| Longgu | |
|---|---|
| Native to | Solomon Islands |
| Region | Guadalcanal |
Native speakers | 1,500 (2002)[1] |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | lgu |
| Glottolog | long1395 |
| ELP | Longgu |
Longgu (Logu) is aSoutheast Solomonic language ofGuadalcanal, but originally fromMalaita.
Phonology is concerned with the ways in which languages make use of sounds to distinguish words from each other.[2] In Longgu, there are bothconsonants andvowels which make up its alphabet. Altogether, it has five distinct vowel articulations and nineteen consonantphonemes.[3] According to the usual custom in the languages ofGuadalcanal, the vowels are sounded out separately.[4]
In Longgu, the consonant phonemes include:
| Labial | Dental | Velar | Glottal | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plain | Labialized | |||||
| Plosive | Voiceless | p | t | k | ʔ | |
| Voiced | ᵐb | ᵐbʷ | ⁿd | ᵑɡ | ||
| Fricatives | Voiceless | s | h | |||
| Voiced | β | z | ||||
| Nasal | m | mʷ | n | ŋ | ||
| Lateral | l | |||||
| Trill | r | |||||
| Glide | w | |||||
In Longgu, there are fourvoiceless stops includingglottal stops. All of Longgu's voiceless stops are not aspirated, while its three voiced stops are pre-nasalised.Prenasalization ofvoiced stops is also recurrent in Longgu, whereby it is more audible intervocalically.[3] Furthermore, the labial stop /bʷ/ is also recognised as a voiced stop /b/. For example:
In this language, there are four fricatives, but in particular we can look at thedental fricative /z/ which has been recorded. Additionally, a voiceless interdental has been previously recorded for Longgu. An example of this isθae, meaning ‘liver' in English. Furthermore, when the consonants /s/ and /z/ are produced, the tip of the tongue is touching the back of the bottom teeth, with the blade touching the palate. Below shows aminimal pair which demonstrates these two different consonants:[5]
In addition to consonants for Longgu, the labial consonants /bʷ/ and /mʷ/ are portrayed as individual phonemes as opposed to two separate phonemes, such as /b/ and /w/ or /m/ and /w/ as there are no other transformations of a consonant that is followed by a glide (i.e. */dw/ and */gw/). Therefore, it has been found that there are noconsonant clusters in Longgu, hence an analysis of two separate phonemes rather than a unit phoneme is required.[6]
Thevowel phonemes in Longgu are:
| Front | Back | |
|---|---|---|
| High | i | u |
| Mid | e | o |
| Low | a |
In Longgu, any pair of vowels may occur in a vowel sequence. Vowel sequences are treated as two separate vowels based on their behaviour in terms of stress rules andreduplication. Below are two examples of minimal pairs which demonstrate a contrast in vowel sequences:[7]
| (1) | ae-ai | ae | 'faeces' |
| aiai | 'cassava' |
| (2) | ae-au | haehae | 'cockatoo' |
| hauhau | 'small container' |
The high back vowel, which is in this case /u/ is interpreted as a glide[w] before /i/ or /a/.[8] Furthermore, there appears to be no long vowels in Longgu, however all of its vowels may produce vowel sequences. In Longgu, a vowel sequence cannot be broken for the purposes ofreduplication.[9]
The overall syllable structure of Longgu is (C)V(V), which means that the order of sentence structure will be;consonant, verb and thenvowel. All of its consonants either occur before the word or in the middle, however a few of these consonants are known to occur in particular environments. For example, /z/ will tend to occur only before /a/ and /u/. This syllable structure does not apply to two independent pronouns, such as;ngaia 3rd person singular, andgaoa 1st person dual inclusive. The stress on both of these pronouns is on the first syllable (nga-ia andga-oa). Furthermore, voiced stops may only occur in the samemorpheme as another voiced stop if both are identical or made at the sameplace of articulation.[9] For example:
It is important to note that this rule does not necessarily apply across all morphemic boundaries as, for example, a possessive suffix that is attached to a noun may include a voiced stop that is made at a different place of articulation. For example:[9]
Any vowel, including ageminate vowel (a reduplicated vowel which emphasises the meaning) can occur with any other vowel within the same syllable. In terms of consonants, labial consonants /pw/, /bw/ and /mw/ only occur before non-rounded vowels. See the examples below:[10]
There is both partial and full reduplication that is present in Longgu. In terms of partial reduplication, the first syllable of a word containing two syllables is reduplicated:[11]
It is important to note here that words of two or more syllables are always partially reduplicated through the reduplication of the first two syllables:[11]
Stress occurs when a level of emphasis or prominence is given to a phonological word. Primary stress will be on the main syllable, whilst the secondary stress will be on every alternate preceding syllable. Stress in most oceanic languages will indeed fall on this penultimate syllable.[10] A phonological word can consist of a base word, such as a noun or verb, and all of its affixes. For instance, the wordzato "sunny" tends to be nominalised through a singular noun phraseclitic:[8]
In Longgu, certainorthographic conventions can be used. It is important to realise that the labialised bilabial phonemes in Longgu can essentially be written aspw, bw andmw,[10] the bilabial fricative / β/ asv, the glottal stop /ʔ/ as /’/ and the velar nasal /ŋ/ as digraph /ng/. Apart from these exceptions, all the other consonants are written in their phoneme form.[5]
There are four pronominal forms in Longgu:
Independent pronouns and subject pronouns in Longgu are closed word classes.[13] Possessive suffixes are attached to nouns to form inalienable possessive constructions, and object suffixes are attached to transitive verbs.[13] Four numbers are distinguished in pronominal forms: singular, dual, paucal, and plural, and non-singular first person pronouns are either inclusive (INCL) or exclusive (EXCL).[13]
Independent pronouns can act as subject pronouns for 1st and 2nd person non-singular.[14] They also mark agreement between the verbs and its object for 2nd and 3rd person non-singular object suffixes.[15] When an independent pronoun functions as the head of a noun phrase, the noun phrase may consist of the head alone (example 1), may include the pronominal article (example 2), the cardinal or ordinal numeral expressing "one", a post head modifier, or a noun phrase clitic.[16] All third person pronouns can function as determiners, but the 3rd person plural pronoungira and 3rd person singular pronounngaia are the ones that are most commonly used to fulfill this function.[17]
girua
aura
mola
just
na
tole-a
lead-3SG
na
vu
to
asi
sea
ngaia
mwela-geni-i
child-woman-SG
girua aura lolo-'i-a mola na m-arua tole-a na vu asi ngaia mwela-geni-i
3DU 3DU catch-TRS-3SG just PERF CONJ-3DU lead-3SG PERF to sea 3SG child-woman-SG
"They both just caught her and they both took this girl to the sea."[18]
ngaia
'ua
still
i
ei
there
m-i ngaia 'ua i ei
CONJ-ART 3SG still LOC there
"But she was still there."[18]
| Singular | Dual | Paucal | Plural | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st person | exclusive | nau/na | amerua | golu | gia |
| inclusive | gaoa/ ga | amelu | ami | ||
| 2nd person | oe | amurua | amolu | amu | |
| 3rd person | ngaia | girua/ girarua | giraolu | gira | |
The first person dual inclusive pronoungaoa has the reduced formga. The first person singular pronounna is used instead ofnau when placed before the irrealis particleho.[13]
Independent pronouns have three functions:
gira
tolo-gi
bush-PL
ara
ili-a
tell-3SG
"rau
"line
ni
bolo"
pig"
gira tolo-gi ara ili-a 'ani-a "rau ni bolo"
3PL bush-PL 3PL tell-3SG INSTR-3SG "line LIG pig"
"Those bush (people) call it 'line of the pig'"[14]
The subject pronoun is also the first constituent of a verb phrase, and is used to cross-reference the number and person of the subject noun phrase.[14] Lonngu does not have any 1st and 2nd person non-singular subject pronouns, as can be seen in Table 2. Third person non singular subject noun phrases are either fully cross-referenced for person and number by the subject pronoun (example 6), or by the 3rd person plural subject pronoun (example 7).[20]
Using the 3rd person plural subject pronoun to cross-reference dual and paucal subject noun phrases is thought to be a simplifying device, and used when the number of the subject has already been established either by a subject noun phrase, an independent pronoun (example 7), or a subject pronoun in a previous clause (example 8).[20] The third person plural subject pronoun can be used to cross reference both inanimate and animate subjects.[21]
rua
two
mi
gale-na
child-3SG
arua
la
go
tete
bridge
rua mi gale-na arua la tete
two CONJ child-3SG 3DU go bridge
"A mother and her child walked on the reef"[20]
giraolu
mola
only
ara
ho
la
go
mai
hither
giraolu mola ara ho la mai
3PAU only 3PL IRR go hither
"Only they will come (not you)"[21]
goni
build
pilu
fence
na,
ara
goni-a
build-3SG
pilu-i
fence-SG
liva'a-na
live-3SG
pilu
fence
ni
boo-i
pig-SG
na'i-a
put-3SG
i
ei
there
m-arau goni pilu na, ara goni-a pilu-i liva'a-na pilu ni boo-i m-arua na'i-a i ei
CONJ-3DU build fence PERF, 3PL build-3SG fence-SG live-3SG fence LIG pig-SG CONJ-3DU put-3SG LOC there
"and they both built a fence, they built a fence like a pig fence and they both put it there"[21]
The use of 3rd person plural subject pronoun as a cross-referencing device is often associated with the repetition of an event as seen in example 8.[20]
Subject pronouns are given in Table 2, with independent pronouns functioning as subject pronouns placed in brackets.[22]
| Singular | Dual | Paucal | Plural | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st person | nu | (gaoa amerua) | (golu amelu) | (gia ami) |
| 2nd person | o | (amorua) | (amolu) | (amu) |
| 3rd person | e | arua/ ararua | aralu | ara |
Possessive suffixes are bound morphemes that are either attached to nouns or to the nominal prepositionta-,.
| Singular | Dual | Pascal | Plural | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st person | exclusive | -gu | -mamerua | -mamelu | -mami |
| inclusive | -garua | -gaolu | -ga | ||
| 2nd person | -mu | -miurua | -miolu | -miu | |
| 3rd person | -na | -darua | -daolu | -da | |
Possessive suffixes have five functions:
wai
water
e
'oni
located
gege-na
beside-3SG
komu-i
village-SG
wai e 'oni gege-na komu-i
water 3SG located beside-3SG village-SG
"The river is located/ runs next to the village"[15]
tolo
e
tali
want
to'i
work
haka-i
ship-SG
tolo e tali to'i ta-na haka-i
NAME 3SG want work LOC-3SG ship-SG
"Tolo wants to work on a ship"[15]
Object suffixes are attached to transitive verbs to cross-reference person and number of the object pronoun phrase argument in transitive clauses.[15] The person and number of object noun phrases with animate references are fully marked by the object suffix on the verbs (example 14).[24] Object suffixes in Longgu make distinctions between inanimate and animate objects, as well as distinguishing between objects which are highly individuated, and those that have no special importance.[24]
bwa'ewai
shark
e
bwa'ewai e gali-gali-rarua
shark 3SG circle-REDUP-3DU
"The shark kept circling them both"
A list of object suffixes are shown in Table 3, and independent pronouns functioning as object suffixes are placed in brackets.[25]
| 1st | 2nd | 3rd | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Singular | -u | -o | -a |
| Dual | (gaoa amerua) | (amorua) | -rarua |
| Pascal | (golu amelu) | (amolu) | -raolu |
| Plural | (gia ami) | (amu) | -ra -i |
For third person plural object suffixes, inanimate objects can be referred to using both -ra and -i, but animate objects are referred to using only the object suffix -ra.[15]
Singular objects are marked by 3rd person singular suffix -a.[24]
Non-singular objects can be marked by the 3rd person singular suffix -a, as well as the 3rd person plural suffix -ra and the 3rd person plural inanimate suffix -i. However, the 3rd person singular suffix can only be used when the object is not highly individuated (example 16).[26] The taro tops in example 16 refers to taro tops in general, not a specific group that the speaker had in mind.[26]
nau
mola
only
gu
la
go
vua
grandparent
savi
taro top
nau mola gu la va'i-ni-ra vua ngaia-gi ivu'i-ni-a savi golu-gi
1SG only IRR go COMIT-TRS-3PL grandparent 3SG-PL hoe-TRS-3SG {taro top} 1PAU.IN-PL
"Only I should go with his grandparents, hoeing our taro tops"[26]
The 3rd person plural inanimate suffix -i cross references dual, paucal, or plural inanimate objects which are highly individuated.[26] In example 17, the head noun is quantified, and food objects are also cross-referenced by the 3rd person plural inanimate suffix.[27]
e
rua
two
'ai
stick
ni
topuhu
pudding
rua
two
lodoi
fruit
bua
betel nut
rua
two
aba-aba
leaf-REDUP
ni
ova
betel nut leaf
girua
arua
e rua 'ai ni topuhu rua lodoi bua rua aba-aba ni ova girua arua wate-i
3SG two stick LIG pudding two fruit {betel nut} two leaf-REDUP LIG {betel nut leaf} 3DU 3DU give-3PL.IN
"(it was) two sticks of pudding, two betel nut fruits, two leaves of betel nut leaf, they gave (them)"[27]
Possession in grammar is a construction which expresses a relationship between a possessor and a possessum [what is possessed].[28] There are two keysyntactic constructions for possession: alienable and inalienable.Inalienable possession refers to the relationship between a person/being and its inherent properties or parts, and which cannot be removed. In contrast,alienable possession refers to a relationship of possession where the possessum (thing being possessed) can be given away or lost by the possessor. Both types of possessive construction may express kin relationships, part/whole relationships (body and its parts), objects, location and ownership but to varying degrees and with certain allowances and limitations.[29]
NB: All examples in Possession are taken fromLonggu Grammar by Deborah Hill, 2011 unless otherwise stated.
Inalienable possession in Longgu is expressed by a possessive pronoun. There are two sets of possessive pronouns within inalienable possession: those referring to food that is eaten or intended to be eaten; and those which express ownership of all other things.Inalienable possessive constructions are formed by directly suffixing a possessivesuffix to ahead noun [the possessum], followed by the dependent noun [possessor]. It can be acommon noun (which can in turn be possessed) or an independentpronoun.[28] Some nouns in Longgu may only form the head of an inalienable possessive construction and not alienable. These include: Certain kin terms; local nouns; noun ve’ete- (‘self’); certain nouns referring to personal possessions; nouns expressing the relationship between a whole and its parts; nouns which refer to concepts that are inherently connected to a person (e.g. A person's name, shadow, ancestors); nominalised verbs.[30]
Inalienable possessive constructions express a number of different types of relations and they can be split into several sub-categories:
| Possessum | Possessor |
|---|---|
| Head Noun + Poss. suffix | + independent noun (common noun/independent pronoun) |
| Singular | Dual | Paucal | Plural | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | excl. | -gu | -mamerua | -mamelu | -mami |
| incl. | -garua | -gaolu | -ga | ||
| 2nd | -mu | -miurua | -miolu | -miu | |
| 3rd | -na | -darua | -daolu | -da | |
For example:
e
se
bweina
big
ta’e
tatala-na
footprint-3SG
mwela-ne
child-DEI
e se bweina ta’e tatala-na mwela-ne
3SG NEG big INTENS footprint-3SG child-DEI
"This child's footprint isn't really big"
susu-na
breast milk-3SG
tia
mother
ngaia
susu-na tia ngaia
{breast milk}-3SG mother 3SG
"her mother's breast milk"
Possessive constructions can also be recursive, meaning that up to three possessive noun phrases may be in the one sentence.[31]
parapara
hot
ta’e
bou–na
head-3SG
gale–gu
child-1SG
parapara ta’e bou–na gale–gu
hot INTENS head-3SG child-1SG
"my child's head is really hot"
[*head N + poss. suff. ... head N +poss
bou(head) + na...gale + gu]
Only certain kinship terms may be inalienable in Longgu. These include bound nouns such as: Barunga-na (‘his/her spouse’), Si-na (‘his/her younger sibling’), iiva-na (‘his/her brother/sister in-law’); and Vavune-na (‘his/her cross-sibling’), vungau-na (‘his/her parent/child in-law’) which may both be usedvocatively.
Not strictly kinship terms, boro "old man" and mwaro "old woman" can formulate a semi-verbal predicate. The possessor (rather than possessum) is marked by a suffix (–na) so there is no need for a noun to follow.[32]
su’e-a
ask-3SG
burunga-mu
spouse-2SG
ge
ili-a
tell-3SG
tia
mother
ngaia
su’e-a burunga-mu ge ili-a tia ngaia
ask-3SG spouse-2SG OBL tell-3SG mother 3SG
"ask your spouse to tell of her mother"
Most body part terms form the head of inalienable possessive constructions:
| Bou-na | "his/her head" |
| Suli-na | "his/her body" |
| Lima-gu | "my arm/hand" |
| A’ae-mu | "your leg/foot" |
| Kuli-na | "his/her ear" |
| Kutu-mu | "your belly" |
| Roa-gu | "my shoulder" |
| Aloa-na | "his/her neck" |
| Maa-na | "his/her eye/face" |
| Susu-na^ | "her breast milk, breast" |
| Mimi-na^ | "his/her urine, bladder" |
^may denote either the fluid or the body part.
The inalienable possessive construction is the unmarked possessive construction for primary body parts (parts seen as belonging to the whole body, as opposed to non-primary body parts, which are seen as belonging to a section/part of the body).[33]
Note: when the body parts become separated from the whole they are thus treated as alienable (see Alienable: kinship)
ge
zuala
stand
ga
e
mae
dead
na
a’ae-miu
leg-2PL
m–amolu ge zuala ga ‘ani-a e mae na a’ae-miu
CONJ-2PAU OBL stand ANT INSTR-3SG 3SG dead PERF leg-2PL
"you (few) must stand for a while because your legs are stiff (lit. dead) now"
Local (denoting location) nouns can act as the head of an inalienable possessive construction but not an alienable. As well as denoting possession, local nouns can also appear in their bare form and/or in associative constructions.
gia
go first
ngaia
isitava
go outside
ubu-na
inside-3SG
gia ngaia boo-i–na isitava ubu-na luma–i–na
{go first} 3SG pig-SG-DEI {go outside} inside-3SG house-SG-DEI
"that pig went ahead outside from inside that house"
gale,
baby,
ango
crawl
mai
hither
m–e gale, ango mai gege-darua–i–na
CONJ-3SG baby, crawl hither beside-3DU-SG-DEI
"and it was a baby [snake], [lit] crawled beside them"
Places within the house are also place nouns and as such can form the head of inalienable possession:
nu
lae–lae
go-REDUP
mola
just
ubu
inside
ni
ma
ma
nu kue-kue–kue lae–lae mola ubu ni masu’u-gi-na ma bwarakumo-gi-i-na, ma maa–luma–gu-i-na
1SG squeal-REDUP-REDUP go-REDUP just inside LIG bush-PL-DEI CONJ {back of house}-1SG-SG-DEI, CONJ eye-house-1SG-SG-DEI.
"I squealed (while) just walking in the bush (lit. those bushes) and at the back of my house and my door"
There are a select few common nouns which show personal possession in inalienable constructions but not alienable:
This limited group suggests that there is asemantic basis, that all these items are either worn or slept in. The treatment of these nouns (of personal decoration) as inalienable is consistent even when the possessor is not wearing them, in contrast to ‘clothes’.
vuli-na
bed-3SG
vua
grandchild
rabu–ta’ini-a ta–na vuli-na vua nau–i
beat-TRS-3SG LOC-3SG bed-3SG grandchild 1SG-SG
"beat [the plant] on my grandchild's bed"
Intangible things which aren’t transferable between people are treated as bound to a person.:
zata-na
name-3SG
te
one
uta’a–i
man-SG
a
Sibiloko
zata-na te uta’a–i a Sibiloko
name-3SG one man-SG ART NAME
"the name of one man was Sibiloko"
e
se
bweina
big
ta’e
tatala–na
footprint-3SG
mwela-ne
child-DEI
e se bweina ta’e tatala–na mwela-ne
3SG NEG big INTENS footprint-3SG child-DEI
"this child's footprint isn't really big"
Parts/sections of man-made things, natural things such as rivers and hils, and patterns like dances are treated as inalienably possessed. These include:
ge
nau-nau-a
awade
how
avai
dance
golu ge nau-nau-a awade uri-uri-na avai
1PAU.IN OBL REDUP-try-3SG how step-REDUP-3SG dance
"we must practice how to do the dance steps"
Inalienable possessive pronouns are divided into two categories:
For both sets asuffix a is attached to the1st and2nd person singular possessive suffixes.
(a) For referents to food that’s eaten or intended to be the possessive suffix is attached directly to the possessive particlea.
| 1st | 2nd | 3rd | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Singular | Agua | Amua | Ana |
| Dual | Agarua | Amiurua | Adarua |
| Paucal | Agaola | Amiolu | Adaolu |
| Plural | Aga | Amiu | Ada |
(b) Other possessions, typically found innominal clauses, are formed by an attachment of possessive suffixes to theparticlena
| 1st | 2nd | 3rd | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Singular | Nagua | Namua | Nana |
| Dual | Nagarua | Namiurua | Nadarua |
| Paucal | Nagaolu | Namiolu | Nadaolu |
| Plural | Naga | Namiu | Nada |
Alienable possession refers to the possession of items (possessums) that may be transferred away or lost by the possessor. They are formed by a head noun and an independent pronoun, which denotes the possessor, and may be followed by a possessed or non-possessed dependent noun.
Nouns that can take on an alienable construction include such categories as animals, foods, personal items, villages and some kinship terms.
Longgu development of alienable constructions where the possessor is expressed by a disjunctive pronoun (like nau) is non-standard to the POC.[37]
There is a small set of kinship terms which may be the head of an alienable possessive construction but not inalienable. These are:
o
susu-a
breast feed-3SG
vua
grandchild
nau,
tike,
daughter,
mo
go
na’i-a
leave-3SG
mama
father
ngaia
o susu-a vua nau, tike, mo go na’i-a wa-na mama ngaia
2SG {breast feed}-3SG grandchild 1SG, daughter, CONJ OBL leave-3SG DAT-3SG father 3SG
"you breast feed my grandchild, daughter, and you must leave him for his father"
All of these kinship terms, excluding tia ngaia ‘his/her mother, mother’s sister’, represent reciprocal relationships. In POC, generally terms for mother and father are not included in inalienable possessive constructs, in this Longgu differs. Longgu also deviates from standard POC in that not all reciprocal kinship terms are included in inalienable possessive constructions.
Terms for adopted child and friend are also alienably constructed:
lae
go
na
udu
friend
ngaia
nina
m–e lae na udu ngaia nina
CONJ-3SG go PERF friend 3SG DEI
"and his friend went then"
Personal possession that can be transferred from one person to another, for example objects, as well as place, like villages.
lahou
then
na
ivi
clothes
vata’u
away
ubu–na
inside-3PL
ei
basket
m–ara lahou ade–i na ivi gira–gi vata’u m–ara na’i–i ubu–na ei gira–gi
CONJ-3PL then take-3PL.IN PERF clothes 3PL-PL away CONJ-3PL put-3PL.IN inside-3PL basket 3PL-PL
"and then they took off their clothes and they put them into their baskets"
kao
look back
mai
hither
‘ua
komu
village
m-arua kao mai m–arua bere–ngi–a ‘ua komu girua–i
CONJ-3DU {look back} hither CONJ-3DU see-TRS-3SG CONT village 3DU-SG
"and they both looked back and they both still saw their village"
As noted above, possessive pronouns may be used in inalienable constructions to talk about food that is being eaten/intended to be eaten by the possessor. In alienable constructions the food words themselves can form the head (of only alienable constructions). This includes food that may be intended for eating.[38]
lahou
then
ade–a
take-3SG
hou
thither
kabokabo
taro
ngaia
m–e lahou ade–a hou kabokabo ngaia
CONJ-3SG then take-3SG thither taro 3SG
"and then he took out his taro"
There are a number of nouns which may form either the head of an alienable or inalienable possessive construction, and this is dependent on the semantic relationship between the head and the dependent noun.[39] Sub-categories include:kinship terms, body part terms, other common nouns.
| Inalienable | Alienable | Gloss | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kinship terms | gale-na | gale-ngaia | "her child" |
| To' o-na | To' o ngaia | "her sister" | |
| Body part terms | Kakasa-na | Kakasa ngaia | "her rib" |
| Mimi-na | Mimi ngaia | "its bladder" | |
| Other (originated from possessor) | U'unu-na | U'unu ngaia | "her story" |
| Tala-na | Tala ngaia | "her path" | |
| Zalu-na | Zalu ngaia | "her egg" | |
| Totohale-na | Totohale ngaia | "her picture" | |
| Other (occupied by possessor) | Luma-na | Luma ngaia | "her house" |
| iola-na | iola ngaia | "her canoe" | |
| ivi-na | ivi ngaia | "her clothes" |
There are only two kinship terms which may form the head of both alienable and inalienable possessive constructions. For gale ‘child’, there is a semantic basis for which form it takes. This is whether the possessor of the child is human or animal.
The inalienable possessive construction of body part terms is the unmarked variety, however when these become detached/dismembered they are treated as alienable.
‘story’, ‘path’, ‘egg’, ‘picture’; ‘canoe’, ‘house’, ‘clothes’. Each have alienable and inalienable distinctions.
Inalienable constructions of ‘story’, ‘path’, ‘egg’, ‘picture’ express that the possessor is the source of the possessum. For example, an egg laid (created) by someone compared with an egg which someone owns.
| Possessor as source (inalienable) | Ownership relation (alienable) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| U'unu-na | "his/her story about him/her" | U'unu ngaia | "his/her story told by him/her" |
| Tala-darua | "their path (the way they travelled)" | Tala gira | "their path (of their village)" |
| Zalu-na | "her egg (that she laid)" | Zalu ngaia | "his/her egg (that he/she owns)" |
| Possessor as occupier (inalienable) | Owned by possessor but not occupied by possessor (alienable) | ||
| (a) Luma-gu | "my house (that I live in/occupy) | (a) Luma nau-i | "my house (that I own)" |
| (b) iola-da-i | "their canoe (possessed by the people inside it)" | (c) iola ngaia Teddy | "Teddy's canoe (Teddy owns the canoe)" |
| (d) ivi-na si-na-i | "the younger sibling's clothes" | (e) ivi ngaia Ara | "Ara's clothes" |
luma
house
ni
niu–i
coconut-SG
e
luma
house
luma
house
ni
niu-i
coconut-SG
e
se
luma–gu
house-1SG
luma ni niu–i e luma nau–i luma ni niu-i e se luma–gu
house LIG coconut-SG 3SG house 1SG-SG house LIG coconut-SG 3SG NEG house-1SG
"the coconut house (house for storing coconuts) is my house (that I own. Alienable), it is not my house (that I occupy. Inalienable)"
‘inoni
person
ara
se
ara
vu
to
mwetawa
ocean
‘inoni ara se lae–gi–na ara toro–vahini–a vu mwetawa iola–da–i
person 3PL NEG go-PL-DEI 3PL push-TRS-3SG to ocean canoe-3PL-SG
"the people who are not going push their canoe out to sea"
lahou
then
ade-a
take-3SG
na
ivi-na
clothes-3SG
m-e lahou ade-a na ivi-na si-na-i
CONJ-3SG then take-3SG PERF clothes-3SG {younger sibling}-3SG-SG
"and then she took her younger sibling's (sister's) clothes"
Not strictly a possessive construction, the associative ni construction is formed whereby themorpheme –ni is used to join two nouns into a possessive noun phrase. (N1 + ni + N2).[41]
In Proto-Oceanic there were four distinct constructions for representing nouns possessed by a possessor noun phrase: inalienable/specific possessor; inalienable/non-specific possessor; alienable/specific possessor; alienable/non-specific possessor.[42] Longgu, however, maintains only a three-way distinction, with the differentiation between the two non-specific possessor constructions being lost and ni now used for both.[42]
| Specific possessor | Non-specific possessor | |
|---|---|---|
| Inalienable | tatala footprint ni ni ʔinoni person tatala ni ʔinoni footprint ni person "human footprints" | |
| Alienable |
A negative verb phrase is formed by the negative particlese and a predicate head.[43]
amurua
se
su’e-talivana-a
ask-properly-3SG
amurua se su’e-talivana-a
2DU NEG ask-properly-3SG
you two didn't ask her properly[43]
ho
se
lae
go
nina
kote
in
violo
hungry
amerua ho se lae nina kote amerua violo
1DU.EX IRR NEG go DEI in 1DU.EX hungry
we (two) won't go now in case we (get) hungry[43]
The negative particle,se, is a pre-head particle which negates verbal and semi-verbal clauses. The negative particle occurs after the subject pronoun in a verb phrase expressing realis mood, and after the irrealis particleho (5) in a verb phrase (negative predicate) which expresses irrealis mood.[44]
o
se
salu-u,
lie-1SG,
udu,
friend,
e
una,
say,
ho
se
po-rarua
hide-3DU
o se salu-u, udu, e una, ho se po-rarua
2SG NEG lie-1SG, friend, 3SG say, IRR NEG hide-3DU
don't lie to me, friend, he said, you won't hide them[44]
Quantifiers function like numerals. Negative quantifiers include:[46]
| bwala | "none, no, not" |
| bwalasaliu | "none at all, never" |
The quantifiersbwala "none" may be predicate heads as well as adnominal modifiers.[12]
bwala
none
u’unu
story
tewa-tewa
long-REDUP
bwala u’unu tewa-tewa
none story long-REDUP
not a very long story[12]
All quantifiers modify a head noun. The quantifierbwala "none" quantifies nouns which are not marked by noun phrase clitics.[47]
bwala
none
‘inoni
person
ge
bweu
doubt
bwala ‘inoni ge bweu {‘ani -o}
none person OBL doubt INSTR-2SG
nobody should doubt you (lit. doubt about you)[47]
Note:bwala is also a conjunction "or", which is used to express the disjunctive meaning.[48]
Existential clauses in Longgu are formed by verbal, semi-verbal and nominal clauses.[49]
Negative existential clauses are formed by either semi-verbal or nominal clauses. A semi-verbal negative existential clause consists of the quantifierbwala "none, not, no" and a noun as predicate head. It is recognizable as a semi-verbal clause because of the presence of a subject pronoun (9) and aspect particle (10).[49]
na
bwala
no
tia
mother
nau
bwala
no
mama
father
nau
nau-i na bwala tia nau m-e bwala mama nau
1SG-SG PERF no mother 1SG CONJ-3SG no father 1SG
me, I have no mother and no father
(my mother does not exist and my father does not exist)[50]
bwala
no
vonu
turtle
na
ubu-na
inside-3SG
pilu-i
fence-SG
bwala vonu na ubu-na pilu-i
no turtle PERF inside-3SG fence-SG
there was no turtle inside the fence[50]
A nominal negative existential clause consists of one noun phrase – the predicate. The quantifierbwala "none, no, not" precedes the noun phrase head. Note that (11) is an inalienable possessive construction. The possessum isgale "child" and the dependent possessor is an associative noun phrase. The plural clitic refers to the head of the possessive construction.[50]
bwala
no
gale-darua
child-3DU
geni
woman
ni
bwala gale-darua geni ni Bwabwasu-gi
no child-3DU woman LIG PLACE-PL
the two women of Bwabwasu had no children
(the children of the Bwabwasu women did not exist)[50]
There is also a small closed-class of general modifiers (i.e. those which function as both verbal modifiers (12) and nominal modifiers (13)). The negative general modifier includesodo "nothing".[51]
Sodo "nothing" is a post-head modifier.
The intensifiertahou modifies only verbs.[53] It can be used in comparisons, but it expresses the notion "at all" in negative sentences.[54]
i
weita
before
weita
before
se
tahou
i weita m-i weita golu se bere-ngi-a tahou
LOC before CONJ-LOC before 1PAU.IN NEG see-TRS-3SG INTENS
a long time ago we couldn't see it at all[54]
Yes/no questions are structurally similar to declarative sentences. They differ from declarative sentences only by the intonation contour. In declarative sentences there is falling intonation across the sentence. In interrogative sentences the intonation rises and then falls on the last word.[55]
Yes/no questions may include the directional particlehou "thither". This particle functions to form a more clearly interrogative sentence than an interrogative sentence formed by intonation only.[55]
Yes/no responses (with falling intonation) are:[56]
| ee | "yes" |
| bwala | "no" |
To covey doubt about the answer, a speaker usesii (with rising intonation).[56]
To respond negatively to an identifying question the quantifierbwala "no" is used.[56]
i
ngaia
gale-mu?
child-2SG
bwala
no
i ngaia gale-mu? bwala
ART 3SG child-2SG no
is he your child? no[56]
To respond negatively to a response to a question about a state, a verb phrase consisting of the quantifierbwala "no, none" and an aspect particle (either the continuative particle‘ua or the perfect aspect particlena/na’a) is used (i.e.bwala ’ua "not yet";bwala na "not now").[56]
o
taula’i
marry
oe?
bwala
no
‘ua
o taula’i oe? bwala ‘ua
2SG marry 2SG no CONT
are you married? not yet/ still not[56]
A positive response to yes/no question asking about the identity of something isee "yes". A positive response to a yes/no question about the state of something will often repeat the question.[56]
meta
good
na?
ee,
yes,
nu
meta
good
na
meta na? ee, nu meta na
good PERF yes, 1SG good PERF
are you well now? yes, I am well now[56]
COMIT:comitative prepositionCONT:continuativeINTENS:intensifierLIG:ligatureLOC:locative prepositionNAME:nameOBL:obligatory particlePLACE:place nameTRS:transitiviser