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Araki language

Araki is a nearly extinct language spoken in the small island of Araki (locally known as [ˈɾaki]), south of Espiritu Santo Island in Vanuatu. Araki is gradually being replaced by Tangoa, a language from a neighbouring island.

Araki
Native toVanuatu
RegionAraki Island, Espiritu Santo
Native speakers
8 (2012)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3akr
Glottologarak1252
ELPAraki
Araki is classified as Critically Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Current situation

Araki was estimated to have 8 native speakers in 2012 with ongoing language shift towards the neighboring language Tangoa. The rest of the island's population have a passive knowledge of Araki, allowing them to understand it, but having limited ability to speak it. A large portion of the Araki vocabulary, as well as idiosyncratic syntactic and phonetic phenomena of the language have been lost. The pidgin Bislama is spoken by many speakers of Araki as a lingua franca, though its use is mainly in the two towns of the country, Port-Vila and Luganville, and seldom in rural areas.

Araki was described in 2002 by the linguist Alexandre François.[2]

Year Pop Spkr Source
1897 103 103 Miller (1990)
1972 72 Tryon (1972)
1989 112 80 Tryon and Charpentier (1989)
1996 105 105[a] Grimes (1996)
1998 121 34 Vari-Bogiri (2008)

Classification

Araki belongs to the Oceanic branch of Austronesian languages; more precisely, to the group ‘North and Central Vanuatu languages’.

Phonology

Araki has a phonological inventory of 16 consonant phonemes and 5 vowels, which are shown in the following two tables:

Consonants

Araki has 16 consonants which generally appear at the beginning of a syllable, with some exceptions.

Araki Consonants
Bilabial Linguolabial Alveolar Velar Glottal
Nasal m ⟨m⟩ ⟨m̈⟩ n ⟨n⟩ ŋ ⟨ng⟩
Plosive p ⟨p⟩ ⟨p̈⟩ t ⟨t⟩ k ⟨k⟩
Affricate t͡ʃ ⟨j⟩
Fricative β ⟨v⟩ ð̼ ⟨v̈⟩ s ⟨s⟩ h ⟨h⟩
Flap ɾ ⟨r⟩
Trill r ⟨r̄⟩
Lateral l ⟨l⟩

Only fluent speakers of Araki distinguish between the flap [ɾ] and the trill [r];[3] and only they can distinguish and pronounce the linguolabial consonants. 'Passive' users of the language replace these consonants either with bilabial consonants or alveolar consonants.[4] Although many younger people claim to be able to speak Araki, they are usually passive speakers, and therefore do not use linguolabial consonants.

Vowels

The vowel phonemes are:

Vowels
Front Back
High i u
Mid e o
Low a

Araki does not possess phonemic long vowels. Also, the language does not have phonemic diphthongs. However, strings of consecutive vowels are possible - indeed prevalent - in the language. In these cases, each vowel builds a separate syllable.

Syllable structure and stress

Most syllables in Araki are open (CV). Diachronic effects of word stress have led to the irregular loss of some syllables, and the creation of new phonotactic patterns of CVC and CCV, with many word-final consonants. Although a cluster of more than two consonants is impossible within a word, longer consonant clusters may appear in longer linguistic sequences.

Word stress in Araki normally falls on the penultimate syllable, at least when the last syllable of the word is of the form -(C)V. A secondary stress may be heard on every second syllable toward the left of the word. Stress is assigned only after the lexeme has received all its affixes to form the whole phonological word. A process of final high vowel deletion (which is common in Vanuatu languages) does not affect the stress rule.

Writing System

Araki alphabet
Letter a e h i j k l m n ng o p r s t u v
Pronunciation a e h i t͡ʃ k l m n ŋ o p ɾ r s t u β ð̼

An older orthography used ⟨c⟩ for t͡ʃ, ⟨d⟩ for ɾ, ⟨r⟩ for r, and ⟨g⟩ for ŋ.

Grammar

Araki syntax can be divided into an open set of lexemes, including nouns, adjectives, verbs, adjuncts, adverbs, numerals and demonstratives; and a closed set of morphemes, which are often monosyllabic clitics or affixes.

Word order

The constituent order in Araki is strictly subject–verb–object (SVO). There is a clear formal boundary between the direct object - always internal to the predicate phrase, whether incorporated or not - and the oblique arguments: adverbs, prepositional phrases and indirect objects, which always appear outside the verb phrase.

Nouns

As in many Oceanic languages, not only verbs but also nouns (as well as other syntactic categories) are predicative in Araki. Nouns differ from verbs in being directly predicative, which means that they do not have to be preceded by a subject clitic. Also, only nouns are able to refer directly to entities of the world, and make them arguments entering into larger sentence structures.

Syntactically speaking, a noun can be either the subject of a sentence, the object of a transitive verb or the object of a preposition, all syntactic slots which are forbidden to verbs or adjectives. Proper names - place names and personal names - can be said to belong to the global category of nouns in Araki.

Noun-phrase structure

Contrary to many languages of Vanuatu, Araki did not retain the noun article *na of Proto Oceanic, nor any other obligatory noun determiner. As a consequence, a noun root on its own can form a valid NP in a sentence.

A Noun Phrase must have a head - this can be a noun, an independent pronoun or certain demonstratives. an adjective cannot be a NP-head, but needs the support of the empty head mada. All other elements are optional. A maximal NP should follow the following order of constituents, most of which are optional:

  1. an article: plural dai, partitive re, definite va;
  2. a noun or the empty head mada, or a 'possessive bundle', formed by {possessed noun + (a possessive classifier +) a possessor};
  3. an adjective;
  4. the anaphoric marker di
  5. a demonstrative word
  6. a numeral preceded by a subject clitic (usually mo), similar to a clause;
  7. a relative clause;
  8. a prepositional phrase.

It is rare to meet more than three or four elements in one NP.

Articles and reference-tracking devices

Semantically speaking, a noun without an article can be specific as well as non-specific, and definite as well as indefinite. Moreover, not only is there no gender-distinction, but even number is most of the time under-specified; only the context, and partly the personal marker on the verb, help distinguish between singular and plural reference.

Several devices are available - though always optional - in Araki to help track the reference of a particular NP. These are the clitics va, di, mada, dai, re, mo hese, which appear as shown in the above list.

The pro-clitic va and the post-clitic di both mark anaphoric relations. va is placed immediately before the noun, and codes for discourse-internal anaphora (that is, reference to a term that has already been introduced in the earlier context). di immediately follows the noun, and seems to refer to the immediate context preceding it (comparable with the English anaphoric use of 'this').

The construction {va N di} does not exist. This indicates that the two clitics must have different uses.

The empty head mada can be found at the beginnings of NPs. It never occurs alone, but is always followed by an adjective or a place name. Its role is to refer to a set of human individuals defined by the next word, in a similar way to English 'one' in the small one(s). mada can be described as a personal nominalizer. It does not involve definiteness or number.

The plural marker dai makes explicit the plurality of the NP, which is otherwise never coded for, and often left implicit. As all other markers mentioned in this section, it too is optional.

The specific indefinite mo hese, a numeral quantifier meaning 'one', is very commonly, if not obligatorily, used when a referent is introduced for the first time into the discourse. mo hese may be used as a numerical predicate, contrasting with other numbers, but it is most frequently used as a kind of article following the NP in order to mark it as being indefinite, that is, newly introduced into the discourse.

The partitive–indefinite pro-clitic re is used when the NP refers to a new, non-specific instance of a notion. In order to understand this concept, compare the English sentences 'I ate a banana ' with 'I want to eat a banana '. Besides being indefinite in both cases, in the first sentence a banana is specific, because it refers to a specific banana; in the second sentence a banana is non-specific, because it can refer to any banana, not one in particular. Although this semantic difference is not grammaticalized in English, it is in Araki, using re as a marker for non-specific indefinite reference.

The function of the aforementioned reference-tracking devices can be summarized as follows:

Definite Indefinite
Specific N // va N // N di
'The cake is ready'
N // N mo hese
'I ate a cake'
Non-specific N
'I like cake'
N // re N
'I want to eat a cake'

Verbs

Verbs are predicative words, which are preceded by subject clitics. Unlike nouns, they cannot form a direct predicate (that is, without a clitic), and cannot refer to an entity, nor form the subject of a sentence. They cannot directly modify a noun by just following it. From the semantic point of view, verbs refer to actions, events or states. Each verb in Araki must be marked with either Realis or Irrealis mood.

The only obligatory elements of a verb phrase are the head and the subject clitic. This can be extended not only to phrases headed by a verb, but also to phrases headed by an adjective or a numeral. Under certain conditions, a noun can also be the head of a so-called 'VP', provided that it is endowed with mood-aspectual properties, such as negation.

From a syntactic point of view, Araki contrasts intransitive with transitive verbs.

Intransitive verbs

Intransitive verbs never take either object NPs or transitive suffixes.

They are morphologically unvarying (that is, receive no morphological markings).

Transitive verbs

Transitive verbs take object arguments, as NPs and/or as object suffixes. Most transitive (or transitivised) verbs, though not all of them, can be morphologically marked as such. This usually implies the presence of a transitivity suffix -i and/or of an object personal suffix.

Some verbs can be described as having oblique transitivity, since they are usually followed by an oblique (generally, prepositional) complement.

Araki does not normally allow for ditransitive verbs. Where English would have two direct objects, as in I'll give you some money, Araki would have one complement as a direct object, while the other would be assigned the oblique case. Therefore, one complement appears inside the VP and the other outside it.

Symmetrical verbs

Some verbs in Araki allow its syntactic subject to be marked with either the case role of Patient or Agent.

(1)

M̈arasala

door

mo

3:R

ede.

open

M̈arasala mo ede.

door 3:R open

'The door opened/is open.'

(2)

Nam

1sg:R

ede

open

m̈arasala.

door

Nam ede m̈arasala.

1sg:R open door

'I opened the door.'

However, this phenomenon is more limited in Araki than it is in English.

Verb serialization

Araki allows two verb roots to appear in one single verb phrase, thus forming a sort of complex verb {V1, V2}; usually no more than two verbs can appear at a time. This series of two verbs share one mood-subject clitic and the same aspect markers. This does not imply that they semantically have the same subject. No object or other complement can insert between these two verbs. The transitivity suffix -i, as well as the object suffix, appear on the right of the second verb, provided this is authorized by the morphology of V2 and by the syntactic context.

Verb serialization is much rarer in Araki than in many other Oceanic languages. It seems to be productive only when either of the two verbs is a movement verb. Another less seldom pattern, is when the second element is a stative verb or an adjective: V2 indicates the manner of V1.

A much more frequent strategy in Araki is that of clause chaining.

Personal markers

In the case of Araki, it is more appropriate to discuss ‘personal markers’ (rather than ‘pronouns’). There are seven morphosyntactic person markings: first, second, third, and in the case of non-singular first person, there is an inclusive/exclusive distinction.

Independent pronouns

Singular Plural
1st person inclusive na nica
exclusive kam̈am
2nd person n(i)ko kam̈im
3rd person nia n(i)da

Subject clitics and person markers

The following table shows the clitics that provide ordinary marking of subjects in verbal sentences. They express two moods: realis and irrealis.

Subject clitics and personal markers
Realis Irrealis
singular plural singular plural
1st person inclusive cam co
exclusive nam kam na kam̈a
2nd person om ham o ha
3rd person mo co

Whether the mood is coded as realis or irrealis depends on the modality of the verb phrase.

Numerals

Numerals behave syntactically like (intransitive) verbs, and could be argued to form a subset of verbal lexemes. They must always be introduced by a subject clitic, which is sensitive to person and modality (Realis/Irrealis).

(3)

Naru-ku

child-1sg

mo

3:R

dua.

two

Naru-ku mo dua.

child-1sg 3:R two

'I have two children.' (lit. my child is/are two)

Cardinal numbers

Numerals are listed in the following table:

Araki English
mo hese one
mo dua two
mo rolu three
mo v̈ari four
mo lim̈a five
mo haion(o) six
mo haip̈iru seven
mo haualu eight
mo haisua nine
mo sagavul(u) ten
mo sagavul comana mo hese eleven
mo sagavul comana mo dua twelve
mo gavul dua twenty
mo gavul dua mo hese twenty one
mo gavul rolu thirty
mo gavul haip̈iru seventy
mo gavul sagavulu one hundred
mo gavul sagavulu mo sagavulu one hundred and ten
mo gavul sagavulu dua two hundred
mo gavul sagavulu sagavulu one thousand

Ordinal numbers

Ordinal numbers are formed with the prefix ha-, at least for the numbers 2-5. Greater numbers have already integrated this - or a similar - prefix ha- to their radical.

