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West Papuan languages

The West Papuan languages are a proposed language family of about two dozen non-Austronesian languages of the Bird's Head Peninsula (Vogelkop or Doberai Peninsula) of far western New Guinea, the island of Halmahera and its vicinity, spoken by about 220,000 people in all. It is not established if they constitute a proper linguistic family or an areal network of genetically unrelated families.

West Papuan
(proposed)
Geographic
distribution
Halmahera (North Maluku) and Bird's Head Peninsula (West Papua and Southwest Papua)
Linguistic classificationOne of the world's primary language families
Subdivisions
GlottologNone
Distribution of the West Papuan languages

The best known "West Papuan" language is Ternate (50,000 native speakers) of the island of the same name, which is a regional lingua franca. Along with neighboring Tidore, they were the languages of the rival medieval Ternate and Tidore sultanates, famous for their role in the spice trade.

Origins and contact edit

The North Halmahera (NH) languages, spoken in the Maluku Islands, share some structural similarities with certain Papuan families in Melanesia, which was noted as far back as 1900.[1]: 193  In addition, there is a number of lexical and morphemic correspondences between NH and West Bird’s Head (WBH).[2]: 78  These are not easily explainable as chance resemblance. The question then is whether they are due to language contact (i.e., borrowing) or to common descent (i.e., genealogical inheritance). On the other hand, there is little evidence linking the individual families of the Vogelkop Peninsula to each other, with the relationship perhaps better considered areal (i.e., a Sprachbund).[3]: 626  In spite of the shared morpho-syntactic features, many of these languages exhibit little in the way of lexical resemblance.[4]

It is not clear if East Bird’s Head (Mantion–Meyah and Hatam–Mansim), Maybrat, Mpur, and Abun are related to any of the remaining groups.[3] However, a connection between WBH/NH and the Yawa languages appears to be relatively likely.[3]: 626  The South Bird’s Head and Timor–Alor–Pantar families, while included in older formulations of the proposal, are no longer thought of as part of West Papuan.[5]

All of these languages show traces of old Austronesian influence.[4] Much of the basic vocabulary in NH (~30%) can be linked with various Austronesian sources, suggesting a long period of contact.[1]: 194–195  The languages of the Bird’s Head have undergone extensive contact with the Cenderawasih Bay languages, such as Biak.[3]: 625 

The term "West Papuan" has also been used in an areal sense, encompassing most of the non-Austronesian languages of Halmahera and Bird's Head.[5]

Languages edit

History edit

The German linguist Wilhelm Schmidt first linked the West Bird's Head and North Halmahera languages in 1900. In 1957 H.K.J. Cowan linked them to the non-Austronesian languages of Timor as well. Stephen Wurm believed that although traces of West Papuan languages were to be found in the languages of Timor, as well as those of Aru and Great Andaman, this was due to a substratum and that these languages should be classified as Trans–New Guinea, Austronesian, and Andamanese, respectively. Indeed, most of the languages of East Nusa Tenggara and Maluku appear to have some non-Austronesian influence.[6]

In 2005, Malcolm Ross made a tentative proposal, based on the forms of their pronouns, that the West Papuan languages form one of three branches of an extended West Papuan family that also includes the Yawa languages, and a newly proposed East Bird's Head – Sentani family as a third branch.

Søren Wichmann (2013)[7] considers West Bird's Head, Abun, and Maybrat to form a unified family, but does not accept West Papuan as a coherent language family.

Timothy Usher, also somewhat tentatively, accepts Yawa and East Bird's Head, but not Sentani, as part of West Papuan itself, so the family can remain under that name.[8]

Holton and Klamer (2018) do not unequivocally accept the unity of West Papuan, but note that certain proposals linking "West Papuan" groups together may eventually turn out to be fruitful.[3] Ger Reesink suggests that the West Papuan family should be considered an areal network of unrelated linguistic families, noting the lack of adequate evidence for genetic relatedness.[5]

Pronouns edit

The pronouns Ross reconstructs for proto-West Papuan are,

I *da, *di- exclusive we *mam, *mi-
inclusive we *po-
thou *ni, *na, *a- you *nan, *ni-
she *mV they *yo, *ana, *yo-

These are shared by the "core" West Papuan families. Hattam reflects only "I" and "thou", and Amberbaken only "thou", "you", and "she".

Ross's Extended West Papuan languages have forms in *d for "I" and *m for "we". (Most Yawa forms of "we" have m, such as imama, but they are too diverse for an easy reconstruction.) These are found in all branches of the family except for the Amberbaken isolate.

Ross's West Papuan proper is distinguished from Yawa and EBH-Sentani in having forms like na or ni for the second-person singular ("thou") pronoun.

family I thou we
West Papuan *da, *di- *na, *ni, *a- *mam, *mi
EBH-Sentani *da, *di *ba~wa, *bi *meme, *me
Yava *rei *wein (imama etc.)

Word order edit

Word order is SVO in the West Bird's Head family and in western North Halmahera languages (Ternate, Tidore, West Makian, and Sahu; due to Austronesian influence). SVO word order is also present in the isolates Abun, Mpur, and Maibrat.[3]

The South Bird's Head family generally has SOV word order, although SVO word order is also permitted in transitive clauses. The Timor-Alor-Pantar languages also have verb-final word order.[3]

Phonology edit

All Papuan languages of East Nusantara have five or more vowels.[3]

Abun and Mpur are fully tonal languages, with Mpur having 4 lexical tones, and Abun having 3 lexical tones. Meyah and Sougb are pitch-accent languages. All other languages of the Bird's Head Peninsula are non-tonal.[9]: 134–135 

Of all the Papuan languages spoken in the Bird's Head Peninsula, Abun has the largest consonant inventory with 20 consonants, while neighboring Maybrat has the smallest with 11 consonants. Large consonant inventories similar to that of Abun are also found in the North Halmahera languages, such as Tobelo, Tidore, and Sahu.[3]: 583 

Lexical comparison edit

Basic vocabulary of two West Bird's Head languages (WBH) (Moi and Tehit) and three language isolates (Mpur, Abun, Maibrat), quoted by Holton & Klamer (2018)[3] from Miedema & Reesink (2004: 34) and (Reesink 2005: 202); these show diverse non-cognate forms among Papuan languages of the Bird's Head Peninsula:[10][11]

West Bird's Head family and Bird's Head isolates:
basic vocabulary
gloss Moi (WBH) Tehit (WBH) Mpur Abun Maibrat
arm/hand nin naa wom cim atem
leg/foot eelik deit pet wis ao
house keik mbol jan nu amah
good bok hnjo mafun ndo mof
dog oofun mqaan per ndar mtah
pig baik qorik dwaw nok fane
chicken kelem tole kokok kokor dam kukur kok
louse -jam hain im im sruom
water/river kla kla war aja
banana o ogo fa weu apit

Lexical lookalikes between North Halmahera languages (NH) (Galela and Pagu) and West Bird's Head languages (WBH) (Moi and Tehit) from Voorhoeve (1988: 194), as quoted by Holton & Klamer (2018):[1][3]

Lexical comparisons between North Halmahera and
West Bird's Head families
gloss Galela (NH) Pagu (NH) Moi (WBH) Tehit (WBH)
‘head’ sahe saek sawa safakos
‘fruit’, ‘eye’ sopo sowok suwo sfuon
‘egg’ gosi esyen
‘man’ ya-nau naul ne nau
‘meat’ lake lakem kem qan
‘tree’ gota kot
‘water’ ake akel kala kla
‘drink’ oke okel ook ooqo
‘stab’ saka sakal saa sqaa

The lexical data below is from the Trans-New Guinea database[12] and Usher (2020),[13] unless noted otherwise.

Body parts
family language head hair ear eye nose tooth tongue leg blood bone skin breast
Trans-New Guinea Proto-Trans-New Guinea *kobutu; *kV(mb,p)utu; *mUtUna; *mVtVna *iti; *(nd,s)umu(n,t)[V]; *zumun *ka(nd,t)(i,e)C; *kat(i,e)C; *tVmV(d) *g(a,u)mu; *ŋg(a,u)mu; *(ŋg,k)iti [maŋgV]; *nVpV *mundu; *mutu *magata; *maŋgat[a]; *titi *balaŋ; *mbilaŋ; *me(l,n)e; *me(n,l)e *kani(n); *k(a,o)ond(a,o)C; *kitu *ke(ñj,s)a; *kesa *kondaC; *kwata(l,n) *gatapu; *(ŋg,k)a(nd,t)apu *amu
Timor-Alor-Pantar Proto-Timor-Alor-Pantar (Schapper)[14] *-waRi *-mVN *-wasin *-lebuR *buta *waj *se(r, R) *hami
Timor-Alor-Pantar Proto-Timor-Alor-Pantar (Usher)[13] *ˈwali[k] *ina *muni[k] *ˈwasin *iˈdi *waⁱ[s] *pasu *ami
Tambora Tambora[15] kokóre búlu saing'óre saing kóme sóntong maimpo kiro
North Halmahera Proto-North Halmahera[3] *sahek *hutu *ŋauk *lako *ŋunuŋ *iŋir *akir *ḋohu *aun *koboŋ *kahi
West Bird's Head Moi sawa sagin suo efek telek sayam ofun baik kelem
Abun Abun (Karon Pantai dialect) məsu go ŋgro sios kwes nde dini da
Mpur Mpur (Kebar dialect) èbuam buambor yam bir èipèt far ip fièk
Maibrat Mai Brat ana amawian nasu bait taa mes tai arak
Konda-Yahadian Konda wesi sinamu nuburu unamu be ua toroni giri
Inanwatan-Duriankere Duriankere akaporo asari kabu epo kepo aru atoko agino
South Bird's Head Proto-East SBH[13] *karar *qer[aw] *mitob *resin *nun *sor *a[m/p]as *toq *did
East Bird's Head Meyah ibirfa feji itec bufon maki mugufu mofora mofos
East Bird's Head Manikion mogt mokodi ma-i resi mokta mohoti-muʔ mokuhi mori mos
East Bird's Head Hatam boŋwak ŋta iai kway mij ŋgrom injun ŋkek
Yapen Yawa akari bwin nami atu najo madi pae kea
Nature
family language louse dog pig bird egg tree sun moon water fire stone path
Trans-New Guinea Proto-Trans-New Guinea *niman *n(e,i); *n(e)i; *n[e]i; *yak; *yaka[i]; *yanem *maŋgV; *munaka; *mun(a,u)ka *ida; *inda ~ *iñja *kamali; *kamuli; *ketana *kal(a,i)m; *kamali; *takVn; *takVn[V] *nok; *(n)ok; *ok(u); *ok[V] *inda; *k(a,e)dap; *k(a,e)(n,d)ap; *kambu; *k(a,o)nd(a,u)p *kamb(a,u)na; *(na)muna; *[na]muna
Timor-Alor-Pantar Proto-Timor-Alor-Pantar (Schapper) *baj *(h)adul *hate *wad(i, u) *hur(u) *jira *hada *war *jega
Timor-Alor-Pantar Proto-Timor-Alor-Pantar (Usher) *amin *ˈj[a]bar *ˈadz[o]l *ˈudu *at[eⁱ] *ˈwadu *ˈira *aˈda *war *ˈ[ja]gal
Tambora Tambora kíwu kilaíngkong andik naino maing'aing
North Halmahera Proto-North Halmahera *gani *kaso *boro *gota *ŋoosa *aker *uku *teto
West Bird's Head Moi tolok sdam kodus -kesik ouk (ne) dala dewe kala yak
Abun Abun (Karon Pantai dialect) mim ndar yot namgau bem kew kam sur bot jok
Mpur Mpur (Kebar dialect) èyim pir duaw if bua perau put war yèt bit
Maibrat Mai Brat xate matax fane ru mauf ara ayo aya tafox fra
Konda-Yahadian Konda ano ajia ba boro wu oxot-moro ci abia ucua patyo
Inanwatan-Duriankere Duriankere kono meymo bi dorimo aguo a tigi sa weyko medapo
South Bird's Head Proto-East SBH *kon *kanen *wuk *qemin *teg[ed] *mo[k/q] *sai *aum
East Bird's Head Meyah mec mes mek mem ofou merga mowa mei mowoxo mamu
East Bird's Head Manikion kuta mehi hweij ba moʔwuʔ sako idesi; igda tohu smow idahabu
East Bird's Head Hatam mem msien naba ha tuŋwei bie-incem mpau (mi)ney sum tiy
Yapen Yawa eme make bugwe insane kami nyo uma karu (?) tanam oram
Miscellaneous
family language man woman name eat one two
Trans-New Guinea Proto-Trans-New Guinea *abV; *ambi *panV; *pan(V) *ibi; *imbi; *wani *na; *na- *ta(l,t)(a,e)
Timor-Alor-Pantar Proto-Timor-Alor-Pantar (Schapper) *nVa *nukV
Timor-Alor-Pantar Proto-Timor-Alor-Pantar (Usher) *nami *tubur *naⁱ *nawa *uˈkani
Tambora Tambora sia-in óna-yit mákan kálae
North Halmahera Proto-North Halmahera *naur *ŋopeḋeka *roŋa *oḋom *moi *sinoto
West Bird's Head Moi kwak kedi wak mele ali
Abun Abun (Karon Pantai dialect) bris gum git dik we
Mpur Mpur (Kebar dialect) mamir emuk barièt tu dukir
Maibrat Mai Brat sme asom ait sau ewok; eyok
Konda-Yahadian Konda riobo erunu no- mutyu rak
Inanwatan-Duriankere Duriankere kwemo nye ni- motoni eiri
South Bird's Head Proto-East SBH *rabin *onat *[ou]g
East Bird's Head Meyah nuna mofoka etmar ergens ergek
East Bird's Head Manikion giji moxo eth hom huay
East Bird's Head Hatam pənain ineŋa jem kom can
Yapen Yawa ana tam rais utabo jiru

