Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Binandere language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Trans–New Guinea language spoken in Papua New Guinea
Binandere
Native toPapua New Guinea
RegionOro Province
Native speakers
7,000 (2007)[1]
Dialects
  • Binandere
  • Tainya Dawari (Ambasi)
  • Yewa Buie
Language codes
ISO 639-3bhg
Glottologbina1277

Binandere is aPapuan language spoken in the "tail" ofPapua New Guinea.

Phonology

[edit]

Binandere has 11 consonants: voiced and voiceless bilabials, alveolars, and velars; voiced labial and alveolar nasals; the flap /ɾ/; the voiced bilabial fricative /β/ and the palatal approximant /j/.[2]

Consonants of Binandere[2]
BilabialAlveolarPalatalVelar
Plosive p b t d k ɡ
Nasal m n
Fricative β
Approximant j
Tap/flap ɾ

Binandere also has the 5 common vowels /ɑ e i o u/ and their five nasal counterparts.[2]

Vowels of Binandere[2]
FrontCentralBack
Closeiĩuũ
Mideoõ
Openɑɑ̃

These vowels can be combined to form up to 11 possible diphthongs:

  • Oral: /iu/ /ei/ /eo/ /eu/ /ɑi/ /ɑe/ /ɑo/ /ɑu/ /oi/ /oe/ /ou/
  • Nasal: /ẽĩ/ /ɑ̃ĩ/ /ɑ̃õ/ /õũ/

Evolution

[edit]
See also:Greater Binanderean languages § Evolution

Below are some reflexes ofproto-Trans-New Guinea proposed byPawley (2012):[3]

proto-Trans-New GuineaBinandere
*m(i,u)ndu ‘nose’mendo
*m(o,u)k ‘milk, sap, breast’mu ‘sap’
*mundun ‘internal organs’mundu ‘kidney, testicles’
*(ŋg,k)iti-maŋgV ‘eye’(gisi)-moka ‘eye’
*mV ‘taro’(Suena ma ‘taro’)
*mV- ‘give’(Korafe mut- ‘give’)
*(m,mb)elak ‘light, lightning’biriga ‘lightning’
*am(a,i) ‘mother’ai (*m lost before i), (Suena mia)
*amu ‘breast’ami
*k(i,u)tuma ‘night, morning’tumba ‘darkness’
*na ‘1SG’na
*na- ‘eat’na- ‘eat, drink’
*n[e]i ‘bird’ni
*nVŋg- ‘know, hear, see’(Korafe niŋg- ‘hear, understand’)
pMadang-Binandere *nu[k] ‘3SG free pronoun’nu
*ka(m,mb)(a,u)na ‘stone’ganuma (Korafe ghamana ‘stone’)
*mundun ‘internal organs’mundu ‘kidney, testicles’, (Korafe munju ‘egg’)
*mbalaŋ ‘flame’(?) beriberi ‘be alight’
*mbalaŋ ‘flame’beri-beri ‘be alight’
*mbulikV ‘turn (oneself)’(Guhu-Samane burisi eetaqu ‘turn over, turn s.th. around’)
*mbeŋga-masi ‘orphan’, ‘widow and child’(Suena boga masa ‘destitute widow and child’)
*pu + verb ‘to blow’Binandere put- ‘blow’
*ambi ‘man’embo (Guhu-Samane abi ‘man’)
*kV(mb,p)(i,u)t(i,u) ‘head’kopuru
*[ka]tumba(C) ‘short’tupo
*kambu(s,t)(a,u) ‘smoke’(?) imbosi
*apa ‘father’afa (Korafe afa)
*ndaŋgi/ndiŋga ‘tie’(Suena di ‘tie’)
*m(i,u)ndu ‘nose’mendo
*mundun ‘internal organs’mundu ‘kidney, testicles’, etc.’)
*ka(nd,t)(e,i)kV ‘ear’(Yega kari ‘ear’)
*inda ‘tree’izi (cf. Notu ri)
*[ka]tumba(C) ‘short’tupo
*k(i,u)tuma ‘night, morning’Binandere tumba ‘darkness’, ‘night’)
*kV(mb,p)(i,u)t(i,u) ‘head’kopuru
*(ŋg,k)iti-maŋgV ‘eye’gisi moka
*at(i,u) ‘netbag’asi (Suena ati ‘netbag’)
*si[si] ‘urine’pBinandere *susu (Korafe soso)
*titi ‘tooth’ji
*asi ‘string, rope’asi ‘vine, string, rope’)
*kasipa ‘to spit’kosiwa ‘spittle’
*mbeŋga-masi ‘orphan’(Suena boga masa ‘destitute’) ‘widow and child’
*kanjipa ‘sun’(?) kariga ‘moon’
*(ŋg,k)iti-maŋgV ‘eye’gisi-(moka)
*(ŋg,k)iti-maŋgV ‘eye’(gisi)-moka (Korafe móko ‘core, centre’)
*nVŋg- ‘know, hear, see’(pBinandere *niŋg- ‘hear’, Korafe niŋg- ‘hear, understand’)
*mbeŋga-masi ‘orphan’(Suena boga-masa ‘destitute’) ‘widow and child’
*kV(mb,p)(i,u)t(i,u) ‘head’kopuru
*ka(nd,t)(e,i)kV ‘ear’(Yega kari)
*kasipa ‘to spit’kosiwa ‘spittle’, kosiwa ari ‘to spit’
*ka(m,mb)(a,u)na ‘stone’ganuma (metath.) (Korafe ɣamana)
*ka(m,mb)(a,u)na ‘stone’ganuma (metath.) (Korafe ɣamana ‘stone’)
*k(o,u)ndVC ‘bone’(?) undoru ‘bones’
*kumV- ‘die’(?) abu-bugari ‘dead people’, (pBin *ambu- ‘wither, be sick, dying’)
*kambu(s,t)(a,u) ‘smoke’(?) imbosi
*ka(nd,t)(e,i)kV ‘ear’(Yega kari)
*la(ŋg,k)a ‘ashes’(aßa)-raka ‘fire’
*sikal/*sakil ‘hand, claw’(?) siŋgu ‘finger’, finger’)
*(m,mb)elak ‘light, lightning’biriga ‘lightning’
*(m,mb)elak ‘light, lightning’birigi

References

[edit]
  1. ^Binandere atEthnologue (18th ed., 2015)(subscription required)
  2. ^abcdWilson, Jonathan P. (2002)."Binandere Verbal Structures".SIL. Retrieved31 May 2022.
  3. ^Pawley, Andrew (2012). Hammarström, Harald; van den Heuvel, Wilco (eds.). "How reconstructable is proto Trans New Guinea? Problems, progress, prospects".History, Contact and Classification of Papuan Languages (Language & Linguistics in Melanesia Special Issue 2012: Part I). Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea: Linguistic Society of Papua New Guinea:88–164.hdl:1885/38602.ISSN 0023-1959.

External links

[edit]
Official languages
Major Indigenous
languages
Other Papuan
languages
Angan
Awin–Pa
Binanderean
Bosavi
Chimbu–Wahgi
New Ireland
Duna–Pogaya
East Kutubuan
East Strickland
Engan
Eleman
Ok–Oksapmin
Teberan
Tirio
Turama–Kikorian
Larger families
Sign languages

ThisPapuan languages–related article is astub. You can help Wikipedia byexpanding it.

Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Binandere_language&oldid=1306484641"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp