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Yapunda language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Torricelli language of Papua New Guinea
Yapunda
Yeri
Native toPapua New Guinea
RegionSandaun Province
Native speakers
(60 cited 2000)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3yev
Glottologyapu1240
ELPYeri

Yapunda, orYeri, is aTorricelli language ofPapua New Guinea.

Yeri is a language estimated to be spoken by 100-150 people.[citation needed] The speakers with the most proficiency are generally 40 years of age or older. The speakers who make up the younger demographics tend to either speak a more simplified version of the language or favor the use ofTok Pisin, an English creole, which is the universal language used with neighboring villages.

The village of Yeri is made up of a variety of hamlets along the Om river. Located in theTorricelli mountains, the village was originally deeper in the forest. Most village members decided to relocate nearer to the river, while a few stayed behind and continued habitation in the forest.

The Yeri village is structured as a patrilineal clan system. As of 2012, there were seven clans within the village. There is a history of bride exchange between villages and clans, with patrilocal residence following marriage.[2]

Language status

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The Yeri language is consideredmoribund, or severely endangered. Yeri is not being passed down to younger generations and the existing speakers are declining at a rapid rate.[3]

It is estimated by UNESCO that 10–99 speakers remain.[citation needed]

Vowels and consonants

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The Yeri language has five vowelphonemes, all shown in the chart below. Two of these phonemes, /i/ and /u/, have both glide and vowelallophones. When vowels are unstressed, they are shorted usually to the point of complete deletion.

FrontCentralBack
Highiu
Mideo
Lowa

Yeri has 13 consonants in addition to the five vowels already in its phoneme inventory. There are threeplosives, onefricative, threenasals, and three approximates.

LabialAlveolarPalatalVelar
Plosivesp, bt, dk, g
Nasalsmnŋ
Fricativess
Approximants(w)l, r(j)ɰ

Two of the approximants that are in parentheses, [j] and [w], are analyzed as allophones of their corresponding vowels /i/ and /u/. While they are shown in the table, they are not considered consonant phonemes because of their distribution in vocalic position.[2]

Grammar

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Yeri exhibits the basic word order of SVO (Subject, Verb, Object). In text, OV is more common.[2]

Overt number marking usually occurs through suffixation, which means that a morpheme is attached to the end of a root. In this case, it attaches to the noun.[2]

The Yeri language only has lexical items for the numerals 'one' and 'two.' Multiples of five are made by combining the lexical items for 'hand' and 'foot', where one hand corresponds to 'five,' two hands to 'ten,' two hands one foot to 'fifteen,' and so on. The lexical items for 'hand' and 'foot' can also be strung together with the numerals to create numbers that are between intervals of five. For example, the number 9 is constructed ashɨlogɨl woli wiam wiam, wherehɨlogɨl woli translates as 'hand' andwiam translates as 'two.' So, the phrase for the number 9 directly translated to English would be 'hand two two.'[2]

In Yeri, gender is only marked on third person nouns. Yeri distinguishes three genders: masculine, feminine, and inanimate. Gender is almost never distinguished in the plural.[2]

Yeri observes two distinct types of questions, polar and alternative. Polar questions are marked by either a clause final morpheme or rising intonation. Alternative questions are marked by the use of a conjunction, such as 'or'.

There is no passive voice construction in the language. Yeri does have anapplicative construction forbenefactives andlocatives which usesinfixes that index objects as opposed to the prefixes that index objects which are used in the basic voice construction.[2]

For an example of the basic voicetransitive construction, see the example below. The example sentences useLeipzig Glossing Rules.

te-Ø sɨsekia kɨ              w-y-aria             yem

3-SG.F trick     already      3SG.F-2-do.R   2PL

'She was lying to you (pl).'[2]

Compare the prefixy- for the object 'you (pl)' of the above sentence with the infix <ne> for the object 'fish' in the applicative example below. The applicative itself, 'us' in this example, does use the prefixes that index objects.

ye ta n-w-a<ne>gutɨ nanu-la hebi

2SG  FUT     2SG-1PL-burn.R<SG.M>         fish-SG         1PL

'You (sg) will cook us fish.'[2]

Yeri uses juxtaposition with no overt morpheme corresponding to English 'and' tocoordinate argument clauses. This construction is used for complex sentences. Juxtaposition is also used for noun phrase coordination.[2]

Possession in Yeri is achieved through anadnominal genitive pronoun or through juxtaposition. The juxtaposition form is dependent on the order of the possessor and the possessee.[2]

Code Switching in Yeri

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Some speakers use a 'mountain language' when in the forest. It features a different vocabulary than the standard. This special vocabulary is used due to a belief that the special nominal forms for certain referents will ward off the bad spirits which inhabit the mountains. Hunters and inhabitants of the forest observe this practice to prevent danger. The known register for this vocabulary is limited.[2]

References

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  1. ^Yapunda atEthnologue (18th ed., 2015)(subscription required)
  2. ^abcdefghijklWilson, Jennifer (2017).A Grammar of Yeri: A Torricelli language of Papua New Guinea (PhD thesis). State University of New York at Buffalo.ProQuest 1878004238.
  3. ^"Glottolog 5.1 – Yeri".glottolog.org. Retrieved2024-11-06.


Arapesh
Maimai
One (West Wapei)
Marienberg
Wapei
Palei
Urim
Bogia
Others
Official languages
Major Indigenous
languages
Other Papuan
languages
Angan
Awin–Pa
Binanderean
Bosavi
Chimbu–Wahgi
New Ireland
Duna–Pogaya
East Kutubuan
East Strickland
Engan
Eleman
Ok–Oksapmin
Teberan
Tirio
Turama–Kikorian
Larger families
Sign languages


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