The number 'one' has a suppletive form mudu 'first'.

The ordinal forms are used especially with the word dan(i), to form the days of the weeks:

Araki English
dan mudu Monday
ha-dua dan Tuesday
ha-rolu dan Wednesday
ha-v̈ari dan Thursday
ha-lim̈a dan Friday
haiono dan Saturday
haip̈iru dan Sunday

Adjectives

Contrary to many languages which lack a distinct category of adjectives, Araki does have a set of lexemes which can be named this way. The lexical category of adjectives is defined by two basic principles:

  • adjectives can be predicates, and in this case must be preceded by a subject clitic, like numerals or verbs;
  • adjectives can modify directly a noun in a Noun Phrase, without a subject clitic (opp. numerals) or a relative structure (opp. verbs).

Adjectives always follow the noun they modify, and come before numerals.

(4)

p̈ira

woman

hetehehete

small

mo

3:R

hese

one

p̈ira hetehehete mo hese

woman small 3:R one

'a young woman'

Adjuncts

Adjuncts form quite a small category of lexical items whose syntactic position is to follow immediately the verb radical, though still within the verb phrase. When the verb is transitive, adjuncts are inserted between the verb radical and the transitiviser suffix and/or the object suffixes, as though they were incorporated:

(5)

Na

1sg

pa

SEQ

nak

hit

taha

RES

m̈are-ko!

dead-OBJ:2sg

Na pa nak taha m̈are-ko!

1sg SEQ hit RES dead-OBJ:2sg

'I’m going to kill you!' (lit. hit-become-dead you)

Adverbs

Contrary to adjuncts, which are always incorporated into the verb phrase, adverbs never are. They can appear either at the beginning or at the end of a clause. The unmarked position of a (non-typical) adverb is after the verb–object bundle, where prepositional phrases are too. The category of adverbs includes all words which form directly - that is, without a preposition - an oblique complement.

(6)

V̈apa

cave

di

ANA

mo

3:R

roho

stay

ro

IPFV

saha-ni

up-there

kaura.

above

V̈apa di mo roho ro saha-ni kaura.

cave ANA 3:R stay IPFV up-there above

'The cave is located up there, above'.

Demonstratives

Demonstratives are associated either to nouns for reference tracking, or have the whole clause as their scope. Although they syntactically behave partially like locational adverbs, demonstrative words form a specific paradigm, which is easily identified morphologically.

Reduplication

Araki uses reduplication in order to present a notion as intense, multiple or plural in one way or another. Semantically, verbal reduplication triggers features such as non-referentiality/genericity of the object, and thus is generally associated with noun incorporation. Reduplication is also the main device, if not the only one, which allows a word to change its syntactic category. Reduplication occurs:

  • From noun to noun (indicating plurality, and sometimes a diminutive capacity ('Many Ns, 'small Ns').
    e.g. naru 'son' → nanaru 'sons', hudara 'dirt' → hudahudara 'small particles of dirt'
  • From noun to verb or adjective (referring not to an of the world, but to a process/state which is normally caused by it).
    e.g. alo 'sun' → aloalo 'to be sunny'
  • From verb to verb (deriving one of the following: an intensified meaning, plurality, reflexivity, distributivity, imperfectivity, detransitivity).
    e.g. v̈ano 'walk' → v̈anov̈ano 'race'
  • From verb to noun (referring to the very notion of the verb, in general terms)
    e.g. sodo 'talk; → sodosodo 'speech, message, language'.

Structurally, Araki has three types of reduplication

CV reduplication

The first syllable of the word is reduplicated.

narunanaru ('son', 'sons')
lokudololokudo ('angry')
levosailelevosai ('intelligent')

CVCV reduplication

The first two syllables of the word are reduplicated.

m̈arahum̈aram̈arahu ('fear', 'be afraid')
veculuvecuveculu ('colour')
hudarahudahudara ('dirt', 'small particles of dirt')

Root reduplication

The entire root of the word is reduplicated.

dev̈edev̈edev̈e ('pull')
aloaloalo ('sun', 'to be sunny')
sodosodosodo ('talk', 'speech, message, language')

Clause structure

As mentioned above, Araki is a strict SVO language. This means that different sentence types, such as assertives, imperatives and interrogatives do not involve a change in word order. This, contrary to what occurs in European languages. These sentence types may differ in other ways.

Imperatives

All imperative sentences take Irrealis modality, by definition, since they refer to virtual events. The verb must be preceded by its subject clitic.

(7)

O

2sg

ruen-i-á!

help-TR-OBJ:1sg

O ruen-i-á!

2sg help-TR-OBJ:1sg

'Help me!'

Thus, except for prosody, all imperative sentences are formally identical with sentences expressing an intent or a near future (for example, 'you should help me' or ' you are going to help me').

A negative order does not use the usual negation marker ce, but the modal clitic kan 'Prohibitive':

(8)

Na

1sg:Irr

kan

PROH

sa

go.up

lo

LOC

ima-na.

house-3sg

Na kan sa lo ima-na.

1sg:Irr PROH {go.up} LOC house-3sg

'I should not go / I am not supposed to go to his house'.

Interrogatives

Interrogative sentences can take either Realis or Irrealis modality.
Yes/No questions are similar to the corresponding question, except for prosody.
Quite often, the interrogative is marked by a final tag ... vo mo-ce-re ... 'or not?'.
In WH-questions, the interrogative words take the same slot as the word they replace (that is, they remain in-situ.

Arakian Interrogative words include sa 'what', se 'who', v̈e 'where', gisa 'when', and visa 'how many'. The interrogative article ('what X, which') is sava, a longer form of sa. It comes before a noun, for example sava hina 'what thing'. Two interrogative words are derived from sa 'what': sohe sa 'like what → how' and m̈ara sa 'because of what → why'.

Negation

The general negation marker is a single morpheme ce, which is used in all negative sentences except imperative. It always comes at the beginning of the predicate phrase, following the subject clitic. It can be combined to Realis or Irrealis mood.

