fbpx
Wikipedia

Greater Awyu languages

The Greater Awyu or Digul River languages, known in earlier classifications with more limited scope as Awyu–Dumut (Awyu–Ndumut), are a family of perhaps a dozen Trans–New Guinea languages spoken in eastern West Papua in the region of the Digul River. Six of the languages are sufficiently attested for a basic description; it is not clear how many of the additional names (in parentheses below) may be separate languages.

Greater Awyu
Digul River
Geographic
distribution
Digul watershed, New Guinea
Linguistic classificationTrans–New Guinea
Proto-languageProto-Digul River
Subdivisions
  • Awyu–Dumut
  • Becking–Dawi
  • Sawi
Glottologgrea1275
Map: The Awyu–Dumut languages of New Guinea
  The Awyu–Dumut languages (other languages not shown)
  Other Trans–New Guinea languages
  Other Papuan languages
  Austronesian languages
  Uninhabited

History edit

The Awyu (pronounced like English Ow you) and Awyu–Dumut families were identified by Peter Drabbe in the 1950s.

Voorhoeve included them in his proposed Central and South New Guinea group.[2] As part of Central and South New Guinea, they form part of the original proposal for Trans–New Guinea.[3]

Classification edit

The classification below is based on Usher[4] and de Vries et al. (2012),[5] who used morphological innovations to determine relatedness, which can be obscured by lexical loanwords.

Sawi is classified on pronominal data, as the morphological data used for the rest of the family is not available.

Pawley and Hammarström (2018) exclude Awbono-Bayono, treating it as a separate family.[6]

Various other languages can be found in the literature. Airo-Sumaxage (Airo-Sumaghage)[7] is listed in Wurm, Foley, etc., but not in the University of Amsterdam survey and has been dropped by Ethnologue. Ethnologue lists a 'Central Awyu', but this is not attested as a distinct language (U. Amsterdam). In general, the names in Ethnologue are quite confused, and older editions speak of names from Wurm (1982), such as Mapi, Kia, Upper Digul, Upper Kaeme, which are names of language surveys along the rivers of those names, and may actually refer to Ok languages rather than to Awyu.

van den Heuvel & Fedden (2014) argue that Greater Awyu and Greater Ok are not genetically related, but that their similarities are due to intensive contact.[8]

Reconstruction edit

Proto-Digul River
Reconstruction ofGreater Awyu languages
Reconstructed
ancestors

Phonemes edit

Usher (2020) reconstructs "perhaps" 15 consonants and 8 vowels, as follows:[9]

m n
p t s k
mb nd ndz ng ngʷ
w ɾ j
i u
e o
ɛ ɔ
a ɒ

Pronouns edit

Usher (2020) reconstructs the pronouns as:[9]

sg pl
1 *nup
2 *ngup *ngip
3

Ross (2005) reconstructs the pronouns of the Awyu–Dumut branch as follows:

sg pl
1 *nu-p *na-gu-p
2 *gu-p *ga-gu-p
3 *e-p, *[n]ege-p, *yu-p *ya-gu-p

The suffix *-p and the change of the final TNG *a vowel to *u do not appear in the possessive pronouns: *na, *ga, *ya/wa, *na-ga, *ga-ga, *ya-ga.

Basic vocabulary edit

Healey (1970) and Voorhoeve (2000) edit

The following selected reconstructions of Proto-Awyu-Dumut, Proto-Awyu, and Proto-Dumut by Voorhoeve are from Healey (1970)[10] and Voorhoeve (2000),[11] as cited in the Trans-New Guinea database:[12]

gloss Proto-Awyu-Dumut Proto-Awyu Proto-Dumut
head *kɑibɑn; *xaiban *xaiban; *xɑibɑn *kɑbiɑn; *kebian
hair *möxö; *muk; *ron *mox; *mux; *ron *mökö-ron; *muk; *ron
ear *turun *turun *turutop; *turu=top
eye *kerop *kero *kerop
nose *togut *togut
tongue *fɔgat; *fɔgɛt; *pogɑt *fagɛ; *fɑge *ogat; *pɑgɑt
louse *gut *go; *gu; *ɑgu *gut
dog *angay; *ɑgɑi; *set *sɛ; *(y)ange; *(y)angi; *yɑgi *agay; *ɑgɑi; *tit
pig *wi *wi *uy
bird *yet *yi *yet
egg *wɑidin *mugo *wɑdin
blood *gom *gon *gom
bone *bogi *mit
skin *kɑt; *xa(t) *xɑ; *xa *kotay; *kɑtɑy
breast *ɑm; *om *om; **om *om; *ɔm
tree *yin *yin *in
woman *ran; *rɑn *ran; *rɑn *ran; *rɑn
sky **xuit *xuito *kut
sun *seyɑt *sɑt
moon *wɑkot *wɑkot
water *ox *ɔx; *óxo *ok
fire *yin *yin
stone *irop *ero; *iro *irop
name *füp; *pip *fi *fip; *üp
eat *ɑde; *en; *ɛn- *ɑde-; *en; *ɛn- *ɑde; *en; *en-
two *rumo; *rumon *okorumon; **ok=rumɔ(n) *irumon; *rumo

Usher (2020) edit

Some lexical reconstructions of Proto-Digul River and lower-level reconstructions by Usher (2020) are:[9]

gloss Proto-Digul River Sawuy Proto-North Digul Proto-Central Digul
head *kamb[e̝]jan *kabe̝jan *kambijan
leaf/hair *mo̝k moːx *mo̝k *mo̝k
tongue *te̝p seːp ~ seɸ *te̝p
skin/bark *kat *kat
breast aːm *am *ɒm
dog *tit siːr *tit *tit
bird *ndzeːt eːr *dze̝t *je̝t
egg *mug[o/ɔ] mugo *mugɔ
sun/day *[a]tap ataːp
moon *wakɔɾ oxaːr *wakɔɾ *wakɔɾ
water aːx *[a/ɔ]k *ɔk

Evolution edit

Greater Awyu reflexes of proto-Trans-New Guinea (pTNG) etyma are:[6]

Wambon language:

  • maŋgot ‘teeth, mouth’ < *maŋgat[a]
  • (Wambon S.) kodok ‘leg’ < *k(a,o)ndok[V]
  • mok ‘seed’ < *maŋgV
  • kotay ‘bark, skin’ < *(ŋg,k)a(nd,t)apu
  • kondok ‘bone’ < *kwanjaC
  • kim- ‘die’ < *kumV-
  • kinum- ‘sleep’ < *kin(i,u)-
  • ok ‘water, river’ < *okV
  • enop ‘fire’ < *kendop
  • (ko)sep ‘ashes’ < *(kambu-)sumbu
  • (Wambon N.) kumut ‘thunder’ < *kumut or *tumuk
  • ururuk ko- ‘to fly’ < *pululu

Mandobo Atas language:

  • am ‘breast’ < *amu
  • magot ‘mouth’ < *maŋgat[a]
  • koman ‘neck’ < *k(o,u)ma(n,ŋ)[V]
  • (a)moka ‘cheek’ < *mVkVm ‘cheek, jaw’
  • kere(top) ‘ear’ < *kand(e,i)k(V]
  • betit ‘fingernail’ < *mb(i,u)t(i,u)C
  • kodok ‘foot, leg’ < *k(a,o)ndok[V]
  • otae ‘bark, skin’ < *(ŋg,k)a(nd,t)apu
  • kiow ‘wind’ < *kumbutu
  • komöt ‘thunder’ < *kumut
  • üp ‘name’ < *imbi
  • kinum- ‘sleep’ < *kin(i,u)-
  • (ko)tep ‘ashes’ < *(kambu-)sumbu
  • ok ‘water, river’ < *okV
  • apap ‘butterfly’ < *apa(pa)ta

Pisa language:

  • mugo ‘egg’ < *maŋgV, kiri
  • mogo ‘eye’ < *kiti-maŋgV
  • kifi ‘wind’ < *kumbutu
  • ise ‘mosquito’ < *kasin
  • apero ‘butterfly’ < *apa(pa)ta
  • kunu (ri-) ‘sleep’ < *kin(i,u)-
  • kekuŋ- ‘carry on the shoulder’ < *kak(i,u)-

Syiaxa language:

  • fi ‘name’ < *imbi
  • apa ‘butterfly’ < *apa([pa]pata
  • boro ‘to fly’ < *pululu

References edit

  1. ^ New Guinea World, Digul River – Ok
  2. ^ Voorhoeve, C.L. 1968. “The Central and South New Guinea Phylum: a report on the language situation in south New Guinea. Pacific Linguistics, Series A, No. 16: 1-17. Canberra: Australian National University.
  3. ^ McElhanon, Kenneth A.and C.L. Voorhoeve. 1970. The Trans-New Guinea phylum: explorations in deep-level genetic relationships. Pacific Linguistics, Series B, No. 16. Canberra: Australian National University.
  4. ^ New Guinea World - Digul River
  5. ^ Lourens de Vries, Ruth Wester, & Wilco van den Heuvel. 2012. "The Greater Awyu language family of West Papua", pp. 269–312 of Hammarström & van den Heuvel (eds.), History, Contact and Classification of Papuan Languages. (Language and Linguistics in Melanesia Special Issue). Port Moresby: Linguistic Society of Papua New Guinea.
  6. ^ a b Pawley, Andrew; Hammarström, Harald (2018). "The Trans New Guinea family". In Palmer, Bill (ed.). The Languages and Linguistics of the New Guinea Area: A Comprehensive Guide. The World of Linguistics. Vol. 4. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton. pp. 21–196. ISBN 978-3-11-028642-7.
  7. ^ Multitree qgz
  8. ^ van den Heuvel, W. & Fedden, S. (2014). Greater Awyu and Greater Ok: Inheritance or Contact? Oceanic Linguistics 53(1), 1-36. University of Hawai'i Press.
  9. ^ a b c New Guinea World
  10. ^ Healey, A. 1970. Proto-Awyu-Dumut Phonology. In Wurm, S.A. and Laycock, D. C. (eds). Pacific Linguistic Studies in honour of Arthur Capell. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics.
  11. ^ Voorhoeve, C. L. 2000. Proto Awyu-Dumut phonology II. In A. Pawley, M. Ross, & D. Tryon (Eds.), The Boy from Bundaberg: studies in Melanesian linguistics in honour of Tom Dutton (pp. 361–381). Canberra: Pacific Linguistics.
  12. ^ Greenhill, Simon (2016). "TransNewGuinea.org - database of the languages of New Guinea". Retrieved 2020-11-05.
  • Ross, Malcolm (2005). "Pronouns as a preliminary diagnostic for grouping Papuan languages". In Andrew Pawley; Robert Attenborough; Robin Hide; Jack Golson (eds.). Papuan pasts: cultural, linguistic and biological histories of Papuan-speaking peoples. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics. pp. 15–66. ISBN 0858835622. OCLC 67292782.

Further reading edit

  • Proto-Awyu-Dumut. TransNewGuinea.org. From (1) Voorhoeve, C. L. 2000. Proto Awyu-Dumut phonology II. In A. Pawley, M. Ross, & D. Tryon (Eds.), The Boy from Bundaberg: studies in Melanesian linguistics in honour of Tom Dutton (pp. 361–381). Canberra: Pacific Linguistics. ; (2) Healey, A. 1970. Proto-Awyu-Dumut Phonology. In Wurm, S.A. and Laycock, D. C. (eds). Pacific Linguistic Studies in honour of Arthur Capell. Pacific Linguistics: Canberra.
  • Proto-Awyu. TransNewGuinea.org. From (1) Voorhoeve, C. L. 2000. Proto Awyu-Dumut phonology II. In A. Pawley, M. Ross, & D. Tryon (Eds.), The Boy from Bundaberg: studies in Melanesian linguistics in honour of Tom Dutton (pp. 361–381). Canberra: Pacific Linguistics. ; (2) Healey, A. 1970. Proto-Awyu-Dumut Phonology. In Wurm, S.A. and Laycock, D. C. (eds). Pacific Linguistic Studies in honour of Arthur Capell. Pacific Linguistics: Canberra.
  • Proto-Dumut. TransNewGuinea.org. From (1) Voorhoeve, C. L. 2000. Proto Awyu-Dumut phonology II. In A. Pawley, M. Ross, & D. Tryon (Eds.), The Boy from Bundaberg: studies in Melanesian linguistics in honour of Tom Dutton (pp. 361–381). Canberra: Pacific Linguistics. ; (2) Healey, A. 1970. Proto-Awyu-Dumut Phonology. In Wurm, S.A. and Laycock, D. C. (eds). Pacific Linguistic Studies in honour of Arthur Capell. Pacific Linguistics: Canberra.

