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Ambonese Malay

Ambonese Malay or simply Ambonese is a Malay-based creole language spoken on Ambon Island in the Maluku Islands of Eastern Indonesia. It was first brought by traders from Western Indonesia, then developed when the Dutch Empire colonised the Maluku Islands and was used as a tool by missionaries in Eastern Indonesia. Malay has been taught in schools and churches in Ambon, and because of this it has become a lingua franca in Ambon and its surroundings.

Ambonese Malay
Native toIndonesia
RegionMaluku Islands
Native speakers
(250,000 cited 1987)[1]
1.4 million L2 speakers
Malay Creole
  • East Indonesian
    • Ambonese Malay
Dialects
  • Ambon Malay
  • Dobo Malay
  • Melayu Sini (Dutch Ambonese Malay)
Language codes
ISO 639-3abs
Glottologambo1250

Christian speakers use Ambonese Malay as their mother tongue, while Muslims speak it as a second language as they have their own language. Muslims on Ambon Island particularly live in several areas in the city of Ambon, dominant in the Salahutu and Leihitu Peninsulas. While in the Lease (pronounced LAY-a-SAY, /leɪ.a.seɪ/) Islands, the Christian Ambonese-speaking community is dominant in parts of Haruku, Saparua and Nusa Laut islands. Ambonese Malay has also become lingua franca in Buru, Seram, Geser-Gorom and the south-western Maluku Islands, though with different accents.

While originally derived from Malay, Ambonese Malay has been heavily influenced by European languages (Dutch and Portuguese) as well as the vocabularies or grammatical structures of indigenous languages. Muslims and Christian speakers tend to make different choices in vocabulary. Papuan Malay, a Malay creole spoken in the Indonesian part of New Guinea, is closely related to Ambonese Malay and is said to be a derivative of Ambonese Malay or Manado Malay or a mixture of both. According to Robert B. Allen and Rika Hayami-Allen, the eastern Indonesian forms of Malay have their roots in North Moluccan Malay.[2]

Morpho-syntax edit

Pronouns and person markers edit

In Ambonese Malay, personal pronouns typically have a full form, as well as another one or more shortened and/or variant forms.[3] The pronouns vary in terms of number - singular and plural, as well as clusivity, such as exclusive forms which exclude the addressee and inclusive forms which include the addressee. Such distinction is relatively typical of Austronesian languages. The following table provides a summary of all the pronouns found in Ambonese Malay:

Personal pronouns[3]
Singular Plural
Full (and variant) form Short form Full (and variant) form Short form
1st person Exclusive Beta bet; be Bat'ong (dialectal form recorded at Booi, Saparua Island)
Inclusive Kat'ong tong
2nd person Ose
Ale
os; se
al
Dorang dong
3rd person Dia di; de Dorang dong
neuter Ontua; Ongtua; Antua; Angtua Akang ont'o; ant'u; ant'o kang; ang

Etymology edit

A number of observations can be made from the pronouns of Ambonese Malay which demonstrate etymology of certain pronouns:

  1. A number of pronouns are historically compounded. They are:
    • Bat'ong: Derives from beta 'I (1SG) + orang 'people; man' [3]
    • Kat'ong: Derives from *kita 'we (1PL) + orang 'people; man' [3]
    • Dorang: Derives from dia 'he; she; it (3SG) + orang 'people; man' [3]
  2. The 2nd person singular form ose is derived from the Portuguese pronoun voce, meaning 'you; thou'.[3]
  3. The 2nd person singular form ale is derived from a vernacular language.[3]

Politeness edit

Similarly to other Austronesian languages, such as Malay and Indonesian, the 2nd person singular and one of the 3rd person singular pronouns in Ambonese Malay vary in their degree of politeness. They are summarised in the following table:[3]

Person Politeness marking Full singular form Short singular form
2nd Markedly impolite

Used in familiar and intimate relationships and when no outspoken respect needs to be expressed

Expresses intimacy. Used among peers, or to people of lower status.

ose

Ale

os

se

al

3rd Markedly polite. Used by people of younger age to refer to adults and by adults to refer to people of equal or higher social rank. Ontua; ongtua; antua; angtua

It is also important to note that although in Ambonese the 1st person singular form beta is the standard form, in Classical Malay, it is used only by royal persons speaking to equals of rank.[3]

Syntactic positions edit

As previously mentioned, Ambonese pronouns consist of a full and one or more variant form. Full forms occur in every syntactic position. Variant form have a more restricted distribution and may be functionally different.[3] The following table summarises the set of full personal pronouns plus (in brackets) their variant forms according to context and syntactic function:

Personal pronouns and their syntactic function[3]
Person One-word sentence Subject Object (of verb or prep.)
1S beta beta (bet; be) beta
2S ose (os; se)

ale

ose (os; se)

ale (al)

ose (os; se)

ale

3S

3SN

dia

antua (etc.) ontua (etc.)

dia (di; de)

antua (etc.) ontua (etc.) akang

dia

antua (etc.) ontua (etc.) akang (kang; ang)

1P kat'ong kat'ong (tong) kat'ong
2P dorang (dong) dorang (dong) dorang (dong)
3P dorang (dong) dorang (dong) dorang (dong)

From this table it follows that two factors determine whether a personal pronoun can be shortened: syntactic construction and syntactic position:

  • Except for the first person singular beta, first person plural kat'ong and third person singular dia, all pronouns can be shortened in one-word sentences. Third person singular neuter akang cannot form a one-word sentence altogether.[3]
  • In clauses all personal pronouns in Subject position may be shortened, except for third person singular neutral akang.[3]
  • In clauses all personal pronouns in Object position may be shortened, except for first person singular beta, first person plural kat'ong, second person ale and third person singular dia.[3]
  • Likewise, as preposition object all personal pronouns except for beta, ale, kat'ong and dia may be shortened.[3]

These facts show that se, os 'you', dong 'you', ont'o, ant'o, ant'u 'he; she' and dong 'they' have developed into doublets which are functionally (but not semantically) on a par with their full forms, while other short forms (bet, al, kang, ang) are phonological variants with a more restricted distribution.[3]

It is also important to note a number of syntactic variations within the functions of personal pronouns in Ambonese:

1) The 3rd person single dia 's/he; it' can be shortened to di or de when it is in Subject position, or when it is head of a Noun Phrase (NP) in object position.[3]

2) The 3rd person single antua (and angtua, ontua, ongtua) is also a modifier of head nominals in a phrase, thereby adding an aspect of deference. It adds a feature respect.[3]

(1)

Ant'o

3S

Onggo

O.

Ant'o Onggo

3S O.

Mr. Onggo [3]

(2)

Antua

3S

parangpuan

woman

sana

yonder

tu

that

Antua parangpuan sana tu

3S woman yonder that

the woman overthere [3]

3) The third form, akang, is a neater pronoun 'it', which also functions as a determiner. This form links up with the demonstratives ini and itu for deictic reference: it occurs as a single attribute before nouns, and in combination with postnominal tu.

(1)

Akang

3S.N

barang

things

tu

that

Akang barang tu

3S.N things that

those goods[3]

(2)

Akang

3S.N

gunting

scissors

di

where

mana?

 

Akang gunting di mana?

3S.N scissors where

Where are the scissors?[3] Mismatch in the number of words between lines: 4 word(s) in line 1, 3 word(s) in line 2 (help);

4) The short form of dorang, which is dong, also functions as a modifier in NPs to create collective plurals.[3]

(1)

mama

mother

dong

3P

mama dong

mother 3P

mother and the others (i.e. the children, her family, friends, etc.)[3]

(2)

Okto

O.

dong

3P

Okto dong

O. 3P

Okto and people who are like him [3]

(3)

Anis

A.

dong

3P

Anis dong

A. 3P

Anis and his friends [3]

Reduplication edit

Reduplication with personal pronouns is not frequent. The following examples denote a concept "referent of pronoun plus persons who are alike":[3]

(1)

De

3S

seng

not

datang

come

lia

see

kat'ong-kat'ong

REDUP~1P

De seng datang lia kat'ong-kat'ong

3S not come see REDUP~1P

He doesn't come to visit people like us [3]

(2)

Macang

kind

ose-ose

REDUP~2S

bagini

like this

seng

not

bisa

can

dapa

get

akang

3S.N

Macang ose-ose bagini seng bisa dapa akang

kind REDUP~2S {like this} not can get 3S.N

People like you now can't get it [3]

Word Order edit

Ambonese Malay is a SVO (subject-verb-object) language. Its basic word order has the subject in initial position, followed by the verb and then the object, as shown below. 'Subject, verb, object' are labelled 'S, V, O' respectively:

Pombo

dove

S

kasi

give

V

tongka

stick

O

satu

one to

 

for Kes.

monkey

 

Pombo kasi tongka satu {for Kes}.

dove give stick {one to} monkey

S V O {} {}

"Dove gave a stick to Monkey."[4]

Negation edit

Negation in Ambonese is sentential rather than constituent. Negation is predominantly expressed by five free morphemes that are treated as adverbs, modifying predicates, clauses or parts of the sentence as opposed to specific elements (such as single verbs or nominals). These morphemes are listed below alongside their common variants and English equivalents:

  • seng ‘no, not’
  • tar (tra) ‘no, not’
  • bal’ong (blong) ‘not yet’
  • bukang ‘no, not’
  • jangang (jang) ‘don’t’.[5]

Constituent order

Ambonese negators are typically positioned between the subject and the VO-group. This word order is typical of SVO languages.[5] In the following example, the subject pronoun de precedes the negator seng (represented here as sem), and the verb group headed by the verb bisa follows it.

Der

From

tadi

just now

de

3S

so

PHA

sem

no

bisa

can

k

to

atas

top

lei.

also

Der tadi de so sem bisa k atas lei.

From {just now} 3S PHA no can to top also

"Just now she already couldn't go up (the tree) anymore."[6]

Summary of distinguishing features edit

  1. All negators except tar/tra can be used as one-word sentences in response to a Yes-No question.[7]
  2. All negators except jangang/jang can be used in declarative and interrogative sentence types.
  3. Only jangang/jang can be used in an imperative sentence.

These features will be explored in greater detail below.

Seng edit

Seng is the most commonly used negator.

Although Ambonese generally operates on the premise of sentential negation, seng can be used in a marked word order to narrow the scope of negation to single verbs or nominals. Seng moves rightwards in the clause, shifting the focus of negation to the word it immediately precedes. In the first example below, seng occurs in its default position between the subject de and the verb group headed by kar'ja, modifying the verb group kar'ja bat'ul in a general sense. In the second example, seng is integrated into the verb group itself, immediately preceding and placing the emphasis of negation on the verbal modifier bat'ul.

De

3S

seng

no

karj'a

work

bat'ul.

right

De seng karj'a bat'ul.

3S no work right

"He doesn't work well."[7]

De

3S

karj'a

work

seng

no

bat'ul.

right

De karj'a seng bat'ul.

3S work no right

"He works not well."[7]

Seng also collocates with modal auxiliary usa to express a lack of necessity:

Papa,

Father

seng

no

usa

necessary

mara,

angry

deng

and

seng

no

usa

necessary

malu.

ashamed

Papa, seng usa mara, deng seng usa malu.

Father no necessary angry and no necessary ashamed

"Father, you don't have to be angry and you don't have to be ashamed."[8]

Seng is also used with the reduplicated interrogative pronoun apa, meaning 'what', in a fixed expression to denote 'nothing', or 'not anything':

Seng

No

apa-apa.

REDUP~what

Seng apa-apa.

No REDUP~what

"It's nothing; it doesn't matter."[9]

Tar/tra edit

Unlike all other Ambonese negators, tar/tra cannot form a one-word sentence. It is typically regarded as a marker of emphatic negation, and can be used alongside seng and with reduplication to achieve even greater emphasis. In the example below, ampas is reduplicated, following both negators seng and tra.

Ose

2S

nanti

wait

seng

no

ampas,

waste

ose

2S

tra

no

ampas

waste

lei!

also

Ose nanti seng ampas, ose tra ampas lei!

2S wait no waste 2S no waste also

"You just wait; nothing, not even waste of you will remain (i.e. I won't spare you at all!)"[7]

Tar/tra also commonly collocates with:

  • existential verb ada 'be (somewhere)'
  • bai 'good'
  • modal auxiliary bole 'may, be allowed'

Tar

no

ada

be

uba

medicine

tu!

that

Tar ada uba tu!

no be medicine that

"There was no medicine at all!"[10]

Dong

3P

seng

no

piker

think

akang,

3S.N

kata

CONJ

itu

that

tar

no

bae.

good

Dong seng piker akang, kata itu tar bae.

3P no think 3S.N CONJ that no good

"They don't think about it, <that is> that it is really bad."[10]

Tar

no

bole

may

tu!

that

Tar bole tu!

no may that

"You may not do that!"[10]

Bal'ong/blong edit

Bal'ong marks both negation and the phasal aspect 'yet', denoting 'not yet'.

Dong

3P

su

PHA

makang

eat

deng

and

bal'ong

not yet

gal'ap

dark

lai.

also

Dong su makang deng bal'ong gal'ap lai.

3P PHA eat and {not yet} dark also

"They have eaten and it isn't dark yet <so just let the children play outside>."[10]

Similar to tar/tra it can also be used as a marker of emphatic negation alongside a reduplicated verb, as in the example below where bal'ong co-occurs with the reduplicated verb pulang-pulang:

An-ana

REDUP~child

tu,

that

dong

3P

bilang:

say

"E!

INTER

Mama

mother

tu,

that

ant'o

3S

bal'ong

not yet

pulang-pulang."

REDUP~return

An-ana tu, dong bilang: "E! Mama tu, ant'o bal'ong pulang-pulang."

REDUP~child that 3P say INTER mother that 3S {not yet} REDUP~return

"The children said: 'Hey, mother, she still has not come home yet.'"[11]

Bukang edit

According to van Minde's research findings, bukang is the least commonly used negator in Ambonese Malay.[12] It expresses a 'contrast which implies an alternative' - bukang X means 'not X (but on the contrary) Y)':[12]

Dia

3S

tu

that

bukang

no

guru

teacher

mar

but

soldadu.

soldier

Dia tu bukang guru mar soldadu.

3S that no teacher but soldier

"He wasn't a teacher, but a soldier."[12]

It may also occur in sentences with contrastive stress, combined with the use of 'higher pitch and articulatory strength'[12] to articulate the constituents that are the focus of the negation. In the examples below, these specific constituents are capitalised to demonstrate prosodic emphasis:

Bukang

No

seng

no

BISA,

can

seng

no

DAPA

get

dangsa

dance

deng

with

nona-nona.

REDUP~girl

Bukang seng BISA, seng DAPA dangsa deng nona-nona.

No no can no get dance with REDUP~girl

"Not that he COULD not (dance), he did not GET a dance(-partner) from among the girls."[13]

Jangang/jang edit

Jangang does not occur in declarative or interrogative sentences but is used to express negative imperatives, as in the example below - 'don't go to China.'

Seng

No

usa,

necessary

jang

don't

pi

go

di

to

tan

land

Cina.

China

Seng usa, jang pi di tan Cina.

No necessary don't go to land China

"That’s not necessary, don’t go to China."[13]

It is also used in several 'short formulaic expressions':[14]

Jang

Don't

mira

angry

e.

INTER

Jang mira e.

Don't angry INTER

"Excuse me; Sorry."[14]

Jang

Don't

bilang

say

lai!

also

Jang bilang lai!

Don't say also

"Incredible! Unbelievable! Terrible!"[14]

Negators and common collocations edit

Lai edit

In the above example, the particle lai is used in sentence-final position as an exclamative marker. However, it can also be used with seng, bal'ong, and jangang in non-exclamative sentences to denote, 'anymore; again', or 'still':

De

3S

so

PHA

seng

no

mo

FUT

pi

go

deng

with

beta

1S

lei.

also

De so seng mo pi deng beta lei.

3S PHA no FUT go with 1S also

"He won't go with me anymore."[14]

Jang

Don't

lei.

also

Jang lei.

Don't also

"Don't do that anymore/again."[14]

Bal'ong

Not yet

lei.

also

Bal'ong lei.

{Not yet} also

"Still not yet."[14]

Ka edit

Ka combines with negators seng and bal'ong to form a sentence-final tag for interrogative sentences:

Se

2S

su

PHA

makang

eat

ka

Q

blong?

not yet

Se su makang ka blong?

2S PHA eat Q {not yet}

"Have you eaten already?"[15]

Pap

Father

mara

angry

ka

Q

seng?

no

Pap mara ka seng?

Father angry Q no

"Are you angry, or not?"[15]

In the above example the tag ka seng has converted a yes–no question "Are you angry?" into an alternative question "Are you angry, or not?"

Phonology edit

Ambonese Malay has phonemic word stress, by which is meant that the position of stress within a word is unforeseeable (van Minde 1997, p. 21) . Van Minde (1997, p. 22) uses the term “lexically reduplicated morphemes” which means that both of the roots that compose the morpheme contain an important (e.g. stressed) syllable. However, in the case of duplicated monosyllables, neither of the roots are perceptible as regards stress. Each accent on the syllables will be marked even if the morpheme is made up of a duplicated monosyllable. The reason being is to differentiate them from morphemes that are monomorphemic (van Minde 1997, p. 22). Examples of this would be (p. 22):

/g’igi/ ‘tooth’; /pomp’om/ in: /s’agu pomp’om/ k.o sago-cake roasted in cartridge-cases.

Compare the examples with the following (p. 23):

/’ eleK’ eleK/ ‘oil-lamp made from glass jar’; /t’omit’ omi/ k.o. cherry-like fruit.

Wordstress is the only different feature in a number of minimal pairs (p. 23):

/b’acaŋ/ Bacan (island) - /bac’aŋ/ k.o. fruit
/p’araŋ/ ‘machete’ - /par’aŋ/ ‘war’
/t’are/ ‘to attract s.t.’ - /tar’e/ ‘tight

Vowel phonemes edit

Ambonese contains 5 vowel phonemes as illustrated in the chart (van Minde 1997, p. 24):

Vowel system
Front Central Back
High i u
Non-high e a o

Ambonese Malay do not have phonemic glottal stop /ʔ/ but phonetically the glottal stop is noticed word-initially, morpheme-initially after a vowel, and morpheme-medially between like vowels (van Minde 1997, p. 24). Examples are (p. 24):

/’ose/ [ʔ’ ose] ‘you’
/baku’atur/ [baku#ʔ’atur] ‘to arrange with one another’

In addition, there might be borrowed words from other indigenous languages, there is individual variation, and [ʔ] is occasionally heard (van Minde 1997, p. 24):

/pa’isal/ [paʔ ‘isal] = [pa’isal] k.o. small proa;
/n’oul. [n’oʔul] = [n’oul] k.o. fish

Nasalised vowels happen expectedly before nasal consonants belonging to the same syllable. Due to this, van Minde considers nasalization as a “phonetic phenomenon”. He gave some examples as well (1997, pp. 24–25):

/’aNboŋ/ [ʔ’ām.bõŋ] ‘Ambon; Ambonese’
/kaNp’iNjaŋ/ [kãm.p’ĩñ.jãŋ] ‘churchbell’

Nasalisation is invalid past syllable-boundaries like for example (p. 24-25):

/an’ioŋ/ [ʔa.n’i.yõŋ] ‘rolled up cloth to support load carried on head’
/ba#’aNbur/ [ba. ʔ’āmbur] ‘to strew, scatter (repeatedly)

High front unrounded /i/ edit

According to van Minde (1997, p. 25), the high front unrounded vowel /i/ is always perceived as [i], and it always take place in non-final and final closed and open syllables. /i/ in final syllables (whether they are open or closed) can be replaced by /e/ however this only applies in some polysyllabic morphemes. Though /i/ can be replaced by /e/, it does not work in reverse thus it can’t be said the conflict between these two phonemes is negated in that position and environment (van Minde 1997, p. 25).

Besides position and stress, further restrictions on the alternation /i ≈ e/ is given in two phonological rules (PR). The change in final unstressed syllables of polysyllabic morphemes is not attested in (van Minde, 1997 p. 25):

PR1: final syllables ending in /s/;

PR2: open final syllables when the penultimate syllable contains /u/ or /i/

Van Minde (1997, p. 25) regards /i/ as a ‘heavy phoneme’ wherever there is a change /i ~ e/, which means in environments that are different from those interpreted by PR1 and PR2. The definition of ‘heavy phoneme’ is defined as “consists of one or more optional distinctive features in addition to the basic distinctive features, whereas a basic phoneme consists of basic distinctive features only” (Ebeling 1967; Stokhof 1975). Van Minde deduces that /i/ is a heavy phoneme in environments excluded by PR1 and PR2; /e/ being its basic phoneme and [relative highness] is a voluntary feature. Examples are given in the following (p. 25):

/katiNd’isaŋ/ [katĩnd’isāŋ] ‘to talk or rave while sleep’
/ir/ [ʔir] ‘drunk’
  • closed final syllables (p. 26):
/k’ukis/ [k’ukis *k’ukes] ‘biscuit’
/kac’il/ [kac’il *kac’el] ‘small’
  • open final syllables (p. 26):
/p’uti/ [p’uti *p’ute] ‘white’
/h’ari ≈ h’are/ ‘day’

Mid front unrounded vowel /e/ edit

The mid front unrounded vowel /e/ is perceived as [e] (or [ē] due to nasalization). Examples are followed (p. 26):

/b’esi/ [b’esi] ‘iron/steel’
/b’erkaT/ [b’erkat-] ‘divine blessing’

The phonemic status of /e/ versus /i/ is attested by the followed minimal pairs (p. 26):

/’ina/ ‘mother’ - /’ena/ ‘tasty, delicious’
/p’ici/ ‘to peel’ - /p’eci/ ‘mud’

The examples illustrated distinctly that /i/ is resistant to /e/ in morpheme-final syllables, hence the change /i ≈ e/ in final syllables under the previous restrictions stated in the phonological rules cannot be clarified as neutralization (van Minde 1997, pp. 26–27).

Low central vowel /a/ edit

The low central vowel in Ambonese Malay is perceived as [a] (or [ā] due to nasalization). Examples are followed (p. 27):

/’añer/ [ʔ’añer] ‘bad fishy smell’
/kal’apa/ [kal’apa] ‘coconut’

The minimal pairs attest the resistance between /a/ and /i/ (p. 27):

/s’atu/ ‘one’ - /s’itu/ ‘there’
/bal’a/ ‘to split s.t.’ - /bal’i/ ‘to buy s.t.’

The opposition between /a/ and /e/ is shown by the presented minimal pairs (p. 27):

/cak’a/ ‘to strangle s.o.’ - /cak’e/ ‘(vulg) to eat, stuff o.s.’
/b’aca/ ‘to read’ - /b’eca/ ‘pedicab’

High back rounded vowel /u/ edit

/u/ happens in non-final and final closed and open position. This high back rounded vowel is always perceived as [u] (or [ũ] due to nasalization). However, /u/ in final unstressed syllables (whether open or closed) consistently alternates with /o/ when in certain polysyllabic morphemes (van Minde 1997, p. 27). In addition, not all /o/ in this position and environment alternates with /u/, thus these two phonemes are not balanced. According to van Minde (1997, p. 27), the change /u ≈ o/ in final unstressed syllables of polysyllabic morphemes is not proven in (p. 27):

PR3: open final syllables when the penultimate syllable have /u/ or /i/

This situation is alike to the change between the high and mid front vowels /i ≈ e/, where /u/ is seen as a heavy phoneme, /o/ as the basic phoneme and [relative phoneme] is the optional feature. The following examples prove this assertion (p. 28):

/t’obu/ [t’obu] ≈ /t’obo/ [t’obo] ‘sugar cane’
/’uNpaŋ/ [ʔ’ ũmpãŋ] ‘bait’
  • Closed final syllables (p. 28):
/c’aNpur ≈ c’aNpor/ ‘to mix’
/c’abuT ≈ c’aboT/ ‘let’s go!’
  • Open final syllables (p. 29):
/tapar’egu ≈ tapar’ego/ ‘to do s.t. hurriedly’
/cap’atu ≈ cap’ato/ ‘shoe’
  • Minimal pairs shown to the resistance between /u/ and /i/ (p. 29):
/k’utu/ ‘louse’ - /k’uti/ ‘snap’
/g’ula/ ‘sugar’ - /g’ila/ ‘mad’
  • The resistance between /u/ and /e/ can be shown by (p. 29):
/b’ulaŋ/ ‘moon, month’- /b’elaŋ/ in: /aruNb’ aI b’elaŋ/ k.o. large proa

The resistance between /u/ and /a/ is attested by:

/’uru/ ‘to massage’ – /’aru/ ‘Aru Islands’

Mid back rounded vowel /o/ edit

The mid back rounded vowel /o/ is seen as [o] (or [õ] due to nasalization). Examples are followed (p. 29):

/’oraŋ/ [‘orãŋ] ‘man, human being’
/b’odo/ [b’odo] ‘stupid’
  • The minimal pair show the phoneme status of /o/ vis-à-vis /i/ (p. 30):
/b’oŋko/ ‘bowed (of persons)’ – /b’eŋko/ ‘bend sideways (of persons)’
  • The phoneme status of /o/ against /a/ is shown by (p. 30):
/kat’oŋ/ ‘we’ - /kat’ aŋ/ ‘crab’
  • The resistance between /o/ and /u/ is proven by (p. 30):
/h’ori/ ‘to wander about’ – /h’uri/ ‘having lost its original shape’

Archiphoneme /U/ edit

Archiphoneme /U/ is proposed in unstressed position after a vowel other than /u/ and instantly before a syllable or morpheme boundary by van Minde (1997). This is because there is no opposition between /u/ and /w/ in this environment (p. 31):

/l’aUtaŋ/ [l’autãŋ] ‘deep-sea’

The second reason proposed by van Minde (1997, p. 32) is that /U/ occurs after a consonant and directly before a stressed vowel (p. 32):

/bU’aya/ [bu’aya] ‘crocodile’

Nevertheless, not every pattern /Cw’V/ is collateral by a sequence /CU’V/ (p. 32):

/swaK/ [swak-] ‘weak, feeble’

Archiphoneme /I/ edit

This results from the neutralization of the resistance /i/-/y/ in unstressed position after a vowel or instantly before a stressed vowel (p. 32):

/m’uI/ [m’ui, muy] ‘aunt’
  • Van Minde (1997, p. 32) showed some examples of /I/ before a stressed vowel:
/I’a/ [I’a, iy’a] ‘yes (formal)’
/bI’asa/ [bi’asa] ‘normal, usual’
  • The resistance of /i/ and /y/ is shown by (p. 33):
/t’iU/ [t’iyu] ‘uncle’

Consonants edit

There are 19 consonants phonemes and 4 consonant archiphonemes in Ambonese Malay and they are charted below (van Minde 1997, pp. 40–41):

Consonant system
Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Archiphoneme P T N K
Stop p b t d c j k g
Nasal m n ñ ŋ
Fricative f s h
Liquid l, r
Semivowel w y

Archiphonemes /P, T, K, N/ edit

These archiphonemes is a consequence from the neutralization of the opposition between /p/- /b/, /t/-/d/, and /k/-/g/ respectively in two positions and under certain conditions (van Minde 1997, p. 40):

1. Frequency of /P, T, K/ is especially high in word-final position. Most words with /P, T, K/ in this position are borrowed words from Dutch (van Minde 1997, p. 41). This is due to the many words of Malay origin to have lost final stops *p, *t, *k, or *ʔ. Example: *tutup > tutu ‘to close’.

Wordfinally the archiphonemes /P, T, K/ have a voiceless unreleased realization. Examples are shown (p. 41):

/keP/ [kep-] ‘notch, nick’ (<Dukeep)
/’aNbaK/ [ʔ’ãmbak-] ‘character, habit’

A significant number of polysyllabic words with non-final stress have a doublet without final /P, T, K/ in non emphatic speech (p. 41):

/r’unuT ≈ runu/ ‘fibroid material growing on palm trees’

In addition, van Minde (1997, p. 42) states that /P, T, K/ are “heavy archiphonemes” in this position and environment.

2. The archiphonemes /P, T, K/ have a voiceless unreleased realization in syllable-final position right before a stop, a nasal, fricative /s/, or the lateral /l/. Example is shown (p. 42):

/b’aKso/ [b’ak-so] ‘(Chinese) meatball’

Archiphoneme /N/ is also developed from the neutralization of the opposition between /m, n, ñ/ and /ŋ/ before their own homorgonaic obstruents /l/ (van Minde 1997, p. 42). Example is followed (p. 42):

/naNl’ohi/ [nãnl’ohi] Nanlohi (clan name)

Stops edit

The voiceless and voiced stops of the series /p, b, t, d, c, j, k, g/ are found in word-medial position and word-initial. /p, b/ are bilabials, /d/ is an apico-alveolar, /c, j/ are laminal-palatals, /t/ is an apico-alveodental, /k, g/ are dorsal-velars. Relevant (near) minimal pairs are shown below (van Minde 1997, pp. 43–44):

  • p: b /t’aNpa/ ‘place stop’; /t’aNba/ ‘to add s.t.’
  • p: t /p’aku/ ‘nail’; /t’aku/ ‘afraid’
  • p:d /b’apa/ ‘term of address’; /bad’a/ ‘skin powder’
  • p:c /p’ipi/ ‘cheek’; /p’ici/ ‘to give money’
  • p:j /p’ari/ ‘ray (fish)’; /j’ari/ ‘finger’
  • p:k /p’ele/ ‘to obstruct’; /k’ele/ ‘to press under arm’
  • p:g /p’araŋ/ ‘machete’; /g’araŋ/ ‘salt’
  • b:t /b’aru/ ‘new’; /t’aru/ ‘to place’
  • b:d /b’apa/ ‘term of address’; /d’apa/ ‘to obtain’
  • b:c /b’ole/ ‘may’; /c’ole/ ‘bodice’
  • b:j /b’aNbaŋ/ ‘to warn’; /j’aNbaŋ/ ‘beard’
  • b:k /b’ore/ ‘poisonous extract’; /k’ore/ ‘to fumble’
  • b:g /b’aru/ ‘new’; /g’aru/ ‘to scratch’
  • t:d /t’ulaŋ/ ‘bone’; /d’ulaŋ/ ‘wooden tray’
  • t:c /t’ari/ ‘dance’; /c’ari/ ‘to search’
  • t:j /t’ari/ ‘dance’; /j’ari/ ‘finger’
  • t:k /t’anaŋ/ ‘to plant’; /k’anaŋ/ ‘right (side)’
  • t:g /t’ali/ ‘rope’; /g’ali/ ‘to dig’
  • d:c /d’aro/ ‘from’; /c’ari/ ‘to search’
  • d:j /d’aro/ ‘from’; /j’ari/ ‘finger’
  • d:k /d’aki/ ‘dirt’; /k’aki/ ‘foot’
  • d:g /d’oti/ ‘to work magic’; /g’oti/ ‘trough for preparing sago’
  • c:g /c’ari/ ‘search’; /j’ari/ ‘finger
  • c:k /coK/ ‘choke’; /koK/ ‘owl’
  • c:g /c’ili/ ‘chili’; /g’ilig’ili/ ‘tickle’
  • j:k /j’aNji/ ‘to agree’; /k’aNji/ ‘starch’
  • j:g /j’aga/ ‘to keep watch’; /g’aga/ ‘beautiful’
  • k:g /k’araŋ/ ‘coral’; /g’araŋ/ ‘salt’

In certain lexical items there is an unexplained change between the voiceless stop and its homorganic voiced counterpart (van Minde 1997, p. 44):

/cigulu/ = /jigulu/ ‘riddle’

Nasals edit

The nasals /m, n, ñ, ŋ/ are separated on the basis of the following (near-) minimal pairs (van Minde 1997, pp. 44–45):

  • m:n /m’ani/ ‘bead’; /n’ani/ ‘bamboo hoe’
  • m:ñ /m’adu/ ‘honey’; /ñ’adu/ ‘brother/sister in-law’
  • m:ŋ /m’ana/ ‘where’; /ŋ’ana/ ‘(inter.) gee!’
  • n:ñ /ne/ in /b’ubur ne/ k.o. porridge; /ñe/ in” /m’uka m’acaŋ ñe/ ‘look disappointed’
  • m:ŋ /’ina/ ‘mother’; /’iŋa/ ‘to remember’
  • ñ:ŋ /t’aña/ ‘to ask’; /t’eŋa/ ‘middle’

The prevalence and functional load of these nasal contrasts differently. They take place word-initially and word-medially before vowels. However, in the environment of word-initially, the functional load of /ñ/ and /ŋ/ is low. Examples are shown (van Minde 1997, p. 45):

/ñ’amu/ [ñ’amu] ‘mosquito’
/ñoŋ/ [ñõŋ] ‘term of address for boys’

In morpheme-final position, nasals other than /ŋ/ are barely proven and thus van Minde (1997, p. 46) finds it hard to find minimal pairs that are different in morpheme-final nasal phoneme.

Fricatives edit

The labio-dental fricative /f/ takes place only in borrowed words and in words of unknown origin. Examples are shown (van Minde 1997, p. 46):

/f’ader/ [f’ader] ‘term of address for men’

The alveolar fricative /s/ happens in word-initial, -medial, and –final position. Examples are shown (p. 47):

/saw’aI/ [saw’ai] ‘awry’
/rab’us/ [rab’us] ‘to boil’

The glottal fricative /h/ takes place word-medially and word-initially. However, in the use of interjections such as /ih/ ‘Hey!’ and /ah/ ‘Oh no!’- /h/ occur word-finally (van Minde 1997, p. 47) .

Also, word-medial /h/ is optional in certain words; when /h/ is removed between like vowels, one of the two adjacent vowel segments is also deleted. Examples are illustrated below (p. 47):

/bah’asa/ ≈ /basa/ ‘language’
/mas’ohi/ ≈ /mas’oI/ ‘mutual aid’

Liquids edit

The liquids /l/ and /r/ take place in word-initial, -medial, -final position, just like the alveolar fricative /s/. Example is shown (van Minde 1997, p. 48):

/t’ari/ [t’ari] ‘dance’

Semivowels edit

The semivowels /w/ and /y/ happen in word-initial and word-medial position before a vowel. Example are shown below (van Minde 1997, p. 48):

/hay’al/ [hay’al] ‘to flirt’
/kal’uyu/ [kal’uyu] ‘shark’

Samples edit

Examples:

  • Beta pung nama Ahmad = My name is Ahmed
  • Ose su tau Ahmad pung maitua? = Do you know Ahmed's wife?
  • Jang bakudapa deng dia dolo, dia ada gagartang deng ose = Don't meet with him for a moment, he's angry with you.
  • Susi dong pung kaka mo pi kamari = Susi's brother will come
  • Ini beta kasi akang voor ose = This is for you.
  • Ale badiang jua, beta cumang mo tipu-tipu. Tuang Ala = Shut up, I am just tricking them. god! ('god!' as in swearing. eg. 'jesus christ!)
  • Beta seng tau = I don't know

Ambonese word samples:

  • Beta = I
  • Ose, Ale = you (ose is derived from the Portuguese voce)
  • Dia = he, she
  • Akang = (may) it
  • Katong = we (cut from kita orang)
  • Dong = they (cut from dia orang)
  • Kamong, kamorang = you (pl) (cut from kamu orang)
  • Antua = he, she (respectful form)
  • iyo = yes
  • seng = no
  • bakubae = peace
  • nanaku = pay attention to something
  • su = already (indicating something has already happened or has been done)

INTER:interjection PHA:phasal aspect marker

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Ambonese Malay at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. ^ Allen, Robert B.; Hayami-Allen, Rika (2002). "Orientation in the Spice Islands" (PDF). In Macken, Marlys (ed.). Papers from the Tenth Annual Meeting of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society, 2000. Tempe: Arizona State University, Program for Southeast Asian Studies. p. 21. ISBN 1-881044-29-7. OCLC 50506465.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Van Minde 1997, p. 68
  4. ^ Van Minde 1997, p. 184
  5. ^ a b Van Minde 1997, p. 273
  6. ^ Van Minde 1997, p. 275 Note: In this example, seng is represented as sem, as the phoneme /ŋ/ has become bilabial /m/, assimilating to the place of articulation of the bilabial consonant /b/ in the following morpheme bisa.
  7. ^ a b c d Van Minde 1997, p. 276
  8. ^ Van Minde 1997, p. 193
  9. ^ Van Minde 1997, p. 133
  10. ^ a b c d Van Minde 1997, p. 277
  11. ^ Van Minde 1997, p. 126
  12. ^ a b c d Van Minde 1997, p. 278
  13. ^ a b Van Minde 1997, p. 279
  14. ^ a b c d e f Van Minde 1997, p. 280
  15. ^ a b Van Minde 1997, p. 262

References edit

  • Ethnologue. (2015). Malay, Ambonese. Retrieved 8 May 2015, from https://www.ethnologue.com/language/abs
  • Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2013). "Ambonese Malay". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
  • Van Minde, D. (1997). Malayu Ambong. Leiden, the Netherlands: Research School CNWS.

External links edit

ambonese, malay, simply, ambonese, malay, based, creole, language, spoken, ambon, island, maluku, islands, eastern, indonesia, first, brought, traders, from, western, indonesia, then, developed, when, dutch, empire, colonised, maluku, islands, used, tool, miss. Ambonese Malay or simply Ambonese is a Malay based creole language spoken on Ambon Island in the Maluku Islands of Eastern Indonesia It was first brought by traders from Western Indonesia then developed when the Dutch Empire colonised the Maluku Islands and was used as a tool by missionaries in Eastern Indonesia Malay has been taught in schools and churches in Ambon and because of this it has become a lingua franca in Ambon and its surroundings Ambonese MalayNative toIndonesiaRegionMaluku IslandsNative speakers 250 000 cited 1987 1 1 4 million L2 speakersLanguage familyMalay Creole East IndonesianAmbonese MalayDialectsAmbon Malay Dobo Malay Melayu Sini Dutch Ambonese Malay Language codesISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code abs class extiw title iso639 3 abs abs a Glottologambo1250 Christian speakers use Ambonese Malay as their mother tongue while Muslims speak it as a second language as they have their own language Muslims on Ambon Island particularly live in several areas in the city of Ambon dominant in the Salahutu and Leihitu Peninsulas While in the Lease pronounced LAY a SAY leɪ a seɪ Islands the Christian Ambonese speaking community is dominant in parts of Haruku Saparua and Nusa Laut islands Ambonese Malay has also become lingua franca in Buru Seram Geser Gorom and the south western Maluku Islands though with different accents While originally derived from Malay Ambonese Malay has been heavily influenced by European languages Dutch and Portuguese as well as the vocabularies or grammatical structures of indigenous languages Muslims and Christian speakers tend to make different choices in vocabulary Papuan Malay a Malay creole spoken in the Indonesian part of New Guinea is closely related to Ambonese Malay and is said to be a derivative of Ambonese Malay or Manado Malay or a mixture of both According to Robert B Allen and Rika Hayami Allen the eastern Indonesian forms of Malay have their roots in North Moluccan Malay 2 Contents 1 Morpho syntax 1 1 Pronouns and person markers 1 1 1 Etymology 1 1 2 Politeness 1 1 2 1 Syntactic positions 1 1 3 Reduplication 1 2 Word Order 1 3 Negation 1 3 1 Summary of distinguishing features 1 3 2 Seng 1 3 3 Tar tra 1 3 4 Bal ong blong 1 3 5 Bukang 1 3 6 Jangang jang 1 3 7 Negators and common collocations 1 3 7 1 Lai 1 3 7 2 Ka 2 Phonology 2 1 Vowel phonemes 2 1 1 High front unrounded i 2 1 2 Mid front unrounded vowel e 2 1 3 Low central vowel a 2 1 4 High back rounded vowel u 2 1 5 Mid back rounded vowel o 2 1 6 Archiphoneme U 2 1 7 Archiphoneme I 2 2 Consonants 2 2 1 Archiphonemes P T K N 2 2 2 Stops 2 2 3 Nasals 2 2 4 Fricatives 2 2 5 Liquids 2 2 6 Semivowels 3 Samples 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksMorpho syntax editPronouns and person markers edit In Ambonese Malay personal pronouns typically have a full form as well as another one or more shortened and or variant forms 3 The pronouns vary in terms of number singular and plural as well as clusivity such as exclusive forms which exclude the addressee and inclusive forms which include the addressee Such distinction is relatively typical of Austronesian languages The following table provides a summary of all the pronouns found in Ambonese Malay Personal pronouns 3 Singular Plural Full and variant form Short form Full and variant form Short form 1st person Exclusive Beta bet be Bat ong dialectal form recorded at Booi Saparua Island Inclusive Kat ong tong 2nd person OseAle os seal Dorang dong 3rd person Dia di de Dorang dong neuter Ontua Ongtua Antua Angtua Akang ont o ant u ant o kang ang Etymology edit A number of observations can be made from the pronouns of Ambonese Malay which demonstrate etymology of certain pronouns A number of pronouns are historically compounded They are Bat ong Derives from beta I 1SG orang people man 3 Kat ong Derives from kita we 1PL orang people man 3 Dorang Derives from dia he she it 3SG orang people man 3 The 2nd person singular form ose is derived from the Portuguese pronoun voce meaning you thou 3 The 2nd person singular form ale is derived from a vernacular language 3 Politeness edit Similarly to other Austronesian languages such as Malay and Indonesian the 2nd person singular and one of the 3rd person singular pronouns in Ambonese Malay vary in their degree of politeness They are summarised in the following table 3 Person Politeness marking Full singular form Short singular form 2nd Markedly impolite Used in familiar and intimate relationships and when no outspoken respect needs to be expressedExpresses intimacy Used among peers or to people of lower status ose Ale os seal 3rd Markedly polite Used by people of younger age to refer to adults and by adults to refer to people of equal or higher social rank Ontua ongtua antua angtua It is also important to note that although in Ambonese the 1st person singular form beta is the standard form in Classical Malay it is used only by royal persons speaking to equals of rank 3 Syntactic positions edit As previously mentioned Ambonese pronouns consist of a full and one or more variant form Full forms occur in every syntactic position Variant form have a more restricted distribution and may be functionally different 3 The following table summarises the set of full personal pronouns plus in brackets their variant forms according to context and syntactic function Personal pronouns and their syntactic function 3 Person One word sentence Subject Object of verb or prep 1S beta beta bet be beta 2S ose os se ale ose os se ale al ose os se ale 3S 3SN dia antua etc ontua etc dia di de antua etc ontua etc akang dia antua etc ontua etc akang kang ang 1P kat ong kat ong tong kat ong 2P dorang dong dorang dong dorang dong 3P dorang dong dorang dong dorang dong From this table it follows that two factors determine whether a personal pronoun can be shortened syntactic construction and syntactic position Except for the first person singular beta first person plural kat ong and third person singular dia all pronouns can be shortened in one word sentences Third person singular neuter akang cannot form a one word sentence altogether 3 In clauses all personal pronouns in Subject position may be shortened except for third person singular neutral akang 3 In clauses all personal pronouns in Object position may be shortened except for first person singular beta first person plural kat ong second person ale and third person singular dia 3 Likewise as preposition object all personal pronouns except for beta ale kat ong and dia may be shortened 3 These facts show that se os you dong you ont o ant o ant u he she and dong they have developed into doublets which are functionally but not semantically on a par with their full forms while other short forms bet al kang ang are phonological variants with a more restricted distribution 3 It is also important to note a number of syntactic variations within the functions of personal pronouns in Ambonese 1 The 3rd person single dia s he it can be shortened to di or de when it is in Subject position or when it is head of a Noun Phrase NP in object position 3 2 The 3rd person single antua and angtua ontua ongtua is also a modifier of head nominals in a phrase thereby adding an aspect of deference It adds a feature respect 3 1 Ant o3SOnggoO Ant o Onggo3S O Mr Onggo 3 2 Antua3SparangpuanwomansanayondertuthatAntua parangpuan sana tu3S woman yonder thatthe woman overthere 3 3 The third form akang is a neater pronoun it which also functions as a determiner This form links up with the demonstratives ini and itu for deictic reference it occurs as a single attribute before nouns and in combination with postnominal tu 1 Akang3S NbarangthingstuthatAkang barang tu3S N things thatthose goods 3 2 Akang3S Nguntingscissorsdiwheremana Akang gunting di mana 3S N scissors whereWhere are the scissors 3 Mismatch in the number of words between lines 4 word s in line 1 3 word s in line 2 help 4 The short form of dorang which is dong also functions as a modifier in NPs to create collective plurals 3 1 mamamotherdong3Pmama dongmother 3Pmother and the others i e the children her family friends etc 3 2 OktoO dong3POkto dongO 3POkto and people who are like him 3 3 AnisA dong3PAnis dongA 3PAnis and his friends 3 Reduplication edit Reduplication with personal pronouns is not frequent The following examples denote a concept referent of pronoun plus persons who are alike 3 1 De3Ssengnotdatangcomeliaseekat ong kat ongREDUP 1PDe seng datang lia kat ong kat ong3S not come see REDUP 1PHe doesn t come to visit people like us 3 2 Macangkindose oseREDUP 2Sbaginilike thissengnotbisacandapagetakang3S NMacang ose ose bagini seng bisa dapa akangkind REDUP 2S like this not can get 3S NPeople like you now can t get it 3 Word Order edit Ambonese Malay is a SVO subject verb object language Its basic word order has the subject in initial position followed by the verb and then the object as shown below Subject verb object are labelled S V O respectively PombodoveSkasigiveVtongkastickOsatuone to for Kes monkey Pombo kasi tongka satu for Kes dove give stick one to monkeyS V O Dove gave a stick to Monkey 4 Negation edit Negation in Ambonese is sentential rather than constituent Negation is predominantly expressed by five free morphemes that are treated as adverbs modifying predicates clauses or parts of the sentence as opposed to specific elements such as single verbs or nominals These morphemes are listed below alongside their common variants and English equivalents seng no not tar tra no not bal ong blong not yet bukang no not jangang jang don t 5 Constituent orderAmbonese negators are typically positioned between the subject and the VO group This word order is typical of SVO languages 5 In the following example the subject pronoun de precedes the negator seng represented here as sem and the verb group headed by the verb bisa follows it DerFromtadijust nowde3SsoPHAsemnobisacanktoatastoplei alsoDer tadi de so sem bisa k atas lei From just now 3S PHA no can to top also Just now she already couldn t go up the tree anymore 6 Summary of distinguishing features edit All negators except tar tra can be used as one word sentences in response to a Yes No question 7 All negators except jangang jang can be used in declarative and interrogative sentence types Only jangang jang can be used in an imperative sentence These features will be explored in greater detail below Seng edit Seng is the most commonly used negator Although Ambonese generally operates on the premise of sentential negation seng can be used in a marked word order to narrow the scope of negation to single verbs or nominals Seng moves rightwards in the clause shifting the focus of negation to the word it immediately precedes In the first example below seng occurs in its default position between the subject de and the verb group headed by kar ja modifying the verb group kar ja bat ul in a general sense In the second example seng is integrated into the verb group itself immediately preceding and placing the emphasis of negation on the verbal modifier bat ul De3Ssengnokarj aworkbat ul rightDe seng karj a bat ul 3S no work right He doesn t work well 7 De3Skarj aworksengnobat ul rightDe karj a seng bat ul 3S work no right He works not well 7 Seng also collocates with modal auxiliary usa to express a lack of necessity Papa Fathersengnousanecessarymara angrydengandsengnousanecessarymalu ashamedPapa seng usa mara deng seng usa malu Father no necessary angry and no necessary ashamed Father you don t have to be angry and you don t have to be ashamed 8 Seng is also used with the reduplicated interrogative pronoun apa meaning what in a fixed expression to denote nothing or not anything SengNoapa apa REDUP whatSeng apa apa No REDUP what It s nothing it doesn t matter 9 Tar tra edit Unlike all other Ambonese negators tar tra cannot form a one word sentence It is typically regarded as a marker of emphatic negation and can be used alongside seng and with reduplication to achieve even greater emphasis In the example below ampas is reduplicated following both negators seng and tra Ose2Snantiwaitsengnoampas wasteose2Stranoampaswastelei alsoOse nanti seng ampas ose tra ampas lei 2S wait no waste 2S no waste also You just wait nothing not even waste of you will remain i e I won t spare you at all 7 Tar tra also commonly collocates with existential verb ada be somewhere bai good modal auxiliary bole may be allowed Tarnoadabeubamedicinetu thatTar ada uba tu no be medicine that There was no medicine at all 10 Dong3Psengnopikerthinkakang 3S NkataCONJituthattarnobae goodDong seng piker akang kata itu tar bae 3P no think 3S N CONJ that no good They don t think about it lt that is gt that it is really bad 10 Tarnobolemaytu thatTar bole tu no may that You may not do that 10 Bal ong blong edit Bal ong marks both negation and the phasal aspect yet denoting not yet Dong3PsuPHAmakangeatdengandbal ongnot yetgal apdarklai alsoDong su makang deng bal ong gal ap lai 3P PHA eat and not yet dark also They have eaten and it isn t dark yet lt so just let the children play outside gt 10 Similar to tar tra it can also be used as a marker of emphatic negation alongside a reduplicated verb as in the example below where bal ong co occurs with the reduplicated verb pulang pulang An anaREDUP childtu thatdong3Pbilang say E INTERMamamothertu thatant o3Sbal ongnot yetpulang pulang REDUP returnAn ana tu dong bilang E Mama tu ant o bal ong pulang pulang REDUP child that 3P say INTER mother that 3S not yet REDUP return The children said Hey mother she still has not come home yet 11 Bukang edit According to van Minde s research findings bukang is the least commonly used negator in Ambonese Malay 12 It expresses a contrast which implies an alternative bukang X means not X but on the contrary Y 12 Dia3Stuthatbukangnoguruteachermarbutsoldadu soldierDia tu bukang guru mar soldadu 3S that no teacher but soldier He wasn t a teacher but a soldier 12 It may also occur in sentences with contrastive stress combined with the use of higher pitch and articulatory strength 12 to articulate the constituents that are the focus of the negation In the examples below these specific constituents are capitalised to demonstrate prosodic emphasis BukangNosengnoBISA cansengnoDAPAgetdangsadancedengwithnona nona REDUP girlBukang seng BISA seng DAPA dangsa deng nona nona No no can no get dance with REDUP girl Not that he COULD not dance he did not GET a dance partner from among the girls 13 Jangang jang edit Jangang does not occur in declarative or interrogative sentences but is used to express negative imperatives as in the example below don t go to China SengNousa necessaryjangdon tpigoditotanlandCina ChinaSeng usa jang pi di tan Cina No necessary don t go to land China That s not necessary don t go to China 13 It is also used in several short formulaic expressions 14 JangDon tmiraangrye INTERJang mira e Don t angry INTER Excuse me Sorry 14 JangDon tbilangsaylai alsoJang bilang lai Don t say also Incredible Unbelievable Terrible 14 Negators and common collocations edit Lai edit In the above example the particle lai is used in sentence final position as an exclamative marker However it can also be used with seng bal ong and jangang in non exclamative sentences to denote anymore again or still De3SsoPHAsengnomoFUTpigodengwithbeta1Slei alsoDe so seng mo pi deng beta lei 3S PHA no FUT go with 1S also He won t go with me anymore 14 JangDon tlei alsoJang lei Don t also Don t do that anymore again 14 Bal ongNot yetlei alsoBal ong lei Not yet also Still not yet 14 Ka edit Ka combines with negators seng and bal ong to form a sentence final tag for interrogative sentences Se2SsuPHAmakangeatkaQblong not yetSe su makang ka blong 2S PHA eat Q not yet Have you eaten already 15 PapFathermaraangrykaQseng noPap mara ka seng Father angry Q no Are you angry or not 15 In the above example the tag ka seng has converted a yes no question Are you angry into an alternative question Are you angry or not Phonology editAmbonese Malay has phonemic word stress by which is meant that the position of stress within a word is unforeseeable van Minde 1997 p 21 Van Minde 1997 p 22 uses the term lexically reduplicated morphemes which means that both of the roots that compose the morpheme contain an important e g stressed syllable However in the case of duplicated monosyllables neither of the roots are perceptible as regards stress Each accent on the syllables will be marked even if the morpheme is made up of a duplicated monosyllable The reason being is to differentiate them from morphemes that are monomorphemic van Minde 1997 p 22 Examples of this would be p 22 g igi tooth pomp om in s agu pomp om k o sago cake roasted in cartridge cases Compare the examples with the following p 23 eleK eleK oil lamp made from glass jar t omit omi k o cherry like fruit Wordstress is the only different feature in a number of minimal pairs p 23 b acaŋ Bacan island bac aŋ k o fruit p araŋ machete par aŋ war t are to attract s t tar e tight Vowel phonemes edit Ambonese contains 5 vowel phonemes as illustrated in the chart van Minde 1997 p 24 Vowel system Front Central Back High i u Non high e a o Ambonese Malay do not have phonemic glottal stop ʔ but phonetically the glottal stop is noticed word initially morpheme initially after a vowel and morpheme medially between like vowels van Minde 1997 p 24 Examples are p 24 ose ʔ ose you baku atur baku ʔ atur to arrange with one another In addition there might be borrowed words from other indigenous languages there is individual variation and ʔ is occasionally heard van Minde 1997 p 24 pa isal paʔ isal pa isal k o small proa n oul n oʔul n oul k o fish Nasalised vowels happen expectedly before nasal consonants belonging to the same syllable Due to this van Minde considers nasalization as a phonetic phenomenon He gave some examples as well 1997 pp 24 25 aNboŋ ʔ am boŋ Ambon Ambonese kaNp iNjaŋ kam p ĩn jaŋ churchbell Nasalisation is invalid past syllable boundaries like for example p 24 25 an ioŋ ʔa n i yoŋ rolled up cloth to support load carried on head ba aNbur ba ʔ ambur to strew scatter repeatedly High front unrounded i edit According to van Minde 1997 p 25 the high front unrounded vowel i is always perceived as i and it always take place in non final and final closed and open syllables i in final syllables whether they are open or closed can be replaced by e however this only applies in some polysyllabic morphemes Though i can be replaced by e it does not work in reverse thus it can t be said the conflict between these two phonemes is negated in that position and environment van Minde 1997 p 25 Besides position and stress further restrictions on the alternation i e is given in two phonological rules PR The change in final unstressed syllables of polysyllabic morphemes is not attested in van Minde 1997 p 25 PR1 final syllables ending in s PR2 open final syllables when the penultimate syllable contains u or i Van Minde 1997 p 25 regards i as a heavy phoneme wherever there is a change i e which means in environments that are different from those interpreted by PR1 and PR2 The definition of heavy phoneme is defined as consists of one or more optional distinctive features in addition to the basic distinctive features whereas a basic phoneme consists of basic distinctive features only Ebeling 1967 Stokhof 1975 Van Minde deduces that i is a heavy phoneme in environments excluded by PR1 and PR2 e being its basic phoneme and relative highness is a voluntary feature Examples are given in the following p 25 katiNd isaŋ katĩnd isaŋ to talk or rave while sleep ir ʔir drunk closed final syllables p 26 k ukis k ukis k ukes biscuit kac il kac il kac el small dd open final syllables p 26 p uti p uti p ute white h ari h are day dd Mid front unrounded vowel e edit The mid front unrounded vowel e is perceived as e or e due to nasalization Examples are followed p 26 b esi b esi iron steel b erkaT b erkat divine blessing The phonemic status of e versus i is attested by the followed minimal pairs p 26 ina mother ena tasty delicious p ici to peel p eci mud The examples illustrated distinctly that i is resistant to e in morpheme final syllables hence the change i e in final syllables under the previous restrictions stated in the phonological rules cannot be clarified as neutralization van Minde 1997 pp 26 27 Low central vowel a edit The low central vowel in Ambonese Malay is perceived as a or a due to nasalization Examples are followed p 27 aner ʔ aner bad fishy smell kal apa kal apa coconut The minimal pairs attest the resistance between a and i p 27 s atu one s itu there bal a to split s t bal i to buy s t The opposition between a and e is shown by the presented minimal pairs p 27 cak a to strangle s o cak e vulg to eat stuff o s b aca to read b eca pedicab High back rounded vowel u edit u happens in non final and final closed and open position This high back rounded vowel is always perceived as u or ũ due to nasalization However u in final unstressed syllables whether open or closed consistently alternates with o when in certain polysyllabic morphemes van Minde 1997 p 27 In addition not all o in this position and environment alternates with u thus these two phonemes are not balanced According to van Minde 1997 p 27 the change u o in final unstressed syllables of polysyllabic morphemes is not proven in p 27 PR3 open final syllables when the penultimate syllable have u or i This situation is alike to the change between the high and mid front vowels i e where u is seen as a heavy phoneme o as the basic phoneme and relative phoneme is the optional feature The following examples prove this assertion p 28 t obu t obu t obo t obo sugar cane uNpaŋ ʔ ũmpaŋ bait Closed final syllables p 28 c aNpur c aNpor to mix c abuT c aboT let s go dd Open final syllables p 29 tapar egu tapar ego to do s t hurriedly cap atu cap ato shoe dd Minimal pairs shown to the resistance between u and i p 29 k utu louse k uti snap g ula sugar g ila mad dd The resistance between u and e can be shown by p 29 b ulaŋ moon month b elaŋ in aruNb aI b elaŋ k o large proa dd The resistance between u and a is attested by uru to massage aru Aru Islands Mid back rounded vowel o edit The mid back rounded vowel o is seen as o or o due to nasalization Examples are followed p 29 oraŋ oraŋ man human being b odo b odo stupid The minimal pair show the phoneme status of o vis a vis i p 30 b oŋko bowed of persons b eŋko bend sideways of persons dd The phoneme status of o against a is shown by p 30 kat oŋ we kat aŋ crab dd The resistance between o and u is proven by p 30 h ori to wander about h uri having lost its original shape dd Archiphoneme U edit Archiphoneme U is proposed in unstressed position after a vowel other than u and instantly before a syllable or morpheme boundary by van Minde 1997 This is because there is no opposition between u and w in this environment p 31 l aUtaŋ l autaŋ deep sea The second reason proposed by van Minde 1997 p 32 is that U occurs after a consonant and directly before a stressed vowel p 32 bU aya bu aya crocodile Nevertheless not every pattern Cw V is collateral by a sequence CU V p 32 swaK swak weak feeble Archiphoneme I edit This results from the neutralization of the resistance i y in unstressed position after a vowel or instantly before a stressed vowel p 32 m uI m ui muy aunt Van Minde 1997 p 32 showed some examples of I before a stressed vowel I a I a iy a yes formal bI asa bi asa normal usual dd The resistance of i and y is shown by p 33 t iU t iyu uncle dd Consonants edit There are 19 consonants phonemes and 4 consonant archiphonemes in Ambonese Malay and they are charted below van Minde 1997 pp 40 41 Consonant system Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal Archiphoneme P T N K Stop p b t d c j k g Nasal m n n ŋ Fricative f s h Liquid l r Semivowel w y Archiphonemes P T K N edit These archiphonemes is a consequence from the neutralization of the opposition between p b t d and k g respectively in two positions and under certain conditions van Minde 1997 p 40 1 Frequency of P T K is especially high in word final position Most words with P T K in this position are borrowed words from Dutch van Minde 1997 p 41 This is due to the many words of Malay origin to have lost final stops p t k or ʔ Example tutup gt tutu to close Wordfinally the archiphonemes P T K have a voiceless unreleased realization Examples are shown p 41 keP kep notch nick lt Dukeep aNbaK ʔ ambak character habit A significant number of polysyllabic words with non final stress have a doublet without final P T K in non emphatic speech p 41 r unuT runu fibroid material growing on palm trees In addition van Minde 1997 p 42 states that P T K are heavy archiphonemes in this position and environment 2 The archiphonemes P T K have a voiceless unreleased realization in syllable final position right before a stop a nasal fricative s or the lateral l Example is shown p 42 b aKso b ak so Chinese meatball Archiphoneme N is also developed from the neutralization of the opposition between m n n and ŋ before their own homorgonaic obstruents l van Minde 1997 p 42 Example is followed p 42 naNl ohi nanl ohi Nanlohi clan name Stops edit The voiceless and voiced stops of the series p b t d c j k g are found in word medial position and word initial p b are bilabials d is an apico alveolar c j are laminal palatals t is an apico alveodental k g are dorsal velars Relevant near minimal pairs are shown below van Minde 1997 pp 43 44 p b t aNpa place stop t aNba to add s t p t p aku nail t aku afraid p d b apa term of address bad a skin powder p c p ipi cheek p ici to give money p j p ari ray fish j ari finger p k p ele to obstruct k ele to press under arm p g p araŋ machete g araŋ salt b t b aru new t aru to place b d b apa term of address d apa to obtain b c b ole may c ole bodice b j b aNbaŋ to warn j aNbaŋ beard b k b ore poisonous extract k ore to fumble b g b aru new g aru to scratch t d t ulaŋ bone d ulaŋ wooden tray t c t ari dance c ari to search t j t ari dance j ari finger t k t anaŋ to plant k anaŋ right side t g t ali rope g ali to dig d c d aro from c ari to search d j d aro from j ari finger d k d aki dirt k aki foot d g d oti to work magic g oti trough for preparing sago c g c ari search j ari finger c k coK choke koK owl c g c ili chili g ilig ili tickle j k j aNji to agree k aNji starch j g j aga to keep watch g aga beautiful k g k araŋ coral g araŋ salt In certain lexical items there is an unexplained change between the voiceless stop and its homorganic voiced counterpart van Minde 1997 p 44 cigulu jigulu riddle Nasals edit The nasals m n n ŋ are separated on the basis of the following near minimal pairs van Minde 1997 pp 44 45 m n m ani bead n ani bamboo hoe m n m adu honey n adu brother sister in law m ŋ m ana where ŋ ana inter gee n n ne in b ubur ne k o porridge ne in m uka m acaŋ ne look disappointed m ŋ ina mother iŋa to remember n ŋ t ana to ask t eŋa middle The prevalence and functional load of these nasal contrasts differently They take place word initially and word medially before vowels However in the environment of word initially the functional load of n and ŋ is low Examples are shown van Minde 1997 p 45 n amu n amu mosquito noŋ noŋ term of address for boys In morpheme final position nasals other than ŋ are barely proven and thus van Minde 1997 p 46 finds it hard to find minimal pairs that are different in morpheme final nasal phoneme Fricatives edit The labio dental fricative f takes place only in borrowed words and in words of unknown origin Examples are shown van Minde 1997 p 46 f ader f ader term of address for men The alveolar fricative s happens in word initial medial and final position Examples are shown p 47 saw aI saw ai awry rab us rab us to boil The glottal fricative h takes place word medially and word initially However in the use of interjections such as ih Hey and ah Oh no h occur word finally van Minde 1997 p 47 Also word medial h is optional in certain words when h is removed between like vowels one of the two adjacent vowel segments is also deleted Examples are illustrated below p 47 bah asa basa language mas ohi mas oI mutual aid Liquids edit The liquids l and r take place in word initial medial final position just like the alveolar fricative s Example is shown van Minde 1997 p 48 t ari t ari dance Semivowels edit The semivowels w and y happen in word initial and word medial position before a vowel Example are shown below van Minde 1997 p 48 hay al hay al to flirt kal uyu kal uyu shark Samples editExamples Beta pung nama Ahmad My name is Ahmed Ose su tau Ahmad pung maitua Do you know Ahmed s wife Jang bakudapa deng dia dolo dia ada gagartang deng ose Don t meet with him for a moment he s angry with you Susi dong pung kaka mo pi kamari Susi s brother will come Ini beta kasi akang voor ose This is for you Ale badiang jua beta cumang mo tipu tipu Tuang Ala Shut up I am just tricking them god god as in swearing eg jesus christ Beta seng tau I don t know Ambonese word samples Beta I Ose Ale you ose is derived from the Portuguese voce Dia he she Akang may it Katong we cut from kita orang Dong they cut from dia orang Kamong kamorang you pl cut from kamu orang Antua he she respectful form iyo yes seng no bakubae peace nanaku pay attention to something su already indicating something has already happened or has been done INTER interjection PHA phasal aspect markerSee also editNorth Moluccan Malay Papuan Malay Serui MalayNotes edit Ambonese Malay at Ethnologue 18th ed 2015 subscription required Allen Robert B Hayami Allen Rika 2002 Orientation in the Spice Islands PDF In Macken Marlys ed Papers from the Tenth Annual Meeting of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society 2000 Tempe Arizona State University Program for Southeast Asian Studies p 21 ISBN 1 881044 29 7 OCLC 50506465 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Van Minde 1997 p 68 Van Minde 1997 p 184 a b Van Minde 1997 p 273 Van Minde 1997 p 275 Note In this example seng is represented as sem as the phoneme ŋ has become bilabial m assimilating to the place of articulation of the bilabial consonant b in the following morpheme bisa a b c d Van Minde 1997 p 276 Van Minde 1997 p 193 Van Minde 1997 p 133 a b c d Van Minde 1997 p 277 Van Minde 1997 p 126 a b c d Van Minde 1997 p 278 a b Van Minde 1997 p 279 a b c d e f Van Minde 1997 p 280 a b Van Minde 1997 p 262References editEthnologue 2015 Malay Ambonese Retrieved 8 May 2015 from https www ethnologue com language abs Nordhoff Sebastian Hammarstrom Harald Forkel Robert Haspelmath Martin eds 2013 Ambonese Malay Glottolog Leipzig Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology Van Minde D 1997 Malayu Ambong Leiden the Netherlands Research School CNWS External links editMaterials on Ambonese Malay are included in the open access Arthur Capell collection AC1 held by Paradisec nbsp Ambonese Malay test of Wikipedia at Wikimedia Incubator Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ambonese Malay amp oldid 1216689637, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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