Bandjalang language

Bundjalung
Spoken in New South Wales, Australia
Native speakers 10  (1983)
Language family
Pama–Nyungan
  • Bundjalung
Writing system Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-3 bdy

Bundjalung is an Australian Indigenous language of North-Eastern New South Wales.

Bundjalung consists of a number of dialects, including Yugumbir, Nganduwal, Minjangbal, Njangbal, Biriin, Baryulgil, Waalubal, Dinggabal, Wiyabal, Gidabal, Galibal, and Wudjeebal.

Contents

Phonology

Vowels

Varieties of Bundjalung may have a vowel system of either 3 or 4 vowels that also contrast in length, resulting in either 6 or 8 phonemic vowels in total.[1]

In practical orthography and some descriptions of the language, the letter "h" is often used after the vowel to indicate a long vowel.[2]

Front Back
High i iː u uː
Mid (e eː)
Low a aː

Vowel Alternations

/a/ and /e/ are neutralised as [ɛ] before /j/.

The low central vowel /a/ can be fronted and raised following a palatal consonant, and backed following a velar consonant.[3]

Unstressed short vowels can be reduced to the neutral central vowel schwa in a similar way to English.[4]

Consonants

Bundjalung has a smaller inventory of consonant phonemes than is typical of most Australian languages, having only four contrastive places of articulation and only one lateral and one rhotic phoneme.

Peripheral Laminal Apical
Bilabial Velar Palatal Alveolar
Obstruent b ɡ ɟ d
Nasal m ŋ ɲ n
Lateral l
Rhotic r
Semivowel w j

Obstruents

Although the standard IPA symbols used in transcription of the language are the voiced stop symbols, these segments are better characterised as obstruents because they are realised more often as fricatives or affricates than actual stops.[5] There is no contrast in Bundjalung between these manners of articulation.[6]

Bundjalung varieties do not have voicing contrasts for their obstruent sequences, and so phonological literature varies in its representation of these consonants- some linguists have chosen the symbols /p/, /k/, /c/, /t/, and others have decided upon /b/, /g/, /ɟ/, /d/.[7] Generally, these consonants are phonetically voiceless, except when following a homorganic nasal segment.[8]

Nasals

When nasal stops occur syllable-finally, they are often produced with a stop onset as a free variant.[9]

Lateral

The lateral phoneme can appear as a flap rather than an approximant, and sometimes occurs prestopped as a free variant in the same way as nasals.[10]

Rhotic

The rhotic phoneme has several surface realisations in Bundjalung. Between vowels, it tends to be a flap, although it can sometimes be an approximant, and it is usually a trill at the end of syllables.[11]

Semivowels

The existence of semivowels in Bundjalung can be disputed, as in many Australian languages. Some linguists posit their existence in order to avoid an analysis that involves onset-less syllables,[12] which are usually held to be non-existant in Australian languages. Some phonologists have found that semivowels can be replaced with glottal stops in some varieties of Bundjalung. [13]

Stress

Bundjalung is a stress-timed language and is quantity-sensitive, with stress being assigned to syllables with long vowels.[14] Short unstressed vowels tend to be reduced to the neutral vowel schwa.[15]

Syllable Structure

Like many Australian languages, Bundjalung is thought to have a constraint that states that all syllables must have a consonant onset.[16] Only vowels are permitted as the syllable nucleus, and these may be long or short.[17] Syllable codas are also permitted, with long or short vowels in the nucleus.[18] However, long vowels are not permitted to occur in adjacent syllables.[19]

Phonotactics

Consonant Clusters

Bundjalung does not permit clusters of the same consonant, or clusters that begin with an obstruent phoneme or end with an approximant, except the labio-velar glide.[20] All homorganic nasal-obstruent clusters occur in the language.[21] Clusters usually only involve two segments, but clusters of three may occur if an intervening vowel is deleted by some process.[22]

See also

References

  1. ^ Sharpe, Margaret C. (2005). Grammar and Texts of the Yugambeh-Bundjalung Dialect Chain in Eastern Australia. Muenchen, Germany: LINCOM. pp. 180. ISBN 3895867845. 
  2. ^ Sharpe, Margaret C. (2005)
  3. ^ Sharpe, Margaret C. (2005)
  4. ^ Sharpe, Margaret C. (2005)
  5. ^ Sharpe, Margaret C. (2005)
  6. ^ Sharpe, Margaret C. (2005)
  7. ^ Sharpe, Margaret C. (2005)
  8. ^ Sharpe, Margaret C. (2005)
  9. ^ Sharpe, Margaret C. (2005)
  10. ^ Sharpe, Margaret C. (2005)
  11. ^ Sharpe, Margaret C. (2005)
  12. ^ Sharpe, Margaret C. (2005)
  13. ^ Sharpe, Margaret C. (2005)
  14. ^ Sharpe, Margaret C. (2005)
  15. ^ Sharpe, Margaret C. (2005)
  16. ^ Sharpe, Margaret C. (2005)
  17. ^ Sharpe, Margaret C. (2005)
  18. ^ Sharpe, Margaret C. (2005)
  19. ^ Sharpe, Margaret C. (2005)
  20. ^ Sharpe, Margaret C. (2005)
  21. ^ Sharpe, Margaret C. (2005)
  22. ^ Sharpe, Margaret C. (2005)

External links