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Pouye language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sepik language of Papua New Guinea
Pouye
Native toPapua New Guinea
RegionSandaun Province
Native speakers
960 (2003)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3bye
Glottologpouy1238
ELPPouye
Map all coordinates usingOpenStreetMapDownload coordinates asKML

Pouye (Bouye) is a language spoken inSandaun Province,Papua New Guinea, by a thousand people, and growing. It is spoken in the seven villages of Bulawa (3°39′57″S142°00′52″E / 3.665801°S 142.014408°E /-3.665801; 142.014408 (Bulwo)), Kiliauto, Komtin, Maurom (3°40′59″S141°50′50″E / 3.683154°S 141.847269°E /-3.683154; 141.847269 (Maurom)), Wokien (3°41′52″S141°57′28″E / 3.697824°S 141.957815°E /-3.697824; 141.957815 (Wokien)), Wulme, and Yukilau (3°40′42″S141°55′32″E / 3.678344°S 141.925477°E /-3.678344; 141.925477 (Yiklau)), which are mostly located withinEast Wapei Rural LLG.[1][2]

A grammar of the Pouye language is published here:https://www.sil.org/resources/archives/62023

Phonology

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This description follows Dede & Reuter (2011).[3]

Phonemic inventory

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Pouye has 12 consonants, of which three have constrastivesecondary articulations (labialisation or palatalisation).

Pouye consonant inventory
BilabialAlveolarPalatalVelar
labialisedplainpalatalisedlabialisedplain
Plosive/p//tʷ//t//tʲ////k/
Nasal/m//n/
Trill/r/
Approximant/l//j//w/

A fairly large nine-vowel inventory is also seen:

Pouye vowel inventory
FrontCentralBack
Close/i//ɨ//u/
Near-close/ɪ/
Close-mid/e//o/
Open-mid/ɛ//ə/
Open/a/

In addition there are sevendiphthongs /au̯ əu̯ ou̯ ai̯ əi̯ ei̯ ɪi̯/ which act as discrete vowel units.

The trial orthography is as in theIPA except for /tʷ tʲ kʷ j/ which aretw ty kw y and the vowels /ɨ ɪ ɛ ə/ which arei i e a. This causes ambiguity between /i ɨ ɪ/, /e ɛ/ or /a ə/ although the functional load on these contrasts is low.

Phonotactics

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Pouye allows maximally two consonants in asyllable onset and one consonant in the coda. The nucleus may be a single vowel or diphthong, but although CVVC and CCVC syllables are permitted, CCVVC syllables are unattested. Complex onsets may be maximally a plosive plus a trill or approximant, or the sequence /kt/, for instance in /kin.kti/ "small" (no other two-plosive sequences occur).

Stress is generally placed on the penultimate syllable, although exceptions do occur (/wɨlˈou̯k/ "snake") and if the penult is /wɨ/ or /wo/ the stress is pushed leftwards (/⁠ˈka.wo.wi/ "white").

Morphophonology

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Severalmorphophonemic alternations occur in Pouye, both within phonological words and across word boundaries.

Trill-deletion

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The nominal object marker-rɨ loses its initial consonant following /r/ or /l/ or a monosyllable ending in /n/:

/jar-rɨ/ → [jarɨ]who-OBJ "whom"

/pol-rɨ/ → [polɨ]Paul-OBJ "Paul"

/wan-rɨ/ → [wanɨ]1SG-OBJ "me"

Compare /wəlou̯k-rɨ/ → [wəlou̯krɨ]snake-OBJ. Similarly, the locative marker-ru is realised as [u] in fast speech following any plain alveolar consonant (/n l r t/).

/tɨlpan-ru/ → [tɨlpanu]palm.floor-LOC "on the floor"

/tau̯ wai̯l-ru/ → [tau̯ wai̯lu]tree tree.keel-LOC "on the tree keel"

/jɪprar-ru/ → [jɪpraru]chicken-LOC "on the chicken"

/pɨrɨt-ru/ → [pɨrɨtu]ground-LOC "on the ground"

Compare /ləu̯-ru/ → [ləu̯ru]house-LOC "to the house/village".

Vowel epenthesis

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When concatenation of morphemes would produce a sequence of two identicalplosives, /ɨ/ is inserted between themepenthetically.

/t-tɪnri-ke-nɨn-a/ → [tɨtInrikenɨn]

R-revenge-PRF-PAS-awhile

"Had had revenge"

Likewise /ɨ/ is inserted to prevent the formation of non-permissible consonant sequences, i.e. sequences of three consonants where the last two do not form a valid onset as described above, or two such consonants word-initially.

/wilau̯k-mta/ → [wilau̯kɨmta]good-INT "great"/n-kɨ/ → [nɨkɨ]IMP-get "get it!"

Compare for instance /nam-ki/ → [namki]1P-ACP "with us", where the sequence /mk/ appears intervocalically and can be syllabified to two distinct syllables without requiring epenthesis.

Consonant coalescence

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Two identical nasals, trills or laterals (/mm nn rr ll/)degeminate when brought together.

/t-ətɨn-nɨn/ → [tətɨnɨn]R-sew-PAS "has sewn"/t-ɪl-lai̯/ → [tɪlai̯]R-weave-CONT "weaving"

With the imperative prefixn-, epenthesis occurs prior to this rule, meaning that imperatives remain distinct.

/n-nək/ → [nɨnək]IMP-hold "hold!" *[nək]

Approximant epenthesis

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Between two vowels at morpheme boundaries, a non-lateral approximant is inserted. Following /i ɨ ɪ e ɛ/, /j/ is inserted, and following /u o ə a/, /w/ is inserted.

/t-ake-ɨr/ → [takejɨr]R-see-around "look round"/ra-lə-atʲɨ/ → [raləwatʲɨ]REP-down-come "come down again"

In exception to this rule, the hortative prefixpa- inserts /l/ before a vowel.

/pa-i-nɨm/ → [palinɨm]HRT-go-P "let's go" *[pawinɨm]

Note also the exception described below.

Vowel deletion

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The low vowel /a/ is deleted before /e/ or /ɛ/ over morpheme boundaries.

/t-ja-ɛj-ɨr-wɨt/ → [tʲejɨrwɨt]

R-up-COM-with-stand

"Come up and stand with"

Labial-velar approximant deletion

[edit]

The suffix-wo "only" is reduced to-o in penultimate position, i.e. when followed by another single monosyllabic suffix. This prevents stress shifting leftwards.

/wan-wo-kʷɨ/ → [waˈnokʷɨ]1S-only-POS "my/mine only"

Compare /wan-wo/ → [ˈwanwo]1SG-only "I only" or /kʷ-atu-wo-ke-nɨn/ → [kʷatuwoˈkenɨn]QCK-hang.up-up-PRF-PAS "quickly hung up (sth.) and left", in which caseswo would not be stressed normally anyway.

Dissimilation

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When the prefixesna- (potential) orya- (negative) precede the realis prefixt-, and this sequence precedes a morpheme beginning with a plosive, the realis prefix becomesr- viadissimilation of manner with the following plosive.

/ya-t-patɨ-tamu/ → [yarpatɨtamu]

NEG-R-twist-break

"Didn‘t break"

Vowel harmony

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Withcompound words,vowel harmony causes the open vowel /a/ in the first element to raise to /ə/ in the second element.

/mau̯-ləu̯/ → [məu̯ləu̯]bush-house "bush-house"

Alveolar plosive epenthesis

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Thealveolar plosive /t/ is inserted at the end of a word when the following word begins with /m/. If the first word already ends in /t/, then additional epenthesis of /ɨ/ occurs.

/pa-ki me/ → [pakit me]FCS-TMP say "then said"/lot mei̯pɨr-ke/ → [lotɨt mei̯pɨrke]Lot laugh-PRF "Lot laughed"

This and the following rule occur over word boundaries, as opposed to the previous rules which are all word-internal processes.

Secondary trill deletion

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The trill /r/ is also deleted in fast speech in the wordriyɨ "now" when the previous word ends in /n/.

/ja-t-i-nɨn rijɨ/ → [jatinɨn ͜ ijɨ]NEG-R-go-PAS now "still has not gone"

Loan word phonology

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Pouye has borrowed a number of words from the lingua francaTok Pisin. In these words the phonemes /b d ɡ v s/ can be retained, e.g. /sevenpela/ "seven" (cf. native /jilɨkalikir/). Morphophonemic rules generally apply to these words, and the trill deletion rule described above extends its environment to following /s/ as well:

/barnabas-rɨ/ → [barnabasɨ]Barnabas-OBJ "Barnabas"

Note the loan phonemes /b/ and /s/.

References

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  1. ^abPouye atEthnologue (25th ed., 2022)Closed access icon
  2. ^United Nations in Papua New Guinea (2018)."Papua New Guinea Village Coordinates Lookup".Humanitarian Data Exchange. 1.31.9.
  3. ^Dede, Wendy; Reuter, Dorothea (2011).Pouye Grammar Essentials. Summer Institute of Linguistics.
Upper Sepik
Wogamusin
Iwam
Amal–Kalou
Other
Middle Sepik
Nukuma
Ndu
Yellow River
Other
Sepik Hill
Sanio
Bahinemo
Alamblak
Papi
Others
Ram
Tama
Others


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