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Savosavo language

Savosavo is an endangered language spoken on Savo, a small volcanic island north of Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands. Savosavo is one of the Central Solomon languages, which are Papuan languages, unlike most of the languages in the vicinity, which are members of the Oceanic branch of the Austronesian language family. There are close to 3,000 speakers of Savosavo, and it is the easternmost Papuan language in the Pacific. Savosavo is the main language of nine of the twelve districts in the Solomon Islands. The closest Papuan language to Savosavo is the Central Solomon Lavukaleve, spoken in the Russell Islands to the west. Other neighbor languages are Bughotu, Ghari, and Lengo, Bughotu is to the north, while Ghari and Lengo are to the south, and are spoken on Guadalcanal.[2]

Savosavo
Native toSolomon Islands
RegionSavo Island, north of Guadalcanal, Central Solomons.
Native speakers
2,400 (1999)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3svs
Glottologsavo1255
ELPSavosavo
Savosavo is classified as Definitely Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger

Speakers edit

Speakers on Savo are known as agriculturalists. Vegetables and fruit are the main source of food while fish, chicken, and rice round out the overall diet. Rice is also an important commodity, but it has to be bought and is not grown on Savo.[3] A large number of people on Savo are without regularly paid work. To earn income, they sell commodities such as cocoa beans or garden produce at local markets or in the capital Honiara.[2]

Clan lineages are important to the people of Savo, as it makes up their social organization. A clan leader is known as 'chief' and there is one for each of the six clans on Savo. These leaders are all part of the Savo Ghizi Kato House of Chiefs and are important on the local levels.[3] The six clans are Ghaubata, Kakau, Lakuili, Kiki, Tanakidi, and Zoqo. Land in Savo is owned by the clans and not the individuals. Each member of the clan has the rights to a portion of land, but it must be connected to his/her mother's ancestors.[2]

The Central Province is known to have the lowest literacy rates of the Solomon Islands. As a result, literacy of languages such as Savosavo are small. The language is rarely used in writing, since most people only go through a few years of schooling. Savosavo is used in minor situations such as letters, notes, and notices to the public.[4]

Phonology edit

Savosavo has five vowels and 17 consonants.[5]

Vowels have no length contrast, and the vowels /e/, /i/, /o/, and /u/ vary freely between different allophones.

Consonants edit

In total there are four places and six manners of articulation for consonants.

There are three voiceless stops: /p/, /t/, and /k/ and four voiced stops: /b/, /d/, /ɟ/ and /g/.[6]

Minimal contrast between consonants[7]
Initial Medial
p:b puzu 'waist'

buzu 'breadfruit'

kapu 'to be full'

kabu 'to run away'

p:v pazu 'palm leaf'

vazu 'to bud'

sape 'to follow'

savea 'fin'

b:v boli 'intestines'

voli-li 'to buy'

labu 'belly button'

lavu 'place'

b:m barata 'hillside'

marara 'to be bright'

kaba 'shell'

kama 'armpit'

t:d tada 'man'

dada 'to be afraid'

pata-li 'to separate rope'

pada-li 'to count'

d:n data 'outside'

nata 'flat area'

vudu '(boy)friend'

vunu-li 'to smell'

d:r doi 'earth'

roi 'to sink'

kudo 'hen'

kuro 'pot'

r:l raju 'level ground'

l-aju 'to finish'

kuro 'pot'

kulo 'seawards'

r:n rata 'to be slippery'

nata 'flat area'

ura 'crayfish'

una 'earring'

s:z sala 'to follow'

zala-li 'to look for'

posovata 'yellow'

pozogho 'bottom'

g:ng qasi-li 'to close'

ngasi 'to be hard'

koqa-li 'to erect posts'

konga-li 'to worship'

Vowels edit

The vowels have no length contrast, and the vowels /e/, /i/, /o/ and /u/ vary freely between different allophones.

Sequences of identical vowels are not allowed in Savosavo.[8] All other sequences are allowed.

