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Bulaka River languages

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Papuan languages
Bulaka River
Yelmek–Maklew
Jabga
Geographic
distribution
Tubang andIlwayab subdistricts,Bulaka River watershed,Merauke Regency,South Papua
EthnicityJab (Yab)
Linguistic classificationOne of the world's primarylanguage families
Subdivisions
Language codes
Glottologbula1259
Map: The Bulaka River languages of New Guinea
  The Bulaka River languages
  Trans–New Guinea languages
  Other Papuan languages
  Austronesian languages
  Uninhabited

TheBulaka River languages are a pair of closely relatedPapuan languages,Yelmek andMaklew, on theBulaka River in IndonesianSouth Papua. They are ethnically Yab (Jab); their speech isYabga (Jabga).

Languages

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Yelmek is spoken west ofMerauke Regency, between theDigul River andMbian River, (from north to south) in the villages of Wanam, Bibikem, Woboyo, and Dodalim.

Maklew is spoken in Welbuti village.[1] The former two villages are located inIlwayab district, and the latter three inTubang district.

Classification

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The two languages are transparently related.

Ross (2005) tentatively included them in the proposedTrans-Fly – Bulaka River family, but Usher, who reconstructs that family, does not connect Bulaka River to any other language family.[2]

Proto-language

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Phonology

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Usher (2014) reconstructs the consonant inventory as follows.[3]Although the modern inventories of Yelmek and Maklew are nearly identical, they lack a one-to-one correspondence. Maklew in particular has been heavily influenced by Marind, and participates in a number of sound changes that occurred in that language. Usher posits:

  • j for Yelmek j ~ Maklew s (→ [z] in the Jab dialect of Yelmek; also found in loans from Marind /j/, which in some dialects is [hʲ])
  • w for Yelmek w ~ Maklew h (also found in loans from Marind /w/, which in some dialects is [hʷ])
  • ɣ for Yelmek ŋ ~ Maklew h (→ [g] in the Jab dialect of Yelmek; Makelew /h/ also found in loans from Marind /ɣ/, which in the central dialects becomes [h])

and, in loan words, mostly from Marind,

  • s for Yelmek t ~ Maklew s (→ [ts] is Jab).

In addition, there is a set of correspondences between alveolars in Yelmek and velars in Maklew (n~ŋ, t~k, d~g). Usher transcribes these as a series of palatal consonants (*ɲ *c *ɟ), but this is merely a typographic convenience. The phonetic forms are not easily recoverable, but most instances (8 out of 10) are followed by *e, suggesting that there was a vocal component. Usher suggests that *ɲ *c *ɟ might actually have been *niV *tiV *diV or *ŋiV *kiV *giV, none of which occur in the reconstructions despite the high frequency of the sequence *iV otherwise. The expected sequences *itV and *ikV also do not occur, so it's possible that *ɲ *c *ɟ reflect all three of these series, rather than a fourth place of articulation.

*m*n*ɲ (= *{n|ŋ}i/_V?)
*p*t*c (= *{t|k}i/_V?)*k
*b*d*ɟ (= *{d|g}i/_V?)*g
[*s]
*w*l*j
*i*u
*e(*ə)*o
*a

The reconstruction of *ə is not firm, at least partly because the transcribed data is often unreliable.

There are vowel sequences of *iV and *uV. These might have been reconstructed as **jV and **wV, with no vowel sequences in the proto-language, but that analysis would require changing *w and *j in the consonant table above to **β and **ʝ, distinct from **w and **j, resulting in a larger set of consonants and an odd inventory of fricatives.

