Vaeakau-Taumako language
Vaeakau-Taumako | |
---|---|
Pileni | |
Region | Reef Islands and Taumako, Solomon Islands |
Native speakers | 1,700 (1999)[1] |
Austronesian
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 |
piv |
Glottolog |
pile1238 [2] |
Vaeakau-Taumako (formerly known as Pileni) is a Polynesian language spoken in some of the Reef Islands as well as in the Taumako Islands (also known as the Duff Islands) in the Temotu province of the Solomon Islands.
The language is spoken throughout the Taumako Islands, while in the Reef Islands, it is spoken on Aua, Matema, Nifiloli, Nupani, Nukapu, and Pileni. Speakers are thought to be descendants of people from Tuvalu.
The language has traditionally been considered one of the Futunic group of Polynesian languages, but a 2008 study exclusively based on lexical evidence concluded that this membership is weakly supported.[3]
Phonology
Vowels
Vaeakau-Taumako does not vary from the standard Polynesian and Austronesian vowel system, featuring five vowels that can be used either in a long or short form. Short vowels found in word-final syllables are frequently devoiced or dropped, but long vowels in the same position are always stressed. There is little allophonic variation between vowel pronunciations.[GVT 1]
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
High | i: /i/ and /ī/ | u: /u/ and /ū/ | |
Mid | e: /e/ and /ē/ | o: /o/ and /ō/ | |
Low | a: /a/ and /ā/ |
Vowel sequences in Vaeakau-Taumako are typically not treated as diphthongs, as they are not fully reduplicated, as shown in the word "holauhola". This is despite the vowels in the original word being pronounced like a diphthong.[GVT 1]
Consonants
The Vaeakau-Taumako language has one of the most complex consonant system of the Polynesian languages, with 19 distinct phonemes, plus a large amount of variation across dialects. /b/ and /d/ are found primarily in loan words, rather being native to the language.[GVT 2]
Aspirated sounds are characteristic of the language, and are typically strong and audible. However, the use of aspirated sounds varies across dialects, enough that it is difficult to identify a consistent pattern aside from noting they always occur at the start of stressed syllables.[GVT 3]
Labial | Dentalveolar | Velar | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Oral stop | unvoiced, unaspirated
unvoiced, aspirated voiced |
p
pʰ b |
t
tʰ d |
k
kʰ |
Nasal | voiced, unaspirated
unvoiced, aspirated |
m
mʰ |
n
nʰ |
ŋ
ŋʰ |
Lateral | voiced, unaspirated
unvoiced, aspirated |
l
lʰ |
||
Fricative | voiced
unvoiced |
v |
s |
h |
Morphology
Pronouns
Vaeakau-Taumako pronouns distinguish between 1st, 2nd and 3rd person pronouns. There are some inclusive and exclusive distinctions, and variations for singular, dual and plural in all cases. There are no gender distinctions. There is variation in the pronoun system for the dialects of Vaeakau-Taumako which can become quite complex, so for simplicity, only the general forms are recorded here.[GVT 4]
Independent personal pronouns
There are two distinctive base sets of independent personal pronouns in Vaeakau-Taumako. The standard forms are used for formal occasions and recorded text, while the colloquial forms are typically found in informal, everyday conversation.[GVT 5]
Standard | Colloquial | ||
---|---|---|---|
Singular | 1st person
2nd person 3rd person |
iau, au
koe ia |
|
Dual | 1st person inclusive
1st person exclusive 2nd person 3rd person |
thaua
mhuaua khoulua, kholua lhaua |
haua
houlua, holua haua |
Plural | 1st person inclusive
1st person exclusive 2nd person 3rd person |
thatou, thatu
mihatou, mhatu khoutou, khotou lhatou, lhatu |
hatou, hatu
houtou hatou, hatu |
Bound subject pronouns
The language also features bound subject pronouns which act as clitics to the tense-aspect-mood marker of the verb of the constituent. They are not obligatory to use. The presence of the "u" has free variation by the choice of the speaker, but they are typically less prevalent in the colloquial forms.[GVT 6]
Standard | Colloquial | ||
---|---|---|---|
Singular | 1st person
2nd person 3rd person |
u=, ku=
ko= ø |
|
Dual | 1st person inclusive
1st person exclusive 2nd person 3rd person |
tha(u)=
mha(u)= khol(u)= lha(u)= |
ha=
hol(u)= ha= |
Plural | 1st person inclusive
1st person exclusive 2nd person 3rd person |
that(u)=
mhat(u)= khot(u)= lhat(u)= |
hat(u)=
hot(u)= hat(u)= |
Hortative pronouns
The dual, plural and 2nd person singular have specific pronouns used in imperative and hortative sentences.[GVT 7]
Singular | Dual | Plural | |
---|---|---|---|
1st person inclusive | ta | tatu, hatu, tatou | |
1st person exclusive | ma | matu | |
2nd person | ko | lu | tu |
3rd person | la | latu, hatu |
Emphatic corefential pronouns
When the subject and direct object of a sentence are the same thing, repetition of the independent pronoun in place of both argument positions is typically used. However, there is a set of emphatic coreferential pronouns used for the direct object to refer to someone or a group of people acting alone.[GVT 8]