  • a and e – ae (to be married)
  • e and a – onea (to listen)
  • i and o – pio (man)
  • o and e – dodoe (4th gen relative)
  • u and i – koi (eight)
Minimal contrast between vowels [8]
Initial Final
a:e:i aghe 'we'

eghe 'Ngali nut tree'

ighe 'recently'

kata 'bushwards'

k-ate 'to hold'

kati 'bushwards'

o:u ora 'to burn'

ura 'crayfish'

kao 'bushwards'

k-au 'to take'

Orthography edit

The Savosavo language has 5 vowels (a, e, i, o, u) and 17 consonants (b, d, g, gh, j, k, l, m, n, gn, ng, p, r, s, t, v, z). This is the Anglican orthography. In the Catholic orthography, G is written Q, and Gh is written G. In other orthographies, Gn is written Ñ, and Ng is written N̄.[9]

Grammar edit

Verbs edit

Verbs usually mark tense, aspect and mood. They are by the far the largest word class in Savosavo, making up 47% of the overall word class. There are three types of verbs in Savosavo.[10]

Transitive verbs edit

Transitive verb stems have object marking. These verbs usually agree with their object in person (number) and in the third person singular (gender) using suffixes, prefixes, and stem modification.[11]

  • Stems taking prefixes only:
    • l-agha 'to marry'
    • l-aka 'to help '
    • l-au 'to take'
    • l-eghe 'to see'
    • l-ogha 'to weave'
    • l-ogo 'to collect'
  • Stems taking both prefixes and suffixes:
    • l-ave-li 'to kill'
    • l-ogho-li 'to fill'
    • l-ova-li 'to bite'
    • l-ogha-li 'to own'
    • l-ame-li 'to give'
    • l-esgangi-li 'to spoil'
  • Stems showing stem modification
    • sala 'to follow'
    • solo 'to throw'
    • pala 'to make'
    • bola 'to shoot'
  • Stems taking suffixes only:
    • aghi-li 'to pull'
    • jurake-li 'to shatter'
    • rami-li 'to shoot'

Intransitive verbs edit

Intransitive verb stems usually are without object marking. The suffix -vi can only be used on four intransitive verbs. When the suffix is added, there also has to be an object marking suffix.[12]

  • sogha (to jump) + -vi = sogha-vi-li[verification needed]
  • raghe (to run) + -vi = raghe-vi li
  • sara (to reach) + -vi = sara-vi-li
  • tete (to balance) + -vi = tete-vi-li

There are also transitive verbs that cannot be transitivized. Examples are ngori 'to snore', bo 'to go', and vige 'to dry'.

Ambitransitive verbs edit

Ambitransitive verb stems can occur with or without object marking. These verbs use suffixes to mark their object.[13]

  • ghavi 'to paddle' = ghavi-li 'to paddle a canoe'
  • ale 'to enter' = ale-li 'to enter something'
  • sali 'to wash away' = sali-li 'to wash something away'
  • kasanga 'to be angry' = kasanga-li 'to be angry about'

Nouns edit

Nouns are the second largest word class in Savosavo, making up around 40% of the overall word class. Nouns can be derived from verbs by the suffix -ghu. Another way to differentiate nouns from verbs in the concept of reduplication. This occurs when nouns can be duplicated to insinuate a verb.[2]

  • elu 'Ngali nut' = élu~elu 'to gather Ngali nuts'
  • kumara 'sweet potato' = kuma~kumara 'to harvest sweet potatoes'
  • kosu 'bird' = kosu~kosu 'to hunt for birds'
  • itoro 'walking stick' = ito~itoro 'to walk with a walking stick'

Many of the language names were actually made by duplicating the place where the language was spoken. This is how Savo~savo came to be.

Overall, nouns are required to be verbalized using the suffix -sa in order to function as the head of the verb phrase:

  • Lo mavutu=na ka molumolu-sa-zu (The place was already an island)

Number System edit

Savosavo's number system is based on the decimal counting system. What is interesting about this counting system is that there are two different words for 'one'. These words are ela and pade. Ela is usually used either in counting or to denote the numeral 'first'. As a modifier it means 'some'.[14]

Moka

ela

mapa=gha=na

ata

tetegha=la.

