Central Solomon languages

Language family of Solomon Islands From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Central Solomon languages are the four Papuan languages spoken in the state of Solomon Islands.

Geographic
distribution
Solomon Islands
Proto-languageProto-Central Solomons
Quick facts Geographic distribution, Linguistic classification ...
Central Solomons
(tentative)
Geographic
distribution
Solomon Islands
Linguistic classificationOne of the world's primary language families
Proto-languageProto-Central Solomons
Subdivisions
Language codes
GlottologNone
Language families of the Solomon Islands.
  Central Solomons
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The four languages are, listed from northwest to southeast,

Classification

The four Central Solomon languages were identified as a family by Wilhelm Schmidt in 1908. The languages are at best distantly related, and evidence for their relationship is meager. Dunn and Terrill (2012) argue that the lexical evidence vanishes when Oceanic loanwords are excluded.[1] Ross (2005) and Pedrós (2015), however, accept a connection, based on similarities among pronouns and other grammatical forms.

Pedrós (2015) suggests, tentatively, that the branching of the family is as follows.

Central Solomons

Savosavo and Bilua, despite being the most distant languages geographically, both split more recently than Lavukaleve and Touo according to Pedrós.

Palmer (2018) regards the evidence for Central Solomons as tentative but promising.[2]

An automated computational analysis (ASJP 4) by Müller et al. (2013)[3] grouped Touo, Savosavo, and Bilua together. Lavukaleve was not included.[4] However, since the analysis was automatically generated, the grouping could be either due to mutual lexical borrowing or genetic inheritance.

Pronoun reconstructions

Pedrós (2015) argues for the existence of the family through comparison of pronouns and other gender, person and number morphemes and based on the existence of a common syncretism between 2nd person nonsingular and inclusive. He performs an internal reconstruction for the pronominal morphemes of each language and then proposes a reconstruction of some of the pronouns of the claimed family. The reconstructions are the following:

More information 1 singular, 2 singular ...
1 singular2 singularinclusive/
2 non-singular
1 exclusive
Pre-Savosavo*a-ɲi*no*mea-
Pre-Touonoe*mee̤-
Pre-Lavukaleve*ŋai*ŋo*mee
Pre-Bilua*ani/*aŋai*ŋomee-
Proto-Central Solomons*ani/*aŋai*ŋo*me*e
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Numerals

Central Solomon numerals from Pedrós (2015):

More information numeral, Savosavo ...
numeralSavosavoTouoLavukaleveBilua
1 ˈela, ˈpade / paaɺo / azoˈtelakom, ˈtelakoˈomadeu, ˈmadeu
2 ˈedoe̤ɺiˈlelemal, ˈlelaol, ˈlelaɰel, ˈlemalˈomuga, ˈmuga
3 iˈɰiβa / iˈɰiahieˈeŋaˈzouke, ke
4 ˈaɰaβaa̤vonunˈariku
5 ˈarasoduˈsieˈsike, ke
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As the comparisons indicate, lexical evidence for the relatedness of the four languages is limited.

Vocabulary comparison

The following basic vocabulary words are from Tryon & Hackman (1982),[5] as cited in the Trans-New Guinea database.[6] The Savosavo data is from Claudia Wegener's field notes.[7]

The words cited constitute translation equivalents, with no claim as to whether they are cognate or not. If one sets apart the obvious loanwords from Oceanic languages (e.g. batu, vatu for “head”, susu for “breast”), the number of potential cognates across these four varieties is evidently very low.

More information gloss, Lavukaleve ...
glossLavukaleveMbaniata
(Lokuru dial.)
Mbilua
(Ndovele dial.)
Savosavo
head vatulezubatu
hair memeazufutouluta; sivuɰa
ear hovulōŋgototaliŋatagalu
eye lemimberɔvilunito
nose sisiemɔŋgameɲoko
tooth neonānetakanale
tongue letānlleñolapi
leg tau furimeɔekiti
louse kea; lailisa; vutusipi; tiŋgaudole
dog mitakeusiesielemisu
bird malaɣulmānozombiaŋambiaŋakosu
egg keruvāndenatɔrurukolei; si
blood ravuvondaraɰabu
bone sosokiominupizatovolo
skin keutzuɔnatupukorakora
breast ɔfususususususu
man alifinɔzɔmambatada
woman airaŋgoherekoadaki
sky totoāsuziaauoka
moon kuaīndikambosokuɰe
water lafifiɔnĵupiva
fire lakehirɔuzakeda
stone mbeko; vekohɛŋgalandokato
road, path lakeekevekeva
name laŋininiŋinini
eat eu; eui; ouneazafevuatol-ou; samu
one dom; tetelomāroŋo; thufimandeuela; pade
two lelal; lemalēriomuŋgaedo
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Syntax

All Central Solomon languages have SOV word order except for Bilua, which has SVO word order due to Oceanic influence.[8]

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