| Busa | |
|---|---|
| Odiai | |
| Native to | Papua New Guinea |
| Region | Sandaun Province, Amanab District, north of Upper Sepik River, west of Namia. 3 villages. Yare is north and east, Abau is south and west, Biaka is northwest. |
Native speakers | 370 (2011 census)[1] |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | bhf |
| Glottolog | odia1239 |
| ELP | Busa |
| Coordinates:3°49′S141°20′E / 3.817°S 141.333°E /-3.817; 141.333 | |
TheBusa language, also known asOdiai (Uriai), is spoken in three hamlets of northwesternPapua New Guinea.[2] There were 244 speakers at the time of the 2000 census. One of the hamlets where Busa is spoken is Busa (3°50′14″S141°26′25″E / 3.837112°S 141.440227°E /-3.837112; 141.440227 (Busa)) in Rawei ward,Green River Rural LLG,Sandaun Province.[3]
Busa speakers are in extensive trade and cultural contact withYadë, a distantly related language spoken in six villages to the north of the Busa area.[2]
Busa may be one of theKwomtari languages. Foley (2018) classifies Busa as a language isolate (meaning unclassified), but does not exclude the possibility that it may have a distant relationship with theTorricelli languages.[2]
Pronouns are:[2]
| sg | pl | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | mu | mi |
| 2 | am | |
| 3m | a ~ ari | ti |
| 3f | tu | |
Busa basic vocabulary listed inFoley (2018):[2]
| gloss | Busa |
|---|---|
| ‘bad’ | buriambu |
| ‘bird’ | wana |
| ‘black’ | baro |
| ‘breast’ | nã |
| ‘ear’ | dina |
| ‘eye’ | dena |
| ‘fire’ | eβa |
| ‘leaf’ | iri |
| ‘liver’ | munã |
| ‘louse’ | amo |
| ‘man’ | nutu |
| ‘mother’ | mẽ |
| ‘nape’ | onaiba |
| ‘older brother’ | aba |
| ‘road’ | ti |
| ‘stone’ | bito |
| ‘tooth’ | wuti |
| ‘tree’ | nda |
| ‘water’ | ani |
| ‘woman’ | ele |
| ‘one’ | otutu |
| ‘two’ | tinana |
| ‘three’ | wunana |
| ‘four’ | aite |
| ‘five’ | yumnadi |
The following basic vocabulary words are from Conrad and Dye (1975),[4] as cited in the Trans-New Guinea database:[5]
| gloss | Busa |
|---|---|
| head | owuna |
| hair | etete |
| ear | dinʌ |
| eye | dena |
| nose | wʌti |
| tooth | wuti |
| tongue | dʌgʌrʌ |
| louse | amo |
| dog | inʌri |
| pig | waru |
| bird | wʌnʌ |
| egg | mʌiyʌ |
| blood | aɔ̨ |
| bone | ab̶uwibʌ |
| skin | tati |
| breast | ną |
| tree | nda |
| man | nutu |
| woman | tɔ |
| water | ani |
| stone | bitɔ |
| road, path | ti |
| eat | muniʌren |
| one | otutu |
| two | tinʌnʌ |
Busa subject agreement affixes are:[2]
| sg | pl | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | ma- | ma- |
| 2 | a- | a- |
| 3 | m _r_- | m- |
| 3 | f | _w_- |
The Busa possessive suffix -ni is also found in proto-Sepik as the dative suffix *ni, as well as inAma, aLeft May language.[2]