The negation ce combines with other elements, for example aspect markers, to build complex negative morphemes. For example,

  • Negation ce + aspect le 'again' → 'no longer'
  • Negation ce + aspect m̈isi 'still' → 'not yet'
  • Negation ce + partitive re 'some' → 'not any'
  • Negation ce + NP re hina 'some thing' → 'nothing'
  • Negation ce + adverb n-re-dan 'on some day' → 'never'

The combination {negation re + Verb + partitive re in object position}, has the frequent effect of implying the non-existence of this object. The construction {ce re + N} has been grammaticalised into a complect predicate ce re, meaning 'do not exist, not to be'.

Existential sentences

Since the combination ce re has generalized to form a negative existential predicate, one could expect that, in a second stage of evolution, affirmative existential sentences (that is, 'there is N') would simply use the same predicate re without the negation. In fact, this is normally impossible.

Affirmative existential sentences never use re, but have to employ other strategies. These include the use of the predicate mo hese 'one', or a locative phrase.

Complex sentences

Coordination

Coordination as a clause-linker is far from being widespread in Araki: clause-chaining is by far the preferred strategy. Nevertheless, some coordinators exist, whose meaning is more precise than just 'and'.

The most frequent coordinator is pani ~ pan 'and, but', which usually carries an adversive meaning:

(9)

Cam

1inc:R

ce

NEG

levse

know

lesi-a,

see-OBJ:3sg

pani

but

nia

3sg

mo

3:R

roho

stay

ro.

IPFV

Cam ce levse lesi-a, pani nia mo roho ro.

1inc:R NEG know see-OBJ:3sg but 3sg 3:R stay IPFV

'We are not able to see him [ghost], yet he is around'.

The word for 'or' is voni ~ von ~ vo.

M̈ara 'because' can be said to have coordinating effects.

Frequent use is made of the Bislama coordinator 'ale (derived from the French allez). Possible meanings are 'OK; then; now; so; finally'.

NP coordination 'X and Y' can be translated into Araki in three different ways:

  • the noun-like preposition nida- 'with';
  • the comitative suffix -n(i), only with free pronouns;
  • the numeral rolu 'three → and', with personal pronouns.

Conditional systems

Araki has three markers corresponding to English 'if': vada, aru, code. Surprisingly, two of these three markers are compatible with Realis modality.

  1. Co de 'suppose, let us say that → if' is the only marker that is incompatible with Realis modality. It can refer to a possible situation in the future, or it can present a counter-factual hypothesis about the present.
  2. Aru appears only with Realis modality in the conditional clause (the main clause may bear Realis or Irrealis marking). It can refer either to a possible hypothesis about the future, or to a counter-factual situation in the past.
  3. Vada is a common subordinator in Araki, probably deriving etymologically from the root vadai 'say, tell'. When used in a topic clause, vada is most often associated to Realis mood. It can refer either to a single event in the past (English 'when'), to a generic event in the global situation (English 'whenever'), or to a possible event in the future (English 'when', 'if', 'in case').

Clause chaining

Clause chaining is the combination of at least two clauses (C1 and C2), without any coordinator, subordinator or any other kind of overt link between them. On prosodic criteria, no pause is audible at their boundary, at least no such pause as between two autonomous sentences. Contrary to verb serialization, every verb must be preceded by its own subject clitic, whether or not it refers to the same subject as the preceding verb. A sentence like the following is perfectly common in Araki:

(10)

Racu

man

mo

3:R

vari-a

take-OBJ:3sg

sule

stone

mo

3:R

plan-i-a

throw-TR-OBJ:3sg

mo

3:R

sa

go.up

mo

3:R

covi

fall

mo

3:R

sivo.

go.down

Racu mo vari-a sule mo plan-i-a mo sa mo covi mo sivo.

man 3:R take-OBJ:3sg stone 3:R throw-TR-OBJ:3sg 3:R {go.up} 3:R fall 3:R {go.down}

'A man takes a stone and throws it (so that it goes) up and falls down (again).'

Notice the ambiguity of the sentence: it is only the context that makes clear that what falls down is actually the stone, not the man. The high frequency of clause chaining constructions makes the clitic mo (Third person Realis, singular or plural) by far the most frequent word encountered in actual discourse.

Clause chaining can be used to describe a wide variety of situations:

  • Time succession and consequence;
  • Two phases of a single complex action;
  • Simultaneity of two events;
  • Commenting on an action;
  • Spatial dynamics;
  • Temporal dynamics;
  • Sentential objects;
  • Relative clauses;
  • Numeral phrases.

Unusual characteristics

Araki is one of the few languages of Vanuatu, and indeed of the world, that has a set of linguolabial consonants.

Araki lacks a row of voiced stops, as well as prenasalised stops, both of which are prevalent in the Oceanic language group.

Araki has an unusually high number of phonemic differentiation on the alveolar point of articulation. Particularly notable is the existence of a contrast between the alveolar trill and the alveolar flap one.

Language preservation

In June 2008, the Jacques Chirac Foundation for Sustainable Development and Cultural Dialogue announced its intention to focus on preserving the Araki language.[5][6] This language is cited as an example, among many others, of the situation of language endangerment which the Chirac Foundation aims at addressing, especially through its programme “Sorosoro: Pour que vivent les langues du monde”. Sorosoro is itself an Araki word, meaning “breath, speech, language”.[7]

Notes and references

Notes

  1. ^ Vari-Bogiri (2008) suggests this is an overestimate, suggesting an alternate estimate of 45 speakers

References

  1. ^ François (2012:98).
  2. ^ All the information contained in this entry comes from his grammar Araki: A disappearing language of Vanuatu (François (2002)).
  3. ^ François (2002), p.18.
  4. ^ François (2002), p.6.
  5. ^ "New foundation seeks to preserve rare Vanuatu language". Radio New Zealand International. June 9, 2008. Retrieved September 19, 2011.
  6. ^ "Chirac launches foundation 'to awaken consciences'", AFP, June 8, 2008.
  7. ^ See Chirac Foundation's Facebook page, and interview by J. Chirac, 5 June 2008.

Bibliography

  • François, Alexandre (2002). Araki: A disappearing language of Vanuatu. Pacific Linguistics, 522. Canberra: Australian National University. doi:10.15144/PL-522 (inactive 31 December 2022). hdl:1885/146137. ISBN 0-85883-493-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of December 2022 (link)
  • François, Alexandre (2012), "Ditransitive alignment and referential hierarchies in Araki", Linguistic Discovery, 10 (3): 97–124, doi:10.1349/ps1.1537-0852.a.418.
  • Miller, J. G. (1990). Live Book 7: Santo and Malo. New South Wales: Mission Publication of Australia.
  • Tryon, D. T. (1972). "The languages of the New Hebrides: A checklist and general survey". In Beaumont, C.; Tryon, D. T.; Wurm, S. A. (eds.). Papers in Linguistics of Melanesia, Series A-33. Pacific Linguistics.
  • Grimes, Barbara, ed. (1996). Ethnologue: Languages of the World (13th ed.). Dallas, TX: Summer Institute of Linguistics.
  • Vari-Bogiri, Hannah (2008). "A Sociolinguistic Survey of Araki: A Dying Language of Vanuatu". Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development. 26 (1): 52–66. doi:10.1080/14790710508668398. S2CID 41801304.

External links

R:Realis:Realis mood Irr:Irrealis:Irrealis mood OBJ:Object:Object (grammar)

araki, language, araki, nearly, extinct, language, spoken, small, island, araki, locally, known, ˈɾaki, south, espiritu, santo, island, vanuatu, araki, gradually, being, replaced, tangoa, language, from, neighbouring, island, arakinative, tovanuaturegionaraki,. Araki is a nearly extinct language spoken in the small island of Araki locally known as ˈɾaki south of Espiritu Santo Island in Vanuatu Araki is gradually being replaced by Tangoa a language from a neighbouring island ArakiNative toVanuatuRegionAraki Island Espiritu SantoNative speakers8 2012 1 Language familyAustronesian Malayo PolynesianOceanicSouthern OceanicNorthern VanuatuNortheast Vanuatu Banks IslandsNuclear SantoSouth SantoArakiLanguage codesISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code akr class extiw title iso639 3 akr akr a Glottologarak1252ELPArakiAraki is classified as Critically Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World s Languages in DangerThis article contains IPA phonetic symbols Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Unicode characters For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA Contents 1 Current situation 2 Classification 3 Phonology 3 1 Consonants 3 2 Vowels 3 3 Syllable structure and stress 4 Writing System 5 Grammar 5 1 Word order 5 2 Nouns 5 2 1 Noun phrase structure 5 2 2 Articles and reference tracking devices 5 3 Verbs 5 3 1 Intransitive verbs 5 3 2 Transitive verbs 5 3 3 Symmetrical verbs 5 3 4 Verb serialization 5 4 Personal markers 5 4 1 Independent pronouns 5 4 2 Subject clitics and person markers 5 5 Numerals 5 5 1 Cardinal numbers 5 5 2 Ordinal numbers 5 6 Adjectives 5 7 Adjuncts 5 8 Adverbs 5 9 Demonstratives 5 10 Reduplication 5 10 1 CV reduplication 5 10 2 CVCV reduplication 5 10 3 Root reduplication 6 Clause structure 6 1 Imperatives 6 2 Interrogatives 6 3 Negation 6 4 Existential sentences 7 Complex sentences 7 1 Coordination 7 2 Conditional systems 7 3 Clause chaining 8 Unusual characteristics 9 Language preservation 10 Notes and references 10 1 Notes 10 2 References 10 3 Bibliography 10 4 External linksCurrent situation EditAraki was estimated to have 8 native speakers in 2012 with ongoing language shift towards the neighboring language Tangoa The rest of the island s population have a passive knowledge of Araki allowing them to understand it but having limited ability to speak it A large portion of the Araki vocabulary as well as idiosyncratic syntactic and phonetic phenomena of the language have been lost The pidgin Bislama is spoken by many speakers of Araki as a lingua franca though its use is mainly in the two towns of the country Port Vila and Luganville and seldom in rural areas Araki was described in 2002 by the linguist Alexandre Francois 2 Year Pop Spkr Source1897 103 103 Miller 1990 1972 72 Tryon 1972 1989 112 80 Tryon and Charpentier 1989 1996 105 105 a Grimes 1996 1998 121 34 Vari Bogiri 2008 Classification EditAraki belongs to the Oceanic branch of Austronesian languages more precisely to the group North and Central Vanuatu languages Phonology EditAraki has a phonological inventory of 16 consonant phonemes and 5 vowels which are shown in the following two tables Consonants Edit Araki has 16 consonants which generally appear at the beginning of a syllable with some exceptions Araki Consonants Bilabial Linguolabial Alveolar Velar GlottalNasal m m n m n n ŋ ng Plosive p p t p t t k k Affricate t ʃ j Fricative b v d v s s h h Flap ɾ r Trill r r Lateral l l Only fluent speakers of Araki distinguish between the flap ɾ and the trill r 3 and only they can distinguish and pronounce the linguolabial consonants Passive users of the language replace these consonants either with bilabial consonants or alveolar consonants 4 Although many younger people claim to be able to speak Araki they are usually passive speakers and therefore do not use linguolabial consonants Vowels Edit The vowel phonemes are Vowels Front BackHigh i uMid e oLow aAraki does not possess phonemic long vowels Also the language does not have phonemic diphthongs However strings of consecutive vowels are possible indeed prevalent in the language In these cases each vowel builds a separate syllable Syllable structure and stress Edit Most syllables in Araki are open CV Diachronic effects of word stress have led to the irregular loss of some syllables and the creation of new phonotactic patterns of CVC and CCV with many word final consonants Although a cluster of more than two consonants is impossible within a word longer consonant clusters may appear in longer linguistic sequences Word stress in Araki normally falls on the penultimate syllable at least when the last syllable of the word is of the form C V A secondary stress may be heard on every second syllable toward the left of the word Stress is assigned only after the lexeme has received all its affixes to form the whole phonological word A process of final high vowel deletion which is common in Vanuatu languages does not affect the stress rule Writing System EditAraki alphabet Letter a e h i j k l m m n ng o p p r r s t u v v Pronunciation a e h i t ʃ k l m n n ŋ o p t ɾ r s t u b d An older orthography used c for t ʃ d for ɾ r for r and g for ŋ Grammar EditAraki syntax can be divided into an open set of lexemes including nouns adjectives verbs adjuncts adverbs numerals and demonstratives and a closed set of morphemes which are often monosyllabic clitics or affixes Word order Edit The constituent order in Araki is strictly subject verb object SVO There is a clear formal boundary between the direct object always internal to the predicate phrase whether incorporated or not and the oblique arguments adverbs prepositional phrases and indirect objects which always appear outside the verb phrase Nouns Edit As in many Oceanic languages not only verbs but also nouns as well as other syntactic categories are predicative in Araki Nouns differ from verbs in being directly predicative which means that they do not have to be preceded by a subject clitic Also only nouns are able to refer directly to entities of the world and make them arguments entering into larger sentence structures Syntactically speaking a noun can be either the subject of a sentence the object of a transitive verb or the object of a preposition all syntactic slots which are forbidden to verbs or adjectives Proper names place names and personal names can be said to belong to the global category of nouns in Araki Noun phrase structure Edit Contrary to many languages of Vanuatu Araki did not retain the noun article na of Proto Oceanic nor any other obligatory noun determiner As a consequence a noun root on its own can form a valid NP in a sentence A Noun Phrase must have a head this can be a noun an independent pronoun or certain demonstratives an adjective cannot be a NP head but needs the support of the empty head mada All other elements are optional A maximal NP should follow the following order of constituents most of which are optional an article plural dai partitive re definite va a noun or the empty head mada or a possessive bundle formed by possessed noun a possessive classifier a possessor an adjective the anaphoric marker di a demonstrative word a numeral preceded by a subject clitic usually mo similar to a clause a relative clause a prepositional phrase It is rare to meet more than three or four elements in one NP Articles and reference tracking devices Edit Semantically speaking a noun without an article can be specific as well as non specific and definite as well as indefinite Moreover not only is there no gender distinction but even number is most of the time under specified only the context and partly the personal marker on the verb help distinguish between singular and plural reference Several devices are available though always optional in Araki to help track the reference of a particular NP These are the clitics va di mada dai re mo hese which appear as shown in the above list The pro clitic va and the post clitic di both mark anaphoric relations va is placed immediately before the noun and codes for discourse internal anaphora that is reference to a term that has already been introduced in the earlier context di immediately follows the noun and seems to refer to the immediate context preceding it comparable with the English anaphoric use of this The construction va N di does not exist This indicates that the two clitics must have different uses The empty head mada can be found at the beginnings of NPs It never occurs alone but is always followed by an adjective or a place name Its role is to refer to a set of human individuals defined by the next word in a similar way to English one in the small one s mada can be described as a personal nominalizer It does not involve definiteness or number The plural marker dai makes explicit the plurality of the NP which is otherwise never coded for and often left implicit As all other markers mentioned in this section it too is optional The specific indefinite mo hese a numeral quantifier meaning one is very commonly if not obligatorily used when a referent is introduced for the first time into the discourse mo hese may be used as a numerical predicate contrasting with other numbers but it is most frequently used as a kind of article following the NP in order to mark it as being indefinite that is newly introduced into the discourse The partitive indefinite pro clitic re is used when the NP refers to a new non specific instance of a notion In order to understand this concept compare the English sentences I ate a banana with I want to eat a banana Besides being indefinite in both cases in the first sentence a banana is specific because it refers to a specific banana in the second sentence a banana is non specific because it can refer to any banana not one in particular Although this semantic difference is not grammaticalized in English it is in Araki using re as a marker for non specific indefinite reference The function of the aforementioned reference tracking devices can be summarized as follows Definite IndefiniteSpecific N va N N di The cake is ready N N mo hese I ate a cake Non specific N I like cake N re N I want to eat a cake Verbs Edit Verbs are predicative words which are preceded by subject clitics Unlike nouns they cannot form a direct predicate that is without a clitic and cannot refer to an entity nor form the subject of a sentence They cannot directly modify a noun by just following it From the semantic point of view verbs refer to actions events or states Each verb in Araki must be marked with either Realis or Irrealis mood The only obligatory elements of a verb phrase are the head and the subject clitic This can be extended not only to phrases headed by a verb but also to phrases headed by an adjective or a numeral Under certain conditions a noun can also be the head of a so called VP provided that it is endowed with mood aspectual properties such as negation From a syntactic point of view Araki contrasts intransitive with transitive verbs Intransitive verbs Edit Intransitive verbs never take either object NPs or transitive suffixes They are morphologically unvarying that is receive no morphological markings Transitive verbs Edit Transitive verbs take object arguments as NPs and or as object suffixes Most transitive or transitivised verbs though not all of them can be morphologically marked as such This usually implies the presence of a transitivity suffix i and or of an object personal suffix Some verbs can be described as having oblique transitivity since they are usually followed by an oblique generally prepositional complement Araki does not normally allow for ditransitive verbs Where English would have two direct objects as in I ll give you some money Araki would have one complement as a direct object while the other would be assigned the oblique case Therefore one complement appears inside the VP and the other outside it Symmetrical verbs Edit Some verbs in Araki allow its syntactic subject to be marked with either the case role of Patient or Agent 1 M arasaladoormo3 Rede openM arasala mo ede door 3 R open The door opened is open 2 Nam1sg Redeopenm arasala doorNam ede m arasala 1sg R open door I opened the door However this phenomenon is more limited in Araki than it is in English Verb serialization Edit Araki allows two verb roots to appear in one single verb phrase thus forming a sort of complex verb V1 V2 usually no more than two verbs can appear at a time This series of two verbs share one mood subject clitic and the same aspect markers This does not imply that they semantically have the same subject No object or other complement can insert between these two verbs The transitivity suffix i as well as the object suffix appear on the right of the second verb provided this is authorized by the morphology of V2 and by the syntactic context Verb serialization is much rarer in Araki than in many other Oceanic languages It seems to be productive only when either of the two verbs is a movement verb Another less seldom pattern is when the second element is a stative verb or an adjective V2 indicates the manner of V1 A much more frequent strategy in Araki is that of clause chaining Personal markers Edit In the case of Araki it is more appropriate to discuss personal markers rather than pronouns There are seven morphosyntactic person markings first second third and in the case of non singular first person there is an inclusive exclusive distinction Independent pronouns Edit Singular Plural1st person inclusive na nicaexclusive kam am2nd person n i ko kam im3rd person nia n i daSubject clitics and person markers Edit The following table shows the clitics that provide ordinary marking of subjects in verbal sentences They express two moods realis and irrealis Subject clitics and personal markers Realis Irrealissingular plural singular plural1st person inclusive cam coexclusive nam kam na kam a2nd person om ham o ha3rd person mo coWhether the mood is coded as realis or irrealis depends on the modality of the verb phrase Numerals Edit Numerals behave syntactically like intransitive verbs and could be argued to form a subset of verbal lexemes They must always be introduced by a subject clitic which is sensitive to person and modality Realis Irrealis 3 Naru kuchild 1sgmo3 Rdua twoNaru ku mo dua child 1sg 3 R two I have two children lit my child is are two Cardinal numbers Edit Numerals are listed in the following table Araki Englishmo hese onemo dua twomo rolu threemo v ari fourmo lim a fivemo haion o sixmo haip iru sevenmo haualu eightmo haisua ninemo sagavul u tenmo sagavul comana mo hese elevenmo sagavul comana mo dua twelvemo gavul dua twentymo gavul dua mo hese twenty onemo gavul rolu thirtymo gavul haip iru seventymo gavul sagavulu one hundredmo gavul sagavulu mo sagavulu one hundred and tenmo gavul sagavulu dua two hundredmo gavul sagavulu sagavulu one thousandOrdinal numbers Edit Ordinal numbers are formed with the prefix ha at least for the numbers 2 5 Greater numbers have already integrated this or a similar prefix ha to their radical The number one has a suppletive form mudu first The ordinal forms are used especially with the word dan i to form the days of the weeks Araki Englishdan mudu Mondayha dua dan Tuesdayha rolu dan Wednesdayha v ari dan Thursdayha lim a dan Fridayhaiono dan Saturdayhaip iru dan SundayAdjectives Edit Contrary to many languages which lack a distinct category of adjectives Araki does have a set of lexemes which can be named this way The lexical category of adjectives is defined by two basic principles adjectives can be predicates and in this case must be preceded by a subject clitic like numerals or verbs adjectives can modify directly a noun in a Noun Phrase without a subject clitic opp numerals or a relative structure opp verbs Adjectives always follow the noun they modify and come before numerals 4 p irawomanhetehehetesmallmo3 Rheseonep ira hetehehete mo hesewoman small 3 R one a young woman Adjuncts Edit Adjuncts form quite a small category of lexical items whose syntactic position is to follow immediately the verb radical though still within the verb phrase When the verb is transitive adjuncts are inserted between the verb radical and the transitiviser suffix and or the object suffixes as though they were incorporated 5 Na1sgpaSEQnakhittahaRESm are ko dead OBJ 2sgNa pa nak taha m are ko 1sg SEQ hit RES dead OBJ 2sg I m going to kill you lit hit become dead you Adverbs Edit Contrary to adjuncts which are always incorporated into the verb phrase adverbs never are They can appear either at the beginning or at the end of a clause The unmarked position of a non typical adverb is after the verb object bundle where prepositional phrases are too The category of adverbs includes all words which form directly that is without a preposition an oblique complement 6 V apacavediANAmo3 RrohostayroIPFVsaha niup therekaura aboveV apa di mo roho ro saha ni kaura cave ANA 3 R stay IPFV up there above The cave is located up there above Demonstratives Edit Demonstratives are associated either to nouns for reference tracking or have the whole clause as their scope Although they syntactically behave partially like locational adverbs demonstrative words form a specific paradigm which is easily identified morphologically Reduplication Edit Araki uses reduplication in order to present a notion as intense multiple or plural in one way or another Semantically verbal reduplication triggers features such as non referentiality genericity of the object and thus is generally associated with noun incorporation Reduplication is also the main device if not the only one which allows a word to change its syntactic category Reduplication occurs From noun to noun indicating plurality and sometimes a diminutive capacity Many Ns small Ns e g naru son nanaru sons hudara dirt hudahudara small particles of dirt From noun to verb or adjective referring not to an of the world but to a process state which is normally caused by it e g alo sun aloalo to be sunny From verb to verb deriving one of the following an intensified meaning plurality reflexivity distributivity imperfectivity detransitivity e g v ano walk v anov ano race From verb to noun referring to the very notion of the verb in general terms e g sodo talk sodosodo speech message language Structurally Araki has three types of reduplication CV reduplication Edit The first syllable of the word is reduplicated naru nanaru son sons lokudo lolokudo angry levosai lelevosai intelligent CVCV reduplication Edit The first two syllables of the word are reduplicated m arahu m aram arahu fear be afraid veculu vecuveculu colour hudara hudahudara dirt small particles of dirt Root reduplication Edit The entire root of the word is reduplicated dev e dev edev e pull alo aloalo sun to be sunny sodo sodosodo talk speech message language Clause structure EditAs mentioned above Araki is a strict SVO language This means that different sentence types such as assertives imperatives and interrogatives do not involve a change in word order This contrary to what occurs in European languages These sentence types may differ in other ways Imperatives Edit All imperative sentences take Irrealis modality by definition since they refer to virtual events The verb must be preceded by its subject clitic 7 O2sgruen i a help TR OBJ 1sgO ruen i a 2sg help TR OBJ 1sg Help me Thus except for prosody all imperative sentences are formally identical with sentences expressing an intent or a near future for example you should help me or you are going to help me A negative order does not use the usual negation marker ce but the modal clitic kan Prohibitive 8 Na1sg IrrkanPROHsago uploLOCima na house 3sgNa kan sa lo ima na 1sg Irr PROH go up LOC house 3sg I should not go I am not supposed to go to his house Interrogatives Edit Interrogative sentences can take either Realis or Irrealis modality Yes No questions are similar to the corresponding question except for prosody Quite often the interrogative is marked by a final tag vo mo ce re or not In WH questions the interrogative words take the same slot as the word they replace that is they remain in situ Arakian Interrogative words include sa what se who v e where gisa when and visa how many The interrogative article what X which is sava a longer form of sa It comes before a noun for example sava hina what thing Two interrogative words are derived from sa what sohe sa like what how and m ara sa because of what why Negation Edit The general negation marker is a single morpheme ce which is used in all negative sentences except imperative It always comes at the beginning of the predicate phrase following the subject clitic It can be combined to Realis or Irrealis mood The negation ce combines with other elements for example aspect markers to build complex negative morphemes For example Negation ce aspect le again no longer Negation ce aspect m isi still not yet Negation ce partitive re some not any Negation ce NP re hina some thing nothing Negation ce adverb n re dan on some day never The combination negation re Verb partitive re in object position has the frequent effect of implying the non existence of this object The construction ce re N has been grammaticalised into a complect predicate ce re meaning do not exist not to be Existential sentences Edit Since the combination ce re has generalized to form a negative existential predicate one could expect that in a second stage of evolution affirmative existential sentences that is there is N would simply use the same predicate re without the negation In fact this is normally impossible Affirmative existential sentences never use re but have to employ other strategies These include the use of the predicate mo hese one or a locative phrase Complex sentences EditCoordination Edit Coordination as a clause linker is far from being widespread in Araki clause chaining is by far the preferred strategy Nevertheless some coordinators exist whose meaning is more precise than just and The most frequent coordinator is pani pan and but which usually carries an adversive meaning 9 Cam1inc RceNEGlevseknowlesi a see OBJ 3sgpanibutnia3sgmo3 Rrohostayro IPFVCam ce levse lesi a pani nia mo roho ro 1inc R NEG know see OBJ 3sg but 3sg 3 R stay IPFV We are not able to see him ghost yet he is around The word for or is voni von vo M ara because can be said to have coordinating effects Frequent use is made of the Bislama coordinator ale derived from the French allez Possible meanings are OK then now so finally NP coordination X and Y can be translated into Araki in three different ways the noun like preposition nida with the comitative suffix n i only with free pronouns the numeral rolu three and with personal pronouns Conditional systems Edit Araki has three markers corresponding to English if vada aru code Surprisingly two of these three markers are compatible with Realis modality Co de suppose let us say that if is the only marker that is incompatible with Realis modality It can refer to a possible situation in the future or it can present a counter factual hypothesis about the present Aru appears only with Realis modality in the conditional clause the main clause may bear Realis or Irrealis marking It can refer either to a possible hypothesis about the future or to a counter factual situation in the past Vada is a common subordinator in Araki probably deriving etymologically from the root vadai say tell When used in a topic clause vada is most often associated to Realis mood It can refer either to a single event in the past English when to a generic event in the global situation English whenever or to a possible event in the future English when if in case Clause chaining Edit Clause chaining is the combination of at least two clauses C1 and C2 without any coordinator subordinator or any other kind of overt link between them On prosodic criteria no pause is audible at their boundary at least no such pause as between two autonomous sentences Contrary to verb serialization every verb must be preceded by its own subject clitic whether or not it refers to the same subject as the preceding verb A sentence like the following is perfectly common in Araki 10 Racumanmo3 Rvari atake OBJ 3sgsulestonemo3 Rplan i athrow TR OBJ 3sgmo3 Rsago upmo3 Rcovifallmo3 Rsivo go downRacu mo vari a sule mo plan i a mo sa mo covi mo sivo man 3 R take OBJ 3sg stone 3 R throw TR OBJ 3sg 3 R go up 3 R fall 3 R go down A man takes a stone and throws it so that it goes up and falls down again Notice the ambiguity of the sentence it is only the context that makes clear that what falls down is actually the stone not the man The high frequency of clause chaining constructions makes the clitic mo Third person Realis singular or plural by far the most frequent word encountered in actual discourse Clause chaining can be used to describe a wide variety of situations Time succession and consequence Two phases of a single complex action Simultaneity of two events Commenting on an action Spatial dynamics Temporal dynamics Sentential objects Relative clauses Numeral phrases Unusual characteristics EditAraki is one of the few languages of Vanuatu and indeed of the world that has a set of linguolabial consonants Araki lacks a row of voiced stops as well as prenasalised stops both of which are prevalent in the Oceanic language group Araki has an unusually high number of phonemic differentiation on the alveolar point of articulation Particularly notable is the existence of a contrast between the alveolar trill and the alveolar flap one Language preservation EditIn June 2008 the Jacques Chirac Foundation for Sustainable Development and Cultural Dialogue announced its intention to focus on preserving the Araki language 5 6 This language is cited as an example among many others of the situation of language endangerment which the Chirac Foundation aims at addressing especially through its programme Sorosoro Pour que vivent les langues du monde Sorosoro is itself an Araki word meaning breath speech language 7 Notes and references EditNotes Edit Vari Bogiri 2008 suggests this is an overestimate suggesting an alternate estimate of 45 speakers References Edit Francois 2012 98 All the information contained in this entry comes from his grammar Araki A disappearing language of Vanuatu Francois 2002 Francois 2002 p 18 Francois 2002 p 6 New foundation seeks to preserve rare Vanuatu language Radio New Zealand International June 9 2008 Retrieved September 19 2011 Chirac launches foundation to awaken consciences AFP June 8 2008 See Chirac Foundation s Facebook page and interview by J Chirac 5 June 2008 Bibliography Edit Francois Alexandre 2002 Araki A disappearing language of Vanuatu Pacific Linguistics 522 Canberra Australian National University doi 10 15144 PL 522 inactive 31 December 2022 hdl 1885 146137 ISBN 0 85883 493 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of December 2022 link Francois Alexandre 2012 Ditransitive alignment and referential hierarchies in Araki Linguistic Discovery 10 3 97 124 doi 10 1349 ps1 1537 0852 a 418 Miller J G 1990 Live Book 7 Santo and Malo New South Wales Mission Publication of Australia Tryon D T 1972 The languages of the New Hebrides A checklist and general survey In Beaumont C Tryon D T Wurm S A eds Papers in Linguistics of Melanesia Series A 33 Pacific Linguistics Grimes Barbara ed 1996 Ethnologue Languages of the World 13th ed Dallas TX Summer Institute of Linguistics Vari Bogiri Hannah 2008 A Sociolinguistic Survey of Araki A Dying Language of Vanuatu Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development 26 1 52 66 doi 10 1080 14790710508668398 S2CID 41801304 External links Edit Audio recordings in the Araki language in open access by A Francois source Pangloss Collection CNRS Araki English French online dictionary by A Francois Araki wordlist at the Austronesian Basic Vocabulary Database Alphabet and pronunciationR Realis Realis mood Irr Irrealis Irrealis mood OBJ Object Object grammar Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Araki language amp oldid 1130907198, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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