Moka ela mapa=gha=na ata tetegha=la.

'Maybe some people (are) here at the mountain.'

Pade as a modifier is usually shortened to pa.

No

pa

kibo=e

loa=na.

No pa kibo=e loa=na.

'That is one of your sins.'

1 ela (pade/pa) 30 ighivaleza
2 edo 40 aghavaleza
3 ighiva 50 aratale
4 aghava 60 poghoatale
5 ara 70 poghoroatale
6 poghoa 80 kuiatale
7 poghoro 90 kuavatale
8 kui 100 pa kela
9 kuava 200 edo kela
10 atale 269 edo kelagha poghoatale kuava
11 panipiti 999 kuava kelagha kuavatale kuava
20 nebolo 1,000,000 pa mola

Besides numerals, there are also other quantifiers:

  • alea 'how many, however many'
  • elave 'some more'
  • padenge 'only one'
  • pameve/pame 'one more'
  • daivata 'plenty'
  • du(lo) 'all'
  • palea/paleva 'few'

Notes edit

  1. ^ Savosavo at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. ^ a b c d "Individual Research Activities". Oceanic Linguistics. 1 (1): 12–28. 1962. doi:10.2307/3622765. JSTOR 3622765.
  3. ^ a b Wegener (2012), p. 1
  4. ^ Wegener (2012), p. 4
  5. ^ Wegener (2012), p. 13
  6. ^ Wegener (2012), p. 14
  7. ^ Wegener (2012), p. 18
  8. ^ a b Wegener (2012), p. 20
  9. ^ "Savosavo Language, Alphabet and Pronunciation". omniglot.com. Retrieved 2018-06-07.
  10. ^ Wegener (2012)
  11. ^ Wegener (2012), p. 50–53
  12. ^ Wegener (2012), p. 55
  13. ^ Wegener (2012), p. 56
  14. ^ Wegener (2012), p. 73

References edit

  • Wegener, Claudia (2006). "Savosavo body part terminology". Language Sciences. 28 (2–3): 344–359. doi:10.1016/j.langsci.2005.11.005. hdl:11858/00-001M-0000-0013-183C-A.
  • Wegener, Claudia (2008). A Grammar of Savosavo, a Papuan Language of the Solomon Islands (PhD thesis). Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen.
  • Wegener, Claudia (2012). A Grammar of Savosavo. Berlin: De Gruyter. ISBN 9783110289657.

External links edit

  • Materials on Savosavo are included in the open access Arthur Capell collections (AC1 and AC2) held by Paradisec.
  • Savosavo DoReCo corpus compiled by Claudia Wegener. Audio recordings of narrative texts with transcriptions time-aligned at the phone level, translations, and time-aligned morphological annotations.

