Kwomtari–Fas | |
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Kwomtari, Kwomtari–Baibai (dubious) |
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Geographic distribution: |
New Guinea |
Linguistic classification: | ? Left May – Kwomtari |
Subdivisions: |
Fas (Baibai)
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The Kwomtari–Fas or Kwomtari–Baibai languages, often referred to ambiguously as Kwomtari, are a dubious language family of six languages spoken by some 4000 people in the north of Papua New Guinea, near the border with Indonesia. The term "Kwomtari languages" can also refer to one of the established branches of this proposal.
A "Kwomtari" (= Kwomtari–Fas) phylum was first proposed by Loving and Bass (1964). The following classification is based on their proposal, with the addition of the Pyu and Guriaso languages, added later by Laycock (1975) and Baron (1983):
Kwomtari (Kwomtari–Fas) phylum
Laycock (1973; 1975) grouped the languages differently, placing Kwomtari and Fas together in the "Kwomtari family", and Baibai and Nai (Biaka) together in a "Baibai family", and calling the overall grouping "Kwomtari–Baibai". It was also Laycock who added the Pyu isolate, though he admitted, "A great deal more work is required on the Kwomtari Phylum before the classification can be regarded as established" (1973:43), and he published no evidence.
However, Baron (1983) notes that Laycock's reclassification appears to have been due to an alignment error in the published comparative data of Loving & Bass. Their raw fieldnotes support their original classification: They found a Swadesh list of Kwomtari to have 45% cognates with Biaka (Nai), while they note that Baibai has only 3% cognates with Biaka, and so cannot be assigned to the same family. Compare (Baron 1983:5 converted to IPA):
Gloss | Fas | Baibai | Kwomtari | Biaka | Guriaso |
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man | jimɛ(ni̥) | jimɛni | lofwai | doβwai | aməɾim |
woman | mo | moŋo | inali | inali | ajti |
nose | səʙte | səmɔni | tipu | tɔpokɾi | apədu |
eye | kɔj | koɾə | (w)u | wo | mukatu |
Baron coined the name "Kwomtari–Fas" to explicitly correct "Kwomtari–Baibai", the name under which Laycock's arrangement was commonly known. Baron added a newly discovered language, Guriaso, as a divergent branch of the Kwomtari family, and noted that as of that date Laycock maintained the inclusion of Pyu. However, Baron believes there is little to suggest that the Kwomtari family, Fas family, and Pyu are actually related, except that Kwomtari and Fas use similar kinship terms, which are shared by neighboring families that are not thought to be related to either Kwomtari or Fas.
Malcolm Ross linked Laycock's Kwomtari–Baibai family to the small Left May (Arai) family in a Left May – Kwomtari proposal, which is based on common pronouns. However, the link appears less straightforward once the correction is made for Loving and Bass' data. See Left May – Kwomtari for details.