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Voorhoeve, Clemens L. 1988. The languages of the northern Halmaheran stock. In: Geoffrey P. Smith, Tom Dutton, Clemens L. Voorhoeve, Stephen Schooling, Janice Schooling, Robert Conrad, Ron Lewis, Stephen A. Wurm and Theo Baumann (eds.), Papers in New Guinea Linguistics 26: 181–209.
  2. ^ Voorhoeve, Clemens L. (1984–1994), "Comparative Linguistics and the West Papuan Phylum", in Masinambow, E.K.M. (ed.), Maluku dan Irian Jaya, Buletin LEKNAS 3.1, Jakarta: LEKNAS-LIPI, pp. 65–90
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Holton, Gary; Klamer, Marian (2018). "The Papuan languages of East Nusantara and the Bird's Head". 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. 569–640. ISBN 978-3-11-028642-7.
  4. ^ a b Reesink, Ger P. (1998). "The Bird's Head as Sprachbund". In Miedema, Jelle; Odé, Cecilia; Dam, Rien A.C. (eds.). Perspectives on the Bird's Head of Irian Jaya, Indonesia; Proceedings of the Conference, Leiden, 13–17 October 1997. Amsterdam/Atlanta: Rodopi. pp. 603–642. ISBN 9789042006447.
  5. ^ a b c Reesink, G. (2009), "West Papuan languages", in Brown, E.K.; Ogilvie, Sarah (eds.), Concise Encyclopedia of Languages of the World, Amsterdam: Elsevier, pp. 1176–1178, ISBN 978-0-08-087774-7, retrieved 2023-07-05
  6. ^ Arthur Capell, 'The "West Papuan Phylum", Stephen Wurm 1977 [1975], New Guinea Area Languages and Language Study, volume 1.
  7. ^ Wichmann, Søren. 2013. A classification of Papuan languages 2020-11-25 at the Wayback Machine. In: Hammarström, Harald and Wilco van den Heuvel (eds.), History, contact and classification of Papuan languages (Language and Linguistics in Melanesia, Special Issue 2012), 313-386. Port Moresby: Linguistic Society of Papua New Guinea.
  8. ^ NewGuineaWorld - West Papuan
  9. ^ Klamer, Marian; Ger Reesink; and Miriam van Staden. 2008. East Nusantara as a Linguistic Area. In Pieter Muysken (ed.), From linguistic areas to areal linguistics, 95-149. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
  10. ^ Miedema, Jelle and Ger P. Reesink. 2004. One Head, Many Faces: New perspectives on the Bird's Head Peninsula of New Guinea. Leiden: KITLV.
  11. ^ Reesink, Ger P. 2005. West Papuan languages: roots and development. In: Pawley et al. (eds.) 185–218.
  12. ^ Greenhill, Simon (2016). "TransNewGuinea.org - database of the languages of New Guinea". Retrieved 2020-11-05.
  13. ^ a b c Usher, Timothy (2020). . Archived from the original on 2022-12-16. Retrieved 2020-12-31.
  14. ^ Antoinette Schapper, Juliette Huber & Aone van Engelenhoven. 2017. The relatedness of Timor-Kisar and Alor-Pantar languages: A preliminary demonstration. In Marian Klamer (ed.), The Alor-Pantar languages, 91–147. Berlin: Language Science Press. doi:10.5281/zenodo.569389
  15. ^ Donohue, Mark (2008-01-03). "The Papuan Language of Tambora". Oceanic Linguistics. 46 (2): 520–537. doi:10.1353/ol.2008.0014. ISSN 1527-9421. S2CID 26310439.
  • 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.
  • Voorhoeve, C. L. (1988). "The languages of the northern Halmaheran stock". Papers in New Guinea Linguistics. 26: 181–209. ISSN 0078-9135. OCLC 2729642.

External links edit

  • West Papuan sound comparisons
  • Papuans on the move: The linguistic prehistory of the West Papuan languages (OUTOFPAPUA project)

west, papuan, languages, confused, with, west, trans, guinea, languages, proposed, language, family, about, dozen, austronesian, languages, bird, head, peninsula, vogelkop, doberai, peninsula, western, guinea, island, halmahera, vicinity, spoken, about, people. Not to be confused with West Trans New Guinea languages The West Papuan languages are a proposed language family of about two dozen non Austronesian languages of the Bird s Head Peninsula Vogelkop or Doberai Peninsula of far western New Guinea the island of Halmahera and its vicinity spoken by about 220 000 people in all It is not established if they constitute a proper linguistic family or an areal network of genetically unrelated families West Papuan proposed GeographicdistributionHalmahera North Maluku and Bird s Head Peninsula West Papua and Southwest Papua Linguistic classificationOne of the world s primary language familiesSubdivisionsAmberbaken Mpur North Halmahera Yawa East Bird s Head West Central Bird s HeadGlottologNoneDistribution of the West Papuan languages The best known West Papuan language is Ternate 50 000 native speakers of the island of the same name which is a regional lingua franca Along with neighboring Tidore they were the languages of the rival medieval Ternate and Tidore sultanates famous for their role in the spice trade Contents 1 Origins and contact 2 Languages 3 History 4 Pronouns 5 Word order 6 Phonology 7 Lexical comparison 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksOrigins and contact editThe North Halmahera NH languages spoken in the Maluku Islands share some structural similarities with certain Papuan families in Melanesia which was noted as far back as 1900 1 193 In addition there is a number of lexical and morphemic correspondences between NH and West Bird s Head WBH 2 78 These are not easily explainable as chance resemblance The question then is whether they are due to language contact i e borrowing or to common descent i e genealogical inheritance On the other hand there is little evidence linking the individual families of the Vogelkop Peninsula to each other with the relationship perhaps better considered areal i e a Sprachbund 3 626 In spite of the shared morpho syntactic features many of these languages exhibit little in the way of lexical resemblance 4 It is not clear if East Bird s Head Mantion Meyah and Hatam Mansim Maybrat Mpur and Abun are related to any of the remaining groups 3 However a connection between WBH NH and the Yawa languages appears to be relatively likely 3 626 The South Bird s Head and Timor Alor Pantar families while included in older formulations of the proposal are no longer thought of as part of West Papuan 5 All of these languages show traces of old Austronesian influence 4 Much of the basic vocabulary in NH 30 can be linked with various Austronesian sources suggesting a long period of contact 1 194 195 The languages of the Bird s Head have undergone extensive contact with the Cenderawasih Bay languages such as Biak 3 625 The term West Papuan has also been used in an areal sense encompassing most of the non Austronesian languages of Halmahera and Bird s Head 5 Languages editWest Papuan North Halmahera Halmahera West Makian Core North Halmahera West Makian Amberbaken Mpur Yawa Yapen West Central Bird s Head West Bird s Head Abun Maybrat Central Bird s Head East Bird s Head Burmeso Hatam Mansim Hatam Moi Brai Mantion Meax Southeast Bird s Head History editThe German linguist Wilhelm Schmidt first linked the West Bird s Head and North Halmahera languages in 1900 In 1957 H K J Cowan linked them to the non Austronesian languages of Timor as well Stephen Wurm believed that although traces of West Papuan languages were to be found in the languages of Timor as well as those of Aru and Great Andaman this was due to a substratum and that these languages should be classified as Trans New Guinea Austronesian and Andamanese respectively Indeed most of the languages of East Nusa Tenggara and Maluku appear to have some non Austronesian influence 6 In 2005 Malcolm Ross made a tentative proposal based on the forms of their pronouns that the West Papuan languages form one of three branches of an extended West Papuan family that also includes the Yawa languages and a newly proposed East Bird s Head Sentani family as a third branch Soren Wichmann 2013 7 considers West Bird s Head Abun and Maybrat to form a unified family but does not accept West Papuan as a coherent language family Timothy Usher also somewhat tentatively accepts Yawa and East Bird s Head but not Sentani as part of West Papuan itself so the family can remain under that name 8 Holton and Klamer 2018 do not unequivocally accept the unity of West Papuan but note that certain proposals linking West Papuan groups together may eventually turn out to be fruitful 3 Ger Reesink suggests that the West Papuan family should be considered an areal network of unrelated linguistic families noting the lack of adequate evidence for genetic relatedness 5 Pronouns editThe pronouns Ross reconstructs for proto West Papuan are I da di exclusive we mam mi inclusive we po thou ni na a you nan ni she mV they yo ana yo These are shared by the core West Papuan families Hattam reflects only I and thou and Amberbaken only thou you and she Ross s Extended West Papuan languages have forms in d for I and m for we Most Yawa forms of we have m such as imama but they are too diverse for an easy reconstruction These are found in all branches of the family except for the Amberbaken isolate Ross s West Papuan proper is distinguished from Yawa and EBH Sentani in having forms like na or ni for the second person singular thou pronoun family I thou we West Papuan da di na ni a mam mi EBH Sentani da di ba wa bi meme me Yava rei wein imama etc Word order editWord order is SVO in the West Bird s Head family and in western North Halmahera languages Ternate Tidore West Makian and Sahu due to Austronesian influence SVO word order is also present in the isolates Abun Mpur and Maibrat 3 The South Bird s Head family generally has SOV word order although SVO word order is also permitted in transitive clauses The Timor Alor Pantar languages also have verb final word order 3 Phonology editAll Papuan languages of East Nusantara have five or more vowels 3 Abun and Mpur are fully tonal languages with Mpur having 4 lexical tones and Abun having 3 lexical tones Meyah and Sougb are pitch accent languages All other languages of the Bird s Head Peninsula are non tonal 9 134 135 Of all the Papuan languages spoken in the Bird s Head Peninsula Abun has the largest consonant inventory with 20 consonants while neighboring Maybrat has the smallest with 11 consonants Large consonant inventories similar to that of Abun are also found in the North Halmahera languages such as Tobelo Tidore and Sahu 3 583 Lexical comparison editThis article should specify the language of its non English content using lang transliteration for transliterated languages and IPA for phonetic transcriptions with an appropriate ISO 639 code Wikipedia s multilingual support templates may also be used See why December 2021 Basic vocabulary of two West Bird s Head languages WBH Moi and Tehit and three language isolates Mpur Abun Maibrat quoted by Holton amp Klamer 2018 3 from Miedema amp Reesink 2004 34 and Reesink 2005 202 these show diverse non cognate forms among Papuan languages of the Bird s Head Peninsula 10 11 West Bird s Head family and Bird s Head isolates basic vocabulary gloss Moi WBH Tehit WBH Mpur Abun Maibrat arm hand nin naa wom cim atem leg foot eelik deit pet wis ao house keik mbol jan nu amah good bok hnjo mafun ndo mof dog oofun mqaan per ndar mtah pig baik qorik dwaw nok fane chicken kelem tole kokok kokor dam kukur kok louse jam