Pronouns

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Usher (2020) reconstructs the pronouns as:[3]

sgpl
1*ŋ[e]l*ŋag
2*au (?)*ale (?)
3*eb*em[e]l

Lexicon

[edit]

Proto-Bulaka River lexical reconstructions by Usher (2014) are:[3]

glossProto-Bulaka River
afraid*oio
ankle*boto
ant*kani[a/e]
ashes*kab
ask about*lig(-)
ask for*liw
back*uele
bamboo*biol
banana*okal
bandicoot*jowoli
bathe*jale
be (future)*ŋaiak
be hungry*ɣi
beach*uelo
big*bala-
bitter*ipa
blood*ewlek[e]
blunt/dull*map
body/chest*agal
bone/shin*pu
branch*kaka
breadfruit*joko
break (rope)*[a]ŋeme
break (wood)*maɣe
breast*momo
breath*waku
bush/forest*golu
canoe*imo
cassowary*owi
child/offspring*iaŋ
coconut*mi[a/o]
coconut shell*apina
cold*ioɣ[a]
cough/sneeze*ŋot[o]
crocodile*iaua[ŋ]
crooked/turn*meŋ
dark/black*ɟewi
(day)light*owo
deep*dam
dig*k[o]uak
dog*num
dream*ŋeɣe
drink/suck*[a]ŋ[e]
dry*ua-
ear*opo-kolo
earthquake*ŋ[a/o]ɣum[o]
enemy*kui
excrement*de, *gauo
eye/face*opo
feather*papa
fence*molo
fire*ace
fish*dem, *dam
fly (n.)*uoli
fly (v.)*mu
foot/leg*uodo
forehead*cule
fruit*noma
go up*ukal
good/true*ŋama-
grab/hold*[a]ɣep[e]
grandparent*kaga
hard*kakeie
hear*[i]ŋe
hit/smash*pliaɣ
hole*kolo
hot/sharp*dimo
house*ebi
husband*ebVwe
imperative*ia-
intransitive*ŋo-
kill*gul-
knowledge*uowka
kunai grass*uoka
laugh*ŋuw
leaf*op
lie down/sleep*ku
light (weight)*popu-
lightning*melVm
lime/white*mVlino
long*tipu-
louse*dobuna
mountain*uomal
mouth/door*uwo
mucus*em
name*ŋaɟel[e]
neck*ua[n/l]
negative*ma
net*apija
new*ŋaluo-
night*ui
now/today*ŋop[i]
oblique*el ~ *ol
old (thing)*poto-
older sibling*ɲena
one*ŋuka
path*came
penis*mu
person*ŋuwa
pig*milom
plait*ɣo
plant (v.)*[e]ule
possessive*a[u]-
rain*maŋ
rib(s)*mel
ripe*ŋewe
rope*del
run/run away*jeme
sago stems*buka
saliva*wVlo
see*[a]b[e]
shoot*to
short*tama-
sick/ill*dogo
sit*ma[n/d]
sleep*opula
small*wVti-
smoke*acaja
snake*gumolo
soft/weak*ieg(ieg)
sole*mulo
sour*[a]bowol
speech*gaga
spine*ieŋo
steal*ɟepe
stone*mat[e]
stone axe*iebu
straight*amom
suffix on adj.*pa-
sugarcane*belam
sun/sky*[a/o]limu
swim*ce
tame/orphan*ŋomo-
taro*muj
tendon*ouo
testicle*oko
thigh*c[a]pe, *cepe
throat*bila
thumb/big toe*ege-
tongue*nepla
tooth*kal
torch*ual[e]no
tree/wood*doio
upright*daŋ
urine*oŋo
voice*wai[a]
wait*[a]lpo
wallaby*doki
wash*uw
water*iu
weep/cry*ŋom
widow*boi
wife*kepi[ŋ/ɣ][e]
wing*mama
woman/female*iowa-
younger sibling*uobia

References

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  1. ^Evans, Nicholas (2018). "The languages of Southern New Guinea". In Palmer, Bill (ed.).The Languages and Linguistics of the New Guinea Area: A Comprehensive Guide. The World of Linguistics. Vol. 4. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton. pp. 641–774.ISBN 978-3-11-028642-7.
  2. ^"New Guinea World: Bulaka River". Retrieved2017-12-11.
  3. ^abcUsher, Timothy. 2014. "Bulaka River Consonants".Journal of Language Relationship, vol. 12, no. 1, 2015, pp. 31-50.doi:10.31826/jlr-2015-120106

External links

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Based onPalmer 2018 classification
Trans–New Guinea
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See also
  • Families with question marks (?) are disputed or controversial.
  • Families initalics have no living members.
  • Families with more than 30 languages are inbold.
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