External links edit

  • The Awyu–Ndumut languages in their linguistic and cultural context (University of Amsterdam)
  • Timothy Usher, New Guinea World, Proto–Digul River – Ok
    • (ibid.) Proto–Digul River (see also reconstructions of North and Central Digul River)
    • (ibid.) Digul River. New Guinea World.

greater, awyu, languages, greater, awyu, digul, river, languages, known, earlier, classifications, with, more, limited, scope, awyu, dumut, awyu, ndumut, family, perhaps, dozen, trans, guinea, languages, spoken, eastern, west, papua, region, digul, river, lang. The Greater Awyu or Digul River languages known in earlier classifications with more limited scope as Awyu Dumut Awyu Ndumut are a family of perhaps a dozen Trans New Guinea languages spoken in eastern West Papua in the region of the Digul River Six of the languages are sufficiently attested for a basic description it is not clear how many of the additional names in parentheses below may be separate languages Greater AwyuDigul RiverGeographicdistributionDigul watershed New GuineaLinguistic classificationTrans New GuineaCentral West New GuineaAwyu Ok 1 Greater AwyuProto languageProto Digul RiverSubdivisionsAwyu Dumut Becking Dawi SawiGlottologgrea1275Map The Awyu Dumut languages of New Guinea The Awyu Dumut languages other languages not shown Other Trans New Guinea languages Other Papuan languages Austronesian languages Uninhabited Contents 1 History 2 Classification 3 Reconstruction 3 1 Phonemes 3 2 Pronouns 3 3 Basic vocabulary 3 3 1 Healey 1970 and Voorhoeve 2000 3 3 2 Usher 2020 4 Evolution 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory editThe Awyu pronounced like English Ow you and Awyu Dumut families were identified by Peter Drabbe in the 1950s Voorhoeve included them in his proposed Central and South New Guinea group 2 As part of Central and South New Guinea they form part of the original proposal for Trans New Guinea 3 Classification editThe classification below is based on Usher 4 and de Vries et al 2012 5 who used morphological innovations to determine relatedness which can be obscured by lexical loanwords Sawi Sawuy Awyu Dumut Central Digul River Awyu languages Aghu Jair Shiaxa Jenimu Edera Pisa Asuwe Ndeiram Ndumut Dumut Wambon branch Mandobo Kaeti Dumut Wambon Ndeiram River Kombai Wanggom North Digul River Awbono Bayono Becking Dawi Dawi River Komyandaret Tsaukambo Becking River KorowaiSawi is classified on pronominal data as the morphological data used for the rest of the family is not available Pawley and Hammarstrom 2018 exclude Awbono Bayono treating it as a separate family 6 Various other languages can be found in the literature Airo Sumaxage Airo Sumaghage 7 is listed in Wurm Foley etc but not in the University of Amsterdam survey and has been dropped by Ethnologue Ethnologue lists a Central Awyu but this is not attested as a distinct language U Amsterdam In general the names in Ethnologue are quite confused and older editions speak of names from Wurm 1982 such as Mapi Kia Upper Digul Upper Kaeme which are names of language surveys along the rivers of those names and may actually refer to Ok languages rather than to Awyu van den Heuvel amp Fedden 2014 argue that Greater Awyu and Greater Ok are not genetically related but that their similarities are due to intensive contact 8 Reconstruction editProto Digul RiverReconstruction ofGreater Awyu languagesReconstructedancestorsProto Trans New Guinea Proto Awyu OkPhonemes edit Usher 2020 reconstructs perhaps 15 consonants and 8 vowels as follows 9 m np t s k kʷmb nd ndz ng ngʷw ɾ ji ue oɛ ɔa ɒPronouns edit Usher 2020 reconstructs the pronouns as 9 sg pl1 nup2 ngup ngip3Ross 2005 reconstructs the pronouns of the Awyu Dumut branch as follows sg pl1 nu p na gu p2 gu p ga gu p3 e p n ege p yu p ya gu pThe suffix p and the change of the final TNG a vowel to u do not appear in the possessive pronouns na ga ya wa na ga ga ga ya ga Basic vocabulary edit Healey 1970 and Voorhoeve 2000 edit The following selected reconstructions of Proto Awyu Dumut Proto Awyu and Proto Dumut by Voorhoeve are from Healey 1970 10 and Voorhoeve 2000 11 as cited in the Trans New Guinea database 12 gloss Proto Awyu Dumut Proto Awyu Proto Dumuthead kɑibɑn xaiban xaiban xɑibɑn kɑbiɑn kebianhair moxo muk ron mox mux ron moko ron muk ronear turun turun turutop turu topeye kerop kero keropnose togut toguttongue fɔgat fɔgɛt pogɑt fagɛ fɑge ogat pɑgɑtlouse gut go gu ɑgu gutdog angay ɑgɑi set sɛ y ange y angi yɑgi agay ɑgɑi titpig wi wi uybird yet yi yetegg wɑidin mugo wɑdinblood gom gon gombone bogi mitskin kɑt xa t xɑ xa kotay kɑtɑybreast ɑm om om om om ɔmtree yin yin inwoman ran rɑn ran rɑn ran rɑnsky xuit xuito kutsun seyɑt sɑtmoon wɑkot wɑkotwater ox ɔx oxo okfire yin yinstone irop ero iro iropname fup pip fi fip upeat ɑde en ɛn ɑde en ɛn ɑde en en two rumo rumon okorumon ok rumɔ n irumon rumoUsher 2020 edit Some lexical reconstructions of Proto Digul River and lower level reconstructions by Usher 2020 are 9 gloss Proto Digul River Sawuy Proto North Digul Proto Central Digulhead kamb e jan kabe jan kambijanleaf hair mo k moːx mo k mo ktongue te p seːp seɸ te pskin bark kat katbreast aːm am ɒmdog tit siːr tit titbird ndzeːt eːr dze t je tegg mug o ɔ mugo mugɔsun day a tap ataːpmoon wakɔɾ oxaːr wakɔɾ wakɔɾwater aːx a ɔ k ɔkEvolution editSee also Kaeti language Evolution Greater Awyu reflexes of proto Trans New Guinea pTNG etyma are 6 Wambon language maŋgot teeth mouth lt maŋgat a Wambon S kodok leg lt k a o ndok V mok seed lt maŋgV kotay bark skin lt ŋg k a nd t apu kondok bone lt kwanjaC kim die lt kumV kinum sleep lt kin i u ok water river lt okV enop fire lt kendop ko sep ashes lt kambu sumbu Wambon N kumut thunder lt kumut or tumuk ururuk ko to fly lt pululuMandobo Atas language am breast lt amu magot mouth lt maŋgat a koman neck lt k o u ma n ŋ V a moka cheek lt mVkVm cheek jaw kere top ear lt kand e i k V betit fingernail lt mb i u t i u C kodok foot leg lt k a o ndok V otae bark skin lt ŋg k a nd t apu kiow wind lt kumbutu komot thunder lt kumut up name lt imbi kinum sleep lt kin i u ko tep ashes lt kambu sumbu ok water river lt okV apap butterfly lt apa pa taPisa language mugo egg lt maŋgV kiri mogo eye lt kiti maŋgV kifi wind lt kumbutu ise mosquito lt kasin apero butterfly lt apa pa ta kunu ri sleep lt kin i u kekuŋ carry on the shoulder lt kak i u Syiaxa language fi name lt imbi apa butterfly lt apa pa pata boro to fly lt pululuReferences edit New Guinea World Digul River Ok Voorhoeve C L 1968 The Central and South New Guinea Phylum a report on the language situation in south New Guinea Pacific Linguistics Series A No 16 1 17 Canberra Australian National University McElhanon Kenneth A and C L Voorhoeve 1970 The Trans New Guinea phylum explorations in deep level genetic relationships Pacific Linguistics Series B No 16 Canberra Australian National University New Guinea World Digul River Lourens de Vries Ruth Wester amp Wilco van den Heuvel 2012 The Greater Awyu language family of West Papua pp 269 312 of Hammarstrom amp van den Heuvel eds History Contact and Classification of Papuan Languages Language and Linguistics in Melanesia Special Issue Port Moresby Linguistic Society of Papua New Guinea a b Pawley Andrew Hammarstrom Harald 2018 The Trans New Guinea family In Palmer Bill ed The Languages and Linguistics of the New Guinea Area A Comprehensive Guide The World of Linguistics Vol 4 Berlin De Gruyter Mouton pp 21 196 ISBN 978 3 11 028642 7 Multitree qgz van den Heuvel W amp Fedden S 2014 Greater Awyu and Greater Ok Inheritance or Contact Oceanic Linguistics 53 1 1 36 University of Hawai i Press a b c New Guinea World Healey A 1970 Proto Awyu Dumut Phonology In Wurm S A and Laycock D C eds Pacific Linguistic Studies in honour of Arthur Capell Canberra Pacific Linguistics Voorhoeve C L 2000 Proto Awyu Dumut phonology II In A Pawley M Ross amp D Tryon Eds The Boy from Bundaberg studies in Melanesian linguistics in honour of Tom Dutton pp 361 381 Canberra Pacific Linguistics Greenhill Simon 2016 TransNewGuinea org database of the languages of New Guinea Retrieved 2020 11 05 Ross Malcolm 2005 Pronouns as a preliminary diagnostic for grouping Papuan languages In Andrew Pawley Robert Attenborough Robin Hide Jack Golson eds Papuan pasts cultural linguistic and biological histories of Papuan speaking peoples Canberra Pacific Linguistics pp 15 66 ISBN 0858835622 OCLC 67292782 Further reading editProto Awyu Dumut TransNewGuinea org From 1 Voorhoeve C L 2000 Proto Awyu Dumut phonology II In A Pawley M Ross amp D Tryon Eds The Boy from Bundaberg studies in Melanesian linguistics in honour of Tom Dutton pp 361 381 Canberra Pacific Linguistics 2 Healey A 1970 Proto Awyu Dumut Phonology In Wurm S A and Laycock D C eds Pacific Linguistic Studies in honour of Arthur Capell Pacific Linguistics Canberra Proto Awyu TransNewGuinea org From 1 Voorhoeve C L 2000 Proto Awyu Dumut phonology II In A Pawley M Ross amp D Tryon Eds The Boy from Bundaberg studies in Melanesian linguistics in honour of Tom Dutton pp 361 381 Canberra Pacific Linguistics 2 Healey A 1970 Proto Awyu Dumut Phonology In Wurm S A and Laycock D C eds Pacific Linguistic Studies in honour of Arthur Capell Pacific Linguistics Canberra Proto Dumut TransNewGuinea org From 1 Voorhoeve C L 2000 Proto Awyu Dumut phonology II In A Pawley M Ross amp D Tryon Eds The Boy from Bundaberg studies in Melanesian linguistics in honour of Tom Dutton pp 361 381 Canberra Pacific Linguistics 2 Healey A 1970 Proto Awyu Dumut Phonology In Wurm S A and Laycock D C eds Pacific Linguistic Studies in honour of Arthur Capell Pacific Linguistics Canberra External links editThe Awyu Ndumut languages in their linguistic and cultural context University of Amsterdam Timothy Usher New Guinea World Proto Digul River Ok ibid Proto Digul River see also reconstructions of North and Central Digul River ibid Digul River New Guinea World Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Greater Awyu languages amp oldid 1154265695, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.