / A ti me racomande". 11 March 2022.
  13. ^ Mackay, Carolyn J. (1992). "Language maintenance in Chipilo: a Veneto dialect in Mexico". International Journal of the Sociology of Language (96): 129–146. doi:10.1515/ijsl.1992.96.129. ISSN 0165-2516. S2CID 144023111.
  14. ^ Rodríguez, José Jared Galván. "Cláusulas relativas en el Véneto de Chipilo". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  15. ^ "Language Development". Ethnologue. 2012-11-20. Retrieved 2021-11-10.
  16. ^ Eduardo Montagner Anguiano. Ancora fon ora - Eduardo Montagner (2010) (in Venetian).
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