hain im im sruom water river kla kla war aja banana o ogo fa weu apit Lexical lookalikes between North Halmahera languages NH Galela and Pagu and West Bird s Head languages WBH Moi and Tehit from Voorhoeve 1988 194 as quoted by Holton amp Klamer 2018 1 3 Lexical comparisons between North Halmahera and West Bird s Head families gloss Galela NH Pagu NH Moi WBH Tehit WBH head sahe saek sawa safakos fruit eye sopo sowok suwo sfuon egg gosi esyen man ya nau naul ne nau meat lake lakem kem qan tree gota kot water ake akel kala kla drink oke okel ook ooqo stab saka sakal saa sqaa The lexical data below is from the Trans New Guinea database 12 and Usher 2020 13 unless noted otherwise Body parts family language head hair ear eye nose tooth tongue leg blood bone skin breast Trans New Guinea Proto Trans New Guinea kobutu kV mb p utu mUtUna mVtVna iti nd s umu n t V zumun ka nd t i e C kat i e C tVmV d g a u mu ŋg a u mu ŋg k iti maŋgV nVpV mundu mutu magata maŋgat a titi balaŋ mbilaŋ me l n e me n l e kani n k a o ond a o C kitu ke nj s a kesa kondaC kwata l n gatapu ŋg k a nd t apu amu Timor Alor Pantar Proto Timor Alor Pantar Schapper 14 waRi mVN wasin lebuR buta waj se r R hami Timor Alor Pantar Proto Timor Alor Pantar Usher 13 ˈwali k ina muni k ˈwasin iˈdi waⁱ s pasu ami Tambora Tambora 15 kokore bulu saing ore saing kome sontong maimpo kiro North Halmahera Proto North Halmahera 3 sahek hutu ŋauk lako ŋunuŋ iŋir akir ḋohu aun koboŋ kahi West Bird s Head Moi sawa sagin suo efek telek sayam ofun baik kelem Abun Abun Karon Pantai dialect mesu go ŋgro sios kwes nde dini da Mpur Mpur Kebar dialect ebuam buambor yam bir eipet far ip fiek Maibrat Mai Brat ana amawian nasu bait taa mes tai arak Konda Yahadian Konda wesi sinamu nuburu unamu be ua toroni giri Inanwatan Duriankere Duriankere akaporo asari kabu epo kepo aru atoko agino South Bird s Head Proto East SBH 13 karar qer aw mitob resin nun sor a m p as toq did East Bird s Head Meyah ibirfa feji itec bufon maki mugufu mofora mofos East Bird s Head Manikion mogt mokodi ma i resi mokta mohoti muʔ mokuhi mori mos East Bird s Head Hatam boŋwak ŋta iai kway mij ŋgrom injun ŋkek Yapen Yawa akari bwin nami atu najo madi pae kea Nature family language louse dog pig bird egg tree sun moon water fire stone path Trans New Guinea Proto Trans New Guinea niman n e i n e i n e i yak yaka i yanem maŋgV munaka mun a u ka ida inda inja kamali kamuli ketana kal a i m kamali takVn takVn V nok n ok ok u ok V inda k a e dap k a e n d ap kambu k a o nd a u p kamb a u na na muna na muna Timor Alor Pantar Proto Timor Alor Pantar Schapper baj h adul hate wad i u hur u jira hada war jega Timor Alor Pantar Proto Timor Alor Pantar Usher amin ˈj a bar ˈadz o l ˈudu at eⁱ ˈwadu ˈira aˈda war ˈ ja gal Tambora Tambora kiwu kilaingkong andik naino maing aing North Halmahera Proto North Halmahera gani kaso boro gota ŋoosa aker uku teto West Bird s Head Moi tolok sdam kodus kesik ouk ne dala dewe kala yak Abun Abun Karon Pantai dialect mim ndar yot namgau bem kew kam sur bot jok Mpur Mpur Kebar dialect eyim pir duaw if bua perau put war yet bit Maibrat Mai Brat xate matax fane ru mauf ara ayo aya tafox fra Konda Yahadian Konda ano ajia ba boro wu oxot moro ci abia ucua patyo Inanwatan Duriankere Duriankere kono meymo bi dorimo aguo a tigi sa weyko medapo South Bird s Head Proto East SBH kon kanen wuk qemin teg ed mo k q sai aum East Bird s Head Meyah mec mes mek mem ofou merga mowa mei mowoxo mamu East Bird s Head Manikion kuta mehi hweij ba moʔwuʔ sako idesi igda tohu smow idahabu East Bird s Head Hatam mem msien naba ha tuŋwei bie incem mpau mi ney sum tiy Yapen Yawa eme make bugwe insane kami nyo uma karu tanam oram Miscellaneous family language man woman name eat one two Trans New Guinea Proto Trans New Guinea abV ambi panV pan V ibi imbi wani na na ta l t a e Timor Alor Pantar Proto Timor Alor Pantar Schapper nVa nukV Timor Alor Pantar Proto Timor Alor Pantar Usher nami tubur naⁱ nawa uˈkani Tambora Tambora sia in ona yit makan kalae North Halmahera Proto North Halmahera naur ŋopeḋeka roŋa oḋom moi sinoto West Bird s Head Moi kwak kedi wak mele ali Abun Abun Karon Pantai dialect bris gum git dik we Mpur Mpur Kebar dialect mamir emuk bariet tu dukir Maibrat Mai Brat sme asom ait sau ewok eyok Konda Yahadian Konda riobo erunu no mutyu rak Inanwatan Duriankere Duriankere kwemo nye ni motoni eiri South Bird s Head Proto East SBH rabin onat ou g East Bird s Head Meyah nuna mofoka etmar ergens ergek East Bird s Head Manikion giji moxo eth hom huay East Bird s Head Hatam penain ineŋa jem kom can Yapen Yawa ana tam rais utabo jiruSee also editPapuan languages West Trans New Guinea languages Districts of West Papua for a list of districts and villages with respective languages List of ethnic groups of West PapuaReferences edit a b c Voorhoeve Clemens L 1988 The languages of the northern Halmaheran stock In Geoffrey P Smith Tom Dutton Clemens L Voorhoeve Stephen Schooling Janice Schooling Robert Conrad Ron Lewis Stephen A Wurm and Theo Baumann eds Papers in New Guinea Linguistics 26 181 209 Voorhoeve Clemens L 1984 1994 Comparative Linguistics and the West Papuan Phylum in Masinambow E K M ed Maluku dan Irian Jaya Buletin LEKNAS 3 1 Jakarta LEKNAS LIPI pp 65 90 a b c d e f g h i j k l Holton Gary Klamer Marian 2018 The Papuan languages of East Nusantara and the Bird s Head 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 569 640 ISBN 978 3 11 028642 7 a b Reesink Ger P 1998 The Bird s Head as Sprachbund In Miedema Jelle Ode Cecilia Dam Rien A C eds Perspectives on the Bird s Head of Irian Jaya Indonesia Proceedings of the Conference Leiden 13 17 October 1997 Amsterdam Atlanta Rodopi pp 603 642 ISBN 9789042006447 a b c Reesink G 2009 West Papuan languages in Brown E K Ogilvie Sarah eds Concise Encyclopedia of Languages of the World Amsterdam Elsevier pp 1176 1178 ISBN 978 0 08 087774 7 retrieved 2023 07 05 Arthur Capell The West Papuan Phylum Stephen Wurm 1977 1975 New Guinea Area Languages and Language Study volume 1 Wichmann Soren 2013 A classification of Papuan languages Archived 2020 11 25 at the Wayback Machine In Hammarstrom Harald and Wilco van den Heuvel eds History contact and classification of Papuan languages Language and Linguistics in Melanesia Special Issue 2012 313 386 Port Moresby Linguistic Society of Papua New Guinea NewGuineaWorld West Papuan Klamer Marian Ger Reesink and Miriam van Staden 2008 East Nusantara as a Linguistic Area In Pieter Muysken ed From linguistic areas to areal linguistics 95 149 Amsterdam John Benjamins Miedema Jelle and Ger P Reesink 2004 One Head Many Faces New perspectives on the Bird s Head Peninsula of New Guinea Leiden KITLV Reesink Ger P 2005 West Papuan languages roots and development In Pawley et al eds 185 218 Greenhill Simon 2016 TransNewGuinea org database of the languages of New Guinea Retrieved 2020 11 05 a b c Usher Timothy 2020 New Guinea World Archived from the original on 2022 12 16 Retrieved 2020 12 31 Antoinette Schapper Juliette Huber amp Aone van Engelenhoven 2017 The relatedness of Timor Kisar and Alor Pantar languages A preliminary demonstration In Marian Klamer ed The Alor Pantar languages 91 147 Berlin Language Science Press doi 10 5281 zenodo 569389 Donohue Mark 2008 01 03 The Papuan Language of Tambora Oceanic Linguistics 46 2 520 537 doi 10 1353 ol 2008 0014 ISSN 1527 9421 S2CID 26310439 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 Voorhoeve C L 1988 The languages of the northern Halmaheran stock Papers in New Guinea Linguistics 26 181 209 ISSN 0078 9135 OCLC 2729642 External links editWest Papuan sound comparisons Papuans on the move The linguistic prehistory of the West Papuan languages OUTOFPAPUA project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title West Papuan languages amp oldid 1217792462, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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