| Pendau | |
|---|---|
| Umalasa[note 1] | |
| Native to | Indonesia |
| Region | Central Sulawesi |
| Ethnicity | Pendau |
Native speakers | 3940 (2007)[1] |
Austronesian
| |
| Latin | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | ums |
| Glottolog | pend1242 |
| ELP | Pendau |
| This article containsIPA phonetic symbols. Without properrendering support, you may seequestion marks, boxes, or other symbols instead ofUnicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, seeHelp:IPA. | |
Pendau (Ndaoe, Ndau), orUmalasa, is aCelebic language ofSulawesi inIndonesia spoken by the approximately 4000Pendau people who live inCentral Sulawesi. Classified as anendangered language, Pendau is primarily spoken inside of Pendau villages whereasIndonesian is used to speak with neighboring communities and is the language of children's education and outside officials.[2] The highest concentration of speakers is in and aroundKecamatan Balaesang. There are no knowndialects within the Pendau region, although speakers from the mainland can identify whether a speaker is from the Balaesang peninsula through their 'rhythm' or intonation pattern. In recent years, some Pendau leaders have worked with local government topreserve their language alongside Indonesian.[3]
While the history of the Pendau has only been recently documented, a history has been pulled together throughfolklore andoral traditional, historical documents kept by Europeanexplorers, Pendau language developments, and the present situation of the Pendau. In contrast to neighboring groups, older Pendau men hold that the Pendau have never had a king and view themselves as having no class distinctions, although hierarchical roles did exist indecision-making andconflict resolution. The earliest document about the Pendau comes from 1795, when an American crew led by Captain David Woodward was found stranded off the west coast ofSulawesi. Between 1925-1935, Dutch-trained Indonesianevangelists began to arrive, and many of the Pendau today areregistered as Christians by the government and practice Christianity (although many features ofanimism arestill practiced). DuringWorld War II, theJapanese occupied Indonesia. Some Pendau still recite Japanese phrases and songs, although there are mixed opinions about the occupation with the occupation described as a difficult time by many who remember it. In recent history, many Pendau have made their living inmetalsmithing,agriculture,hunting,fishing, andsago making.[4]
The Pendau often live in small, often isolated communities inDonggala betweenBalaesang andDampal Utara. TheBalaesang Peninsula forms its own mountain range that runs north and south, splitting the east and west coast. Most of the Pendau happen to live along the west coast. TheSirenja sub-district is considered the southernmost boundary of the Pendau-speaking area.[5]
Pendau has five vowel phonemes: two front vowels,/i/ and/e/, one central vowel/a/, and two back vowels,/ɯ/ (orthographic⟨u⟩) and/o/. Most vowels areunrounded and/o/ is the only rounded vowel in Pendau. Pendau has nodiphthongs.[6]
| Front | Central | Back | |
|---|---|---|---|
| High | i | ɯ⟨u⟩ | |
| Mid | e | o | |
| Low | a |
The high back unrounded vowel (/u/) changes to alabial-velar glide (/w/) when it comes before a syllable with no consonant in theonset position. When this happens, the labial-velar glide takes the place of the onset consonant, reducing the number of would-be syllables.[7]
| Vowel to Consonant Change and Syllable reduction | Phonetic transcription | English translation |
|---|---|---|
| u.a.ni → wa.ni | [wan̪i] | 'honey bee' |
| ta.u.a.san → ta.wa.san | [t̪aws̪an] | 'unicorn fish' |
Pendau has 19consonant phonemes, although⟨w⟩ (which is not an underlying phoneme) appears in itswritten orthography. There are five contrastiveplaces of articulation and six contrastivemanners of articulation. There are twoaffricates in Pendau, the voiceless dental sibilant affricate (/t̪ʃ/) and the voiced alveolar sibilant affricate (/dʒ/).[6]
| Labial | Dental-Alveolar | Alveo-Palatal | Velar | Glottal | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nasal | m | n̪⟨n⟩ | ɲ⟨ny⟩ | ŋ⟨ng⟩ | |
| Plosive | p | t̪⟨t⟩ | t̪ʃ⟨c⟩ | k | ʔ⟨'⟩ |
| b | d | dʒ⟨j⟩ | ɡ | ||
| Fricative | β⟨v⟩ | s̪⟨s⟩ | h | ||
| Liquid | ɭ⟨l⟩ | ||||
| Trill | r̪⟨r⟩ | ||||
| Semivowel | (w) | j⟨y⟩ |
In word-final positions, voiceless plosives are pronounced asunreleasedallophones:e.g. the[p] in[api] becomes a[p̚] in[aɭap̚]. Other allophones in Pendau include the voiced dental nasal[n̪] becoming the syllabic dental[n̩] and the voiced velar nasal[ŋ] becoming the syllabic velar nasal[ŋ̩] before ahomorganicobstruent such as in[n̩dau] and in[ŋ̩ka:t̪̚].[6]
| /p/ and/p̚/[8] | ||
|---|---|---|
| api | [api] | 'fire' |
| alap | [aɭap̚] | 'take' |
| /t̪/ and/t̪̚/[8] | ||
| tinting | [t̪int̪iŋ] | 'time' |
| udut | [udut̪̚] | 'server' |
| /k/ and/k̚/[9] | ||
| kareva | [kareβa] | 'news' |
| tanduk | [t̪anduk̚] | 'horn' |
| /n̪/ and/n̩/[10] | ||
| nabo | [n̪aboʔ] | 'roof' |
| ndau | [n̩dau] | 'no' |
| /ŋ/ and/ŋ̩/[10] | ||
| nyaa | [ŋa:] | 'don't' |
| ngkaat | [ŋ̩ka:t̪̚] | 'small flame' |
The glottal stop (/ʔ/) is sometimes realized ascreaky voice. It has been observed that "in place of a true stop, a very compressed form of creaky voice or some less extreme form of stiff phonation may be superimposed on the vocalic stream."[11] The creaky voice manifests on one or more of the contiguous vowels where the glottal stop would have been. For example, creaky voice is written with[V̰] in[riV̰uo], where creaky voice appears between[i] and[o] as one vowel transitions into the next vowel.
| ri'uo[12] | [riV̰uo] | 'in/by/at there' |
| so'uya[12] | [s̪oV̰uja] | 'why' |
The syllabic template in Pendau is (C)V(C). Pendau is one of the few Sulawesi languages with a full system of final consonants (e.g. the neighboringKaili languages only allow CV and V, while demonstrated syllable patterns in Pendau include VC and CVC).[13]
| Template | Instantiation | Translation |
|---|---|---|
| V | n.da.u[14] | 'no' |
| CV | wa.ni[7] | 'honeybee' |
| VC | to.nang.la.it[15] | 'the crippled one' |
| CVC | wa.lan.da.no[16] | 'Walandano (village)' |
In the above example,/n/ inndau behaves as asyllabic consonant.
| p | t | c | k | b | d | j | g | m | n | ny | ng | v | s | h | ' | l | r | y | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Onset | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | + | X | X | X | X |
| Coda | X | X | - | X | X | X | - | X | X | X | - | X | - | X | - | X | X | X | X |
In the table above, X means that the consonant can occupy the respective position in the syllable and + means that it is a marginal phoneme. In Pendau,/h/ is the solemarginal phoneme, and it is hypothesized to be borrowed from Indonesianloan words.
Stress always falls on the penultimatesyllable and is unmarked. Words in Pendau require at least two syllables, which reflects this stress pattern. Some have described this process as "pitch accent" because the change in stress is accompanied by a change in pitch (as measured in Hz). However, Phil Quick, author ofA Grammar of the Pendau Language, states that "the use of 'pitch accent' should not be confused with languages such as Japanese in which 'pitch accent' is a term used to indicate a lexical contrast similar to tone language ... So technically then there are two types of pitch-accent languages, those such as Japanese where pitch-accent is phonemic, and those such as Pendau where pitch-accent is non-phonemic."[17]
Pendau usesaffixation (includingprefixes,infixes, andsuffixes) and has sevenverb classes which are categorized astransitive,intransitive, or mixed transitivity. Pendau shows extensive use ofclitics,reduplication, and limitedsubject agreement.
| Prefixation | ||
|---|---|---|
| mong- | mongkumung[18] | 'carry' |
| Infixation | ||
| -um- | molumolon[18] | 'swim' |
| Suffixation | ||
| -a' | niolla'[18] | 'brought for someone' |
Below is a table that lists all the verb classes in Pendau. All canonical verbs (besides stative verbs) require that the verb is prefixed with either theirrealis orrealis mood. The subscripts A and P refers to whether the subject is theagent orpatient.
