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Proto-Pama–Nyungan language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Reconstructed ancestor of the Pama–Nyungan languages
Proto-Pama–Nyungan
pPNy
Reconstruction ofPama–Nyungan languages
RegionGulf Plains, NE Australia
Eraperhaps ca. 3000 BCE
Lower-order reconstructions

Proto-Pama–Nyungan is a hypotheticalancestral language from which allPama–Nyungan languages are supposed to have derived. It may have been spoken as recently as about 5,000 years ago, much more recently thanAboriginal Australian peoples are believed to have been inhabiting various parts ofAustralia.

Evolution

[edit]

How the Pama–Nyungan languages spread over most of the continent and displaced any pre-Pama–Nyungan languages is unknown; one possibility is that language could have been transferred from one group to another alongsideculture andritual.[1][2] Given the relationship of cognates between groups, it seems that Pama-Nyungan has many of the characteristics of asprachbund, indicating the antiquity of multiple waves of culture contact between groups.[3] Dixon in particular has argued that the genealogical trees found with many language families do not fit in the Pama-Nyungan family.[4]

Usingcomputational phylogenetics, Bouckaert, et al. (2018)[5] posit a mid-Holocene expansion of Pama-Nyungan from theGulf Plains of northeastern Australia.

Phonology

[edit]

Proto-Pama–Nyungan'sphonological inventory, as reconstructed byBarry Alpher (2004), is quite similar to those of most present-day Australian languages.[6]

Vowels

[edit]
FrontBack
Highi    u    
Lowa    

Vowel length is contrastive only in the first (i.e. stressed) syllable in a word.

Consonants

[edit]
PeripheralLaminalApical
BilabialVelarPostalveolarAlveolarRetroflex
Plosivepkc    tʈ
Nasalmŋɲnɳ
Lateralʎlɭ
Rhoticrɽ
Semivowelwj

Proto-Pama–Nyungan seems to have had only one set oflaminal consonants; the two contrasting sets (lamino-dental and lamino-alveopalatal or "palatal") found in some present-day languages can largely be explained as innovations resulting from conditionedsound changes.

Nevertheless, there are a small number of words in which an alveolo-palatalstop is found where a dental would be expected, and these are written*cʲ. There is no convincing evidence, however, of an equivalentnasal*ɲʲ orlateral*ʎʲ.

Pronouns

[edit]

Reconstructed Proto-Pama–Nyungan pronouns from Alpher (2004):[6]

glossProto-Pama-Nyungan
1 Sg Dir. Object*ngañi, *ngaña
1 Sg Oblique*ngacu(+)
1 Sg Oblique*ngaca+
2 Sg*ñuntu
you SG OBL*ñuna
we EXnonSg*ngana
we INDU*ngali
you PL*ñurra
they DU*pula
they PL*cana

Vocabulary

[edit]

Reconstructed Proto-Pama–Nyungan vocabulary and morphemes from Alpher (2004):[6]

glossProto-Pama-Nyungan
(ablative, elative) suffix or postposition*nguru
acacia (sp.)*wirlu
alive*kunka
all*muku
anger*kuli
ankle*nuka
another*wiːya
auntie*mayi
away*yarra ~ *yirra
back*mutu/a
beard*ngarnka
behind*kurri
belly (inside)*walngka
big*purlka
bird sp:frogmouth*tawa ~ *tawu
bite*paca- ~ *paca-
black*ngulcu
bone*muku
bottom*mangka
bream (sp.)*lipa-
breast*ngamun
by and by*ngula
cavity*lumpu
cheek*walu
child (to woman), sister's child*cuwa ~ *cuway
clean*taːrrkal
cold*mica
cook in earth oven*kaːmpa-
cooked food*mucya
cousin*maːri
cry*rungka-
damage*ruwa-/i-
dig*paːnga-
dig*paka-
digging stick*kana
drink*kuñcya-
drink*luka-
dry*lalka
eat*mungka-
excrement*kuna
eye*kuru
fall*kaːlka/i-
fall*wanti- ~ *wanta-
fast*kalmpa
father's sister*piːmu
fish*kuya/u
flame*yalyu
foot*cama
foot*cina
forehead*ngulu
ghost*wangarr
green pygmy goose*tiwa+
ground*taːku
hand*mara
having*+mirri
heart*lulku
here*ñaka
hip*pirlu
hit*paca- (?)
hold together*karrpi- ~ *karrpa-
I*ngayu ~ *ngayi ~ *ngaya
later*ngaka
laugh*cangkar(V)
lay (egg), give birth to (young)*ngaːci- ~ *ngaːca-
left hand*caku
lick*pila-
lick*pina
louse*kulu/i
moon*kakara
moon (full)*pira
mother*ngama
mother's brother*ngami(r)ni
mother's father*ngaci
mother's mother*kami
mother's older brother*mukur
mouth*caː
mouth*caːwa/u
mud*curlpi
nasal mucus*ngu(ː)rrci
neck*manu
nose*kuːwu
nose*ngurru
not*kari
one*kuma
pearlshell*piːrra
pierce*ka(r)li-
pigeon (sp.)*laparr
pull*purra-/i-
pus, matter*ci(ː)ci
put*wanta- ~ *wanti-
put*wunpa/i-
rat*kalu
rotten*puka
saltpan*pacirri
sand*curtu
sandfly*lañirri
scratch, scrape*wiːrrngka-
seagull*cyarra
see*ña(ː)-
shade*malu
shell, bivalve (sp.)*wirti
shin*yangkara
sickness*wanci
singe it*wita-
sister (older)*yapa
sit*ñiːna-
smell*ñuːma-
some*wapu
sore*wiːthi
speak*wangka- (?)
spear*kalka
spear*laːma- ~ *raːma- ~ *taːma-
spear*ra-
stand it up*carra-
stick*ci(ː)rni
sting*raca-
taboo*ngalñca
tail*mulu
take*maː-
termite mound*tipa
there*pala
thigh*carra
to wet (something)*kiñca-
together*turnu
tongue*calañ
tongue*ngañcar
tooth*rirra ~ *lirra
turn*wirni-
two*kucyarra ~ *kucarra
urine*kañcyi
urine*kumpu
vegetable food*mayi
water*nguku ~ *nguki
what*miña
what*ngaːni
where*wañca
who*waːri ~ *waːra
wife's mother's brother*caːmi
wind*waːrlpa
wing*marra
woman*kapi+
woman*yipi

In addition to Hale's 1982 list of words unique to Pama–Nyungan, and in addition to pronouns and case endings they reconstruct for the proto-language, Evans and McConvell report that while some of their roots are implausible, O'Grady and Tryon, nevertheless provide "hundreds of clear cognate sets with attestations throughout the Pama–Nyungan area and absent outside."[7]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Hale & O'Grady, pp. 91–92
  2. ^Evans & Rhys
  3. ^Nichols, Johanna (1997), "Modeling Ancient Population Structures and Movement in LinguisticsArchived 12 February 2017 at theWayback Machine" (Annual Review of Anthropology, Vol. 26, (1997)), pp. 359-384.
  4. ^Dixon, R. M. W. 1997. "The rise and fall of languages". (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press)
  5. ^Bouckaert, Remco R., Claire Bowern & Quentin D. Atkinson (2018).The origin and expansion of Pama–Nyungan languages across Australia.Nature Ecology & Evolution volume 2, pages 741–749 (2018).
  6. ^abcAlpher, Barry. 2004. Pama-Nyungan: Phonological Reconstruction and Status as a Phylo-Genetic Group. In Claire Bowern and Harold Koch (eds.),Australian Languages: Classification and the Comparative Method, 93-126, 387-574. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
  7. ^Nick Evans and Patrick McConvell, "The Enigma of Pama–Nyungan Expansion in Australia"Archaeology and language, Volume 29, Roger Blench, Matthew Spriggs, eds., Routledge, 1999,p176

External links

[edit]
Wiktionary has a list of reconstructed forms atAppendix:Proto-Pama-Nyungan reconstructions
North
Northeast
Wik
Lamalamic
Yalanjic
Southwest
Norman
Thaypan
Southern
Other
Dyirbalic
Maric
Waka–Kabic
Durubalic
Gumbaynggiric
Wiradhuric
Yuin–Kuric
Gippsland
Yugambeh–Bandjalang
Other
Yotayotic
Kulinic
Kulin
Drual
Lower Murray
Thura-Yura
Mirniny
Nyungic
Kartu
Kanyara–Mantharta
Ngayarta
Marrngu
Ngumpin–Yapa
Warumungu
Warluwaric
Kalkatungic
Mayi
Yolŋu
Wati
Arandic
Karnic
Other
Macro-Gunwinyguan
Maningrida
Mangarrayi-Marran
Gunwinyguan
Other
Tangkic
Garrwan
Italics indicateextinct languages
Pama–Nyungan
subgroups
Southeastern
Victorian P–N
New South Wales P–N
North Coast
Northern
Paman
Maric
Dyirbalic
Yimidhirr–Yalanji–Yidinic
Gulf
Central
Arandic–Thura–Yura
Karnic
Western
Yolŋu
Ngarna/Warluwarric
Desert Nyungic
South-West P–N
Tangkic
Garrwan
Macro-Gunwinyguan ?
Maningrida
Marran
Gunwinyguan proper
Western
Central
Eastern
YangmanicWagiman?
Other isolates
Iwaidjan
Central (Warrkbi)
Eastern (Goulburn Island)
Southern
Marrku–Wurrugu ?
Darwin Region ?
Limilngan–Wulna?
Umbugarlic
Daly River Sprachbund
Wagaydyic (Anson Bay)
Northern Daly
Western Daly
Eastern Daly
Southern Daly
Mirndi
Yirram
Ngurlun
Jarrakan
Bunuban
Worrorran
Nyulnyulan
Western (Nyulnyulic)
Eastern (Dyukun)
Others
Language isolates
Papuan
Tasmanian
family-level groups
Western
Northern
Northeastern
Eastern
New Indigenous
languages and
Aboriginal Englishes
Creoles
Australian Kriol
Northeastern
creoles
Pidgins
Mixed languages
Others
Proto-languages
Italics indicate individual languages
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