Borneo-Philippines languages

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Borneo-Philippines
Geographic
distribution:
Southeast Asia and Madagascar
Genetic
classification
:
Austronesian
 Malayo-Polynesian
  Borneo-Philippines
Subdivisions:
two dozen branches


The Borneo-Philippines languages (or Outer Hesperonesian or Outer Western Malayo-Polynesian languages) are a branch of the Austronesian family which includes the languages of the Philippines, much of Borneo, the northern peninsula of Sulawesi, and Madagascar, as outlined in Wouk and Ross (2002).

In this classification, the older clade of Western Malayo-Polynesian (WMP), or Hesperonesian, has been broken up into "outer" (Borneo-Philippines) and "inner" (Sunda-Sulawesi) clades, and Western Malayo-Polynesian is considered merely a geographic term.

[edit] Classification

There are a large number of small clusters of languages in the Borneo-Philippines family whose interrelationship remains uncertain.

Parenthetical headings below are geographic conveniences and do not imply a genealogical relationship.

(Northern Philippines)

(Visayas and southern Luzon)

(Mindanao)

  • Southern Philippine languages
    • Manobo languages (15 languages of central Mindanao, including Tasaday)
    • Danao languages (3 languages of east Mindanao, including Magindanao and Maranao)
    • Subanun languages (5 languages of the western peninsula of Mindanao)
  • South Mindanao languages (5 languages of the southern coast, including Tboli)
  • Sama-Bajaw languages (10 languages of the Sulu Archipelago and Biliran, several called Sama or Bajaw)

(Borneo and Madagascar)

(Northern Sulawesi)

[edit] References

  • Fay Wouk and Malcolm Ross (ed.), The history and typology of western Austronesian voice systems. Australian National University, 2002.