9°08′S 159°49′E / 9.13°S 159.81°E / -9.13; 159.81

savosavo, language, savosavo, endangered, language, spoken, savo, small, volcanic, island, north, guadalcanal, solomon, islands, savosavo, central, solomon, languages, which, papuan, languages, unlike, most, languages, vicinity, which, members, oceanic, branch. Savosavo is an endangered language spoken on Savo a small volcanic island north of Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands Savosavo is one of the Central Solomon languages which are Papuan languages unlike most of the languages in the vicinity which are members of the Oceanic branch of the Austronesian language family There are close to 3 000 speakers of Savosavo and it is the easternmost Papuan language in the Pacific Savosavo is the main language of nine of the twelve districts in the Solomon Islands The closest Papuan language to Savosavo is the Central Solomon Lavukaleve spoken in the Russell Islands to the west Other neighbor languages are Bughotu Ghari and Lengo Bughotu is to the north while Ghari and Lengo are to the south and are spoken on Guadalcanal 2 SavosavoNative toSolomon IslandsRegionSavo Island north of Guadalcanal Central Solomons Native speakers2 400 1999 1 Language familyCentral Solomons SavosavoLanguage codesISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code svs class extiw title iso639 3 svs svs a Glottologsavo1255ELPSavosavoSavosavo is classified as Definitely Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World s Languages in Danger Contents 1 Speakers 2 Phonology 2 1 Consonants 2 2 Vowels 3 Orthography 4 Grammar 4 1 Verbs 4 1 1 Transitive verbs 4 1 2 Intransitive verbs 4 1 3 Ambitransitive verbs 4 2 Nouns 5 Number System 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksSpeakers editSpeakers on Savo are known as agriculturalists Vegetables and fruit are the main source of food while fish chicken and rice round out the overall diet Rice is also an important commodity but it has to be bought and is not grown on Savo 3 A large number of people on Savo are without regularly paid work To earn income they sell commodities such as cocoa beans or garden produce at local markets or in the capital Honiara 2 Clan lineages are important to the people of Savo as it makes up their social organization A clan leader is known as chief and there is one for each of the six clans on Savo These leaders are all part of the Savo Ghizi Kato House of Chiefs and are important on the local levels 3 The six clans are Ghaubata Kakau Lakuili Kiki Tanakidi and Zoqo Land in Savo is owned by the clans and not the individuals Each member of the clan has the rights to a portion of land but it must be connected to his her mother s ancestors 2 The Central Province is known to have the lowest literacy rates of the Solomon Islands As a result literacy of languages such as Savosavo are small The language is rarely used in writing since most people only go through a few years of schooling Savosavo is used in minor situations such as letters notes and notices to the public 4 Phonology editSavosavo has five vowels and 17 consonants 5 Savosavo Vowel Phonemes Front Central BackClose i uMid e oOpen a Savosavo Consonant Phonemes Labial Alveolar Palatal VelarPlosive voiceless p t kvoiced ᵐb ⁿd ᶮɟ ᵑɡNasal m n ɲ ŋFricative voiceless svoiced zTrill rLateral lApproximant b ɰ Vowels have no length contrast and the vowels e i o and u vary freely between different allophones Consonants edit In total there are four places and six manners of articulation for consonants There are three voiceless stops p t and k and four voiced stops b d ɟ and g 6 Minimal contrast between consonants 7 Initial Medialp b puzu waist buzu breadfruit kapu to be full kabu to run away p v pazu palm leaf vazu to bud sape to follow savea fin b v boli intestines voli li to buy labu belly button lavu place b m barata hillside marara to be bright kaba shell kama armpit t d tada man dada to be afraid pata li to separate rope pada li to count d n data outside nata flat area vudu boy friend vunu li to smell d r doi earth roi to sink kudo hen kuro pot r l raju level ground l aju to finish kuro pot kulo seawards r n rata to be slippery nata flat area ura crayfish una earring s z sala to follow zala li to look for posovata yellow pozogho bottom g ng qasi li to close ngasi to be hard koqa li to erect posts konga li to worship Vowels edit The vowels have no length contrast and the vowels e i o and u vary freely between different allophones Sequences of identical vowels are not allowed in Savosavo 8 All other sequences are allowed a and e ae to be married e and a onea to listen i and o pio man o and e dodoe 4th gen relative u and i koi eight Minimal contrast between vowels 8 Initial Finala e i aghe we eghe Ngali nut tree ighe recently kata bushwards k ate to hold kati bushwards o u ora to burn ura crayfish kao bushwards k au to take Orthography editThe Savosavo language has 5 vowels a e i o u and 17 consonants b d g gh j k l m n gn ng p r s t v z This is the Anglican orthography In the Catholic orthography G is written Q and Gh is written G In other orthographies Gn is written N and Ng is written N 9 Grammar editVerbs edit Verbs usually mark tense aspect and mood They are by the far the largest word class in Savosavo making up 47 of the overall word class There are three types of verbs in Savosavo 10 Transitive verbs edit Transitive verb stems have object marking These verbs usually agree with their object in person number and in the third person singular gender using suffixes prefixes and stem modification 11 Stems taking prefixes only l agha to marry l aka to help l au to take l eghe to see l ogha to weave l ogo to collect Stems taking both prefixes and suffixes l ave li to kill l ogho li to fill l ova li to bite l ogha li to own l ame li to give l esgangi li to spoil Stems showing stem modification sala to follow solo to throw pala to make bola to shoot Stems taking suffixes only aghi li to pull jurake li to shatter rami li to shoot Intransitive verbs edit Intransitive verb stems usually are without object marking The suffix vi can only be used on four intransitive verbs When the suffix is added there also has to be an object marking suffix 12 sogha to jump vi sogha vi li verification needed raghe to run vi raghe vi li sara to reach vi sara vi li tete to balance vi tete vi liThere are also transitive verbs that cannot be transitivized Examples are ngori to snore bo to go and vige to dry Ambitransitive verbs edit Ambitransitive verb stems can occur with or without object marking These verbs use suffixes to mark their object 13 ghavi to paddle ghavi li to paddle a canoe ale to enter ale li to enter something sali to wash away sali li to wash something away kasanga to be angry kasanga li to be angry about Nouns edit Nouns are the second largest word class in Savosavo making up around 40 of the overall word class Nouns can be derived from verbs by the suffix ghu Another way to differentiate nouns from verbs in the concept of reduplication This occurs when nouns can be duplicated to insinuate a verb 2 elu Ngali nut elu elu to gather Ngali nuts kumara sweet potato kuma kumara to harvest sweet potatoes kosu bird kosu kosu to hunt for birds itoro walking stick ito itoro to walk with a walking stick Many of the language names were actually made by duplicating the place where the language was spoken This is how Savo savo came to be Overall nouns are required to be verbalized using the suffix sa in order to function as the head of the verb phrase Lo mavutu na ka molumolu sa zu The place was already an island Number System editSavosavo s number system is based on the decimal counting system What is interesting about this counting system is that there are two different words for one These words are ela and pade Ela is usually used either in counting or to denote the numeral first As a modifier it means some 14 Mokaelamapa gha naatatetegha la Moka ela mapa gha na ata tetegha la Maybe some people are here at the mountain Pade as a modifier is usually shortened to pa Nopakibo eloa na No pa kibo e loa na That is one of your sins 1 ela pade pa 30 ighivaleza2 edo 40 aghavaleza3 ighiva 50 aratale4 aghava 60 poghoatale5 ara 70 poghoroatale6 poghoa 80 kuiatale7 poghoro 90 kuavatale8 kui 100 pa kela9 kuava 200 edo kela10 atale 269 edo kelagha poghoatale kuava11 panipiti 999 kuava kelagha kuavatale kuava20 nebolo 1 000 000 pa molaBesides numerals there are also other quantifiers alea how many however many elave some more padenge only one pameve pame one more daivata plenty du lo all palea paleva few Notes edit Savosavo at Ethnologue 18th ed 2015 subscription required a b c d Individual Research Activities Oceanic Linguistics 1 1 12 28 1962 doi 10 2307 3622765 JSTOR 3622765 a b Wegener 2012 p 1 Wegener 2012 p 4 Wegener 2012 p 13 Wegener 2012 p 14 Wegener 2012 p 18 a b Wegener 2012 p 20 Savosavo Language Alphabet and Pronunciation omniglot com Retrieved 2018 06 07 Wegener 2012 Wegener 2012 p 50 53 Wegener 2012 p 55 Wegener 2012 p 56 Wegener 2012 p 73References editWegener Claudia 2006 Savosavo body part terminology Language Sciences 28 2 3 344 359 doi 10 1016 j langsci 2005 11 005 hdl 11858 00 001M 0000 0013 183C A Wegener Claudia 2008 A Grammar of Savosavo a Papuan Language of the Solomon Islands PhD thesis Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen Wegener Claudia 2012 A Grammar of Savosavo Berlin De Gruyter ISBN 9783110289657 External links editMaterials on Savosavo are included in the open access Arthur Capell collections AC1 and AC2 held by Paradisec Savosavo DoReCo corpus compiled by Claudia Wegener Audio recordings of narrative texts with transcriptions time aligned at the phone level translations and time aligned morphological annotations 9 08 S 159 49 E 9 13 S 159 81 E 9 13 159 81 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Savosavo language amp oldid 1138037270, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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