Singular | Dual | Plural | |
---|---|---|---|
1st person inclusive | okhitaua | okithatou | |
1st person exclusive | okhoiau | okhimaua | okimhatou |
2nd person | okhoe | okhoulua | okhoutou |
3rd person | okhoia | okhilaua | okilhatou |
The general pronoun nga
The word nga functions as a pronoun with specific use. It is a third person pronoun, but lacks specification for number, and is used to refer to both singular and plural referents. It typically is an anaphoric reference to a previously mentioned referent.[GVT 9]
Possession
Control
While it is common for Polynesian languages to distinguish between alienability and inalienability with a and o possessives, this is not the case for Vaeakau-Taumako. This distinction exists, however it instead marks control – not of the possessed item itself, but of the possessive relationship.[GVT 10]
A-possessives
Relationships that can be initiated or terminated freely, such as items that can be bought, sold or given away at will are marked with the a-possessive.[GVT 10]
O-possessives
Relationships that are outside of the possessor's personal control, such as body parts and kinship relationships are marked with o-possessives.[GVT 10]
Alienability and inalienability
Instead of a- and o- possessives, alienability and inalienability in Vaeakau-Taumako are distinguished by the use of either prenominal or postnominal possessive pronouns.[GVT 11]
Prenominal possessive pronouns
Prenominal possessive pronouns occur directly preceding the possessed nouns, and are typically used for inalienable relationships, such as kinship terms and body parts.[GVT 12] Prenominal possessive pronouns distinguish between singular, dual and plural of the possessor. The singular possessive forms make an additional distinction between singular and plural of the possessed entity, and encode the a- or o-possessive directly. The dual and plural possessor forms are combined with the possessive prepositions a and o to express this distinction, or they may occur without a preposition.[GVT 11]
Singular possessed | Plural possessed | ||
---|---|---|---|
Singular | 1st person
2nd person 3rd person |
taku, toku/tuku
tau, tō tana, tona, tena, na |
aku, oku
au, ou/ō ana, ona |
Dual | 1st person inclusive
1st person inclusive 2nd person 3rd person |
(a/o) ta
(a/o) ma (a/o) lu (a/o) la |
|
Plural | 1st person inclusive
1st person exclusive 2nd person 3rd person |
(a/o) tatu
(a/o) matu (a/o) koto, (a/o) tu (a/o) latu |
Postnominal possessive pronouns
The postnominal possessive pronoun succeeds the possessed noun, and are used to mark alienable relationships, such as owned items. They make no distinction between singular and plural of the possessed item, instead the distinction is usually made through the choice of article preceding the possessed noun. Like with prenominal possessive pronouns, the postnominal possessives are based on the possessive prepositions a and o, plus a pronominal form indicating person and number of the possessor. In the singular form, this is the same set of suffixes found on the prenominal possessives, whereas in the dual and plural form, a distinct set of person and number forms are found. In the third and first person, these forms are identical to the independent personal pronouns, except for the lack of aspiration on the initial consonant.[GVT 13]
Singular | Dual | Plural | |
---|---|---|---|
1st person inclusive | taua | tatou | |
1st person exclusive | aku, oku | maua | matou |
2nd person | au, ou | aulua, oulua | autou, outou |
3rd person | ana, ona | laua | latou |
Possessive Suffixes
The possessive suffixes -ku (1st person), -u (2nd person) and -na (3rd person) apply to a restricted set of kinship nouns: tama/mha ‘father’, hina ‘mother’, thoka ‘same-sex sibling’, thupu ‘grandparent’, and mokupu ‘grandchild’. These nouns cannot occur without possessive marking, they require either a possessive suffix or, in the dual and plural, a postnominal possessive pronoun.[GVT 14] An alternative construction is for these nouns to take the 3rd person possessive suffix -na in combination with a prenominal possessive pronoun or possessive prepositional phrase. The form in -na must in such cases be understood as a neutral or unmarked form, since it may combine with a pronoun of any person and number; but a form in -na without any further possessive marking is unambiguously 3rd person.[GVT 15] Nouns other than those previously mentioned do not take possessive suffixes, but instead combine with possessive pronouns.[GVT 16]
References
- References from Næss, Åshild; Hovdhaugen, Even (2011). A Grammar of Vaeakau-Taumako. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton. ISBN 978-3-11-023826-6.:
- Other sources
- ↑ Vaeakau-Taumako at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
- ↑ Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2013). "Pileni". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
- ↑ Austronesian Basic Vocabulary Database
External links
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