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Yagaria language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Papuan language of Papua New Guinea
"Yagaria" redirects here. For the local-level government area in Papua New Guinea, seeYagaria Rural LLG.
Yagaria
Native toPapua New Guinea
RegionYagaria Rural LLG,Goroka District,Eastern Highlands Province
Native speakers
(38,000 cited 2000)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3ygr
Glottologyaga1260

Yagaria is aPapuan language spoken in theGoroka District ofEastern Highlands Province,Papua New Guinea. Named dialects areKami-Kulaka,Move,Ologuti,Dagenava,Kamate,Hira,Hua (Huva) andKotom. Yagaria has a total number of 21,116 speakers.

History and culture

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The Yagaria people live in low areas about 1,400 meters (4,500 ft.) above sea level with a warm and dry climate around Kami and Gotomi. They practicesubstance agriculture and live in small hamlets where their population is barely 400 people for each clan. They harvest and plant sweet potatoes, taro, yams, sugarcane, bananas, beans, "pitpit", and different types of spinach. They domesticated pigs, dogs, and chickens. Their diets are usually sweet potatoes, marsupials and birds. When coffee plantations were introduced in the late fifties, cash profit changed most of the Yagaria lifestyle. Now rice, tinned meats and fish, and other food items are easy to find in their stores. Men wear European clothes while most women still wear traditional clothing.[2]

Dialects

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Yagaria consists of eight main dialects.[2]

Dialect NameNumber of speakers
Dagenava373
Move4,519
Kamate2,369
Ologuti2,165
Gotomi2,032
Kani-Kuluka4,469
Hira2,318
Huva2,871

Phonology

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Vowels

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Yagaria vowels
FrontCentralBack
Closeiu
Midɛo
Openaɑ
Diphthong/ɛi,ou,ɑɛ,ɑo/
  • /i/ - Voiced high close unrounded front vocoid occurring word initially, medially, and finally
  • /ɛ/ - Voiced mid open unrounded front vocoid gliding to high close unrounded front, occurring word initially, medially, and finally
  • /εi{\displaystyle \varepsilon ^{i}}/ - Voiced mid open unrounded front vocoid gliding to high close unrounded front, occurring word initially, medially, and finally
  • /u/ - Voiced high close rounded back vocoid occurring word initially, medially, and finally
  • /o/ - Voiced mid close rounded back vocoid occurring word initially, medially, and finally
  • /ou{\displaystyle o^{u}}/ - Voiced mid close rounded back vocoid gliding to high close rounded back, occurring word initially, medially, and finally
  • /a/ - Voiced low open unrounded central vocoid occurring word initially, medially, and finally
  • /aε{\displaystyle a^{\varepsilon }}/ - Voiced unrounded central-front
  • /ao{\displaystyle a^{o}}/ - Voiced central-back[2]

Consonants

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Yagaria consonants
BilabialAlveolarPalatalVelarGlottal
Stopvoicelessptkʔ
voicedbdg
Nasalmn
Fricativevsh
Continuantjʟ

Distribution of Phonemes

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The syllable structure used in the Yagaria language is (C)V(ʔ). The four syllable patterns are V, CV, CVʔ, and Vʔ where CV is the most used.[3]


Morphology

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Pronouns

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Personal, Possessive, Emphatic, and Interrogative pronouns are used. Personal and Possessive pronouns happens in free word and affixed forms. Emphatic pronoun occurs in suffixes.[4]

Singular
POVSubject (Yagaria)Subject (English)
1dagaeaI
2gagaeayou
3agaeahe/she
Dual
POVSubject (Yagaria)Subject (English)
1la'agaeawe
2latagaeayou
3tagaeathey
Plural
POVSubject (Yagaria)Subject (English)
1lagaeawe
2lapagaeayou
3pagaeathey
Short Forms Open/Closed
Personal PronounsPOVOpenClosedEnglish
Singular1dagaedagae'I
2gagaegagae'you
3agaeagae'he/she
Dual1la'agaela'agae'we
2latagaelatagae'you
3tagaetagae'they
Plural1lagaelagae'we
2lapagaelapagae'you
3pagaepagae'they

Nouns

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The main noun classes used in the Yagaria language are Class 1 and Class 2.

Class 1

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Nouns can indicate living and non-living objects. They occur in two forms, long-form where carrying suffix -na, and short-form where the suffix is removed and ends with a glottal stop. Long-form nouns are used less and mostly for citation, some as a subject, and mostly used in intransitive clauses.

Long FormShort FormTranslation
anaa'women
yonayo'house
yanaya'taro
gokolenagokole'chicken

Examples of using Long forms

ba

sweet potato

yana

taro

ege

banana

gilena

corn

ba yana ege gilena

{sweet potato} taro banana corn

sweet potato taro banana corn

ana

woman

hoya

work

no'-eli-e

PROG-do-IND

ana hoya no'-eli-e

woman work PROG-do-IND

the woman is working

Long forms as an object:

ve

man

agaea

he

ana

woman

eli-d-i-e

take-PAST-3.SG-IND

ve agaea ana eli-d-i-e

man he woman take-PAST-3.SG-IND

the man took the woman

Short forms as subject in intransitive clause and as an object:

faya'

fish

ni-pi'

water-IN

bei-d-i-e

live-PAST-3.SG-IND

faya' ni-pi' bei-d-i-e

fish water-IN live-PAST-3.SG-IND

there are fish in the water

yale

people

pagaea

they

yo'

house

gi-d-a-e

build-PAST-3.PL-IND

yale pagaea yo' gi-d-a-e

people they house build-PAST-3.PL-IND

the people built a house

Class 2

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Class 2 nouns have some ending in -na, and is never omitted. Suffixation happens after that syllable.

Examples:

bina

bina

price

bina-'a

price-ita

bina-'a

price-ita

its price

Class 2 nouns that behave somewhat like class 1 nouns. They carry suffix -'na, has short form without ending in a glottal stop. All suffixation occurs with long form carrying the suffix -'na.

Examples:

dote'na

dote'na

food

dote'

edible

yava

tree

laga-'a

fruit-its

dote' yava laga-'a

edible tree fruit-its

edible tree-fruit

dote'na-ka

food-your

no-k-am-u-e

PROG-you-give-1.SG-IND

dote'na-ka no-k-am-u-e

food-your PROG-you-give-1.SG-IND

I am giving you your food

filite'na

filite'na

death

filite'

dead

yale

people

filite' yale

dead people

dead people

filite'na-e'

death-BEN

l-amota

us-fear

no'-ei-e

IND

filite'na-e' l-amota no'-ei-e

death-BEN us-fear IND

we are afraid of death

nalu-di

wife-my

nalu-di

wife-my

my wife

da-nalu-di

my-wife-my

da-nalu-di

my-wife-my

my wife

Adjectives

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Yagaria has a distinction between primary and secondary adjectives. Primary adjectives are used to determine the morphological behavior of "adjectives". Secondary adjectives are obtained from nouns or verbs, or local or temporal expressions occurring as noun adjuncts.[2]

Primary adjectives

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Morphological pattern of class 1 nouns, and class 2 nouns are the two groups being used in the primary adjectives. Most adjectives have short or not-suffixed form for attributive occurrence, and long or suffixed form for predicative occurrence.

Class 1 examples
Adjectives following Class 1Translation
haga'. / haganatasty
fagi' / fainafar
fate' / fatenafar
havá' / havánaunimportant
lava' / lavanaunimportant
lakoli' / lakolinaflat
bonu' / bounaround
legi' / leginatrue
havu' / havunauncultivated


Class 2 examples
Adjectives following Class 2Translation
soko / sokonagood
feipa / feipanabad
buko / bukonawarm
gata / gatanaheavy
hogo / hogonashort
hepa / hepanabad
fotogo / fotogonagood

Numerals

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Numbers are made using a system of only one, two, and fives. The sum of numbers are usually expressed by hands and feet.

Number (English)Number (Yagaria)
onebogo
twolole
threelole-'e' bogo-'e'
fourlole-'e' lole-'e'
fived- anita bogo-ko'
sixd- anita bogo-kayagati' bogo-ko'
sevend- anita bogo-kayagati' lole
eightd- anita bogo-kaygati' lole-'e' bogo-'e'
nined- anita bogo-kayagati' lole-'e' lole-'e'
tend- anita lole
elevend- anita su ho- na d- eiya -logati' bogo
twelved- anita su ho- na d- eiya -logati' lole
thirteend- anita su ho- na d- eiya -logati' lole-'e' bogo-'e'
fourteend- anita su ho- na d- eiya -logati' lole-'e' lole-'e'
fifteend- anita su ho- na d- eiya bogo-kayaga'a
sixteend- anita su ho- na d- eiya bogo-kayagati' bogo-ko'
seventeend- anita su ho- na d- eiya bogo-kayagati' lole
eighteend- anita su ho- na d- eiya bogo-kayagati' lole-'e' bogo-'e'
nineteend- anita su ho- na d- eiya bogo-kayagati' lole-'e' lole-'e'
twentyd- eiya d- anita buki'a

References

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  1. ^Yagaria atEthnologue (25th ed., 2022)Closed access icon
  2. ^abcdRenck (1975), pp. 1–2
  3. ^Renck (1975), pp. 12
  4. ^Renck (1975), pp. 15–18

Further reading

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  • Haiman, John (1980).Hua: A Papuan Language of the Eastern Highlands of New Guinea. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.

External links

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Goroka
Gahuku
Kamono–Yagaria
Others
Kainantu
Tairora
Gauwa
Other
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