| Transitivity | Verb Classes | Examples | Stem former (prefix) | Pivot / subject | Irrealis / realis (prefix) | Inverse (non-derived) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TRANSITIVE | Primary | nongkomung 'to carry' | pong-(pepe-) | A | M- / N- | ni'omung |
| Factive | nogabu 'to cook' | po- | A | nipogabu | ||
| MIXED TRANSITIVITY | Dynamic | nelolo 'to search' | pe- | A~SA | nilolo | |
| Denominal | nojala 'to net' | po- | A~SA | nijala | ||
| Locomotion | nol[um]olon 'to swim' | po- | A~SA | -- | ||
| INTRANSITIVE | Postural | nopotundo 'to sit' | popo- | SA | -- | |
| Stative | notou 'to be finished' | -- | SP | mo-no- | -- |
Pendau uses clitics show possession (genitive case), completion, continuation, relative clauses, and location. Clitics arephonologically part of the word (e.g., a word with a clitic adheres to the stress patterns as if the whole unit were one word), but syntactically functions as their own grammatical word.[18]
| ='u | first personal singular (genitive) |
| =to | first person plural inclusive (genitive) |
| =mu | second person singular (genitive) |
| =nyo | third person singular (genitive) |
| =mo | completive aspect |
| =po | continuative |
| si= | proper noun marker (absolute) |
| ni= | poroper noun marker (genitive) |
| nu= | common noun marker (genitive) |
| to= | relative clause marker |
| ri= | general locative oblique |
Reduplication in Pendau is classified as eitheraffixation orcompounding.[18] Both full and partial reduplication are present in Pendau. Partial reduplication sometimes works in tandem with prefixation, as the prefix itself may be added and reduplicated instead of the reduplicating the base (seeseseleo below). Reduplication is used for showinggrammatical number,nominalization, and emphasis.[20]
| Grammatical Number[21] | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| unga | 'child' | unga-unga | 'children' |
| odo | 'monkey' | odo-odo | 'monkeys' |
| sapa | 'what' | sapa-sapa | 'whatever' |
| Nominalization[22] | |||
| tinjo' | 'plant w/ stick' | titinjo' | 'planting stick, post, pole' |
| pangki | 'hit, pound' | papangki | 'sago pounder' |
| Emphasis[23] | |||
| eleo | 'day' | seseleo | 'every day' |
| souya | 'how many?' | sosouya | 'several' |
Subject agreement only occurs with two abilitative verbs (i.e., verbs that show the ability of doing the action):ma'ule 'able' andmatua 'capable.' These verbs themselves are prefixed with either the irrealis or realis mood.[24]
| Irrealis | Realis | |
|---|---|---|
| matua[25] | natua | 'able' |
| ma'ule[25] | na'ule | 'capable' |
The examples below showmatua with first person subject agreement.
bau
fish
A’u matua'u mengkani bau
1SG/ABS capable/IRR=1SG/GEN IRR-AUG/DYN-eat fish
'I am capable of eating fish'
Thebasic word order in Pendau isSVO orVOS, with the former being more common. Verbal prefixes show what the semantic role is of the argument in the subject position (agent orpatient).[26]
Siama’u
siina’u
Siama’u nonuju siina’u
PR/ABS=Father=1SG/GEN REAL-AUG/TR=send PR/ABS=mother=1SG/GEN
'MY FATHER sent my mother'
Siama’u
niina’u
Siama’u nituju niina’u
PR/ABS=Father=1SG/GEN INV/REAL-send PR/GEN=mother=1SG/GEN
'My mother sent MY FATHER'
The inverse voice (VOS) can only be used with transitive verbs, and all transitive verbs can be inflected for the inverse voice. Intransitive verbs need to become transitive verbs through derivation before they can be in the inverse voice. Otherwise, the word order in Pendau (and the word order for all intransitive sentences) is SVO.[28]
Pendau is aprepositional language.[29] There are three prepositions:ila (ablative noun marker),ri= (locative noun phrase marker), andsono (comitative noun phrase marker).[30] Preposed markers can be both independent words andproclitics.
Preposition (ila) functioning as an independent word
Preposition (ri=) functioning as a proclitic
Nenburamo
panganganta
flesh-eater
uo
yonder
sono
riLatoadu
Nenburamo panganganta uo sono riLatoadu
REAL-AUG-speak=COMPL flesh-eater yonder COM LOC=Latoadu
'The flesh-eater spoke to Latoadu'