Kilmeri language

Papuan language of Papua New Guinea From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kilmeri, or bo apulyo is a Papuan language of Papua New Guinea near the border with Indonesian Papua. It is not being learned by children.

Ethnicity2,800 (2004)[1]
Native speakers
2,000 (2004)[1]
Quick facts Native to, Region ...
Kilmeri
Native toPapua New Guinea
RegionSandaun Province
Ethnicity2,800 (2004)[1]
Native speakers
2,000 (2004)[1]
Border
  • Bewani Range
    • Poal River
      • Kilmeri
Language codes
ISO 639-3kih
Glottologkilm1241
ELPKilmeri
Coordinates: 2.916313°S 141.298028°E / -2.916313; 141.298028 (Ossima)
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Kilmeri is spoken around Ossima ward (2.916313°S 141.298028°E / -2.916313; 141.298028 (Ossima)) in Bewani/Wutung Onei Rural LLG, Sandaun Province.[1][2]

Speakers of Kilmeri refer to their own language as bo apulyo, meaning sound in the middle.[3]

Dialects

Dialects are:[4][5][3]

  • Western Kilmeri dialect (spoken in western villages)
    • Elau
    • Osol
    • Kilipau
    • Kiliwes
    • Isi
    • I
    • Isi II
    • Sosi
    • Ilup
  • Eastern Kilmeri dialect (spoken in eastern villages and hamlets)
    • Ossima
    • Isi Daru
    • Akos
    • Awol
    • Airu
    • Asue
    • Omoi
    • Omula

The two major dialect groupings have an estimated cognate percentage of 82% based on lexicostatistics.[4]

Phonology

Kilmeri distinguishes 18 consonants, 12 of which are phonemic.[3]

More information Bilabial, Labiodental ...
Consonants
Bilabial Labiodental Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Plosive voiced prenasalised b d ⌈g⌉
Voiceless p k ⌈ʔ⌉
Labialized (pʷ̜)
Nasal m n
Rhotic ᵐʙ r
Fricative (β / ɸ) ⌈f⌉ s
Lateral l
Approximant ʋ j
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The sounds in parentheses are possible allophones of the bilabial trill. [β] can be intervocalical, [ɸ] can be the final sound, and [pʷ̜] can be syllable-initial. The sounds in half brackets occur extremely rarely and can likely be attributed to loan words.[3]

The exceedingly rare bilabial trill /ʙ/ is found in the areal-related Kwomtari and Sko languages, but not in other Border languages.[6] It likely developed from a prenasalized bilabial stop followed by a high back rounded vowel, hence why [mbu] occurs only in ten words.

Kilmeri has eight vowels, all of which are always short.[3]

More information (Near) Front, Central ...
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The near-high and near-low vowels are especially rare.[3] Thus, Kilmeri was believed to have seven vowels[6] until a small selection of words, such as /bi/ (pig) and /bI/ (hole) show a clear distinction between /i/ and /I/.[3]

The main syllable structure is CV with two preferred syllables.[3]

Orthography

The phonetic inventory easily translates into Latin letters. The near-low vowel uses ae and the near-high vowels use diacritics. Literate Kilmeri speakers much preferred the symbol p for the bilabial trill, but pp was selected to indicate two different phonemes.[3]

More information Phoneme, Grapheme ...
Phoneme Grapheme
/b/ b
/d/ d
/k/ k
/l/ l
/m/ m
/n/ n
/p/ p
/ʙ/ pp
/r/ r
/s/ s
/ʋ/ w
/j/ y
/a/ a
/æ/ ae
/ɛ/ e
/i/ i
/I/ î
/ɔ/ o
/u/ u
/ʊ/ û
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Pronouns

Kilmeri has eleven personal pronouns without gender distinction.[6]

More information Singular, Dual ...
Personal pronouns
SingularDualPlural
1st INCL kodedukoyonuko
1st EXCL koyouke
2nd dedeyoine
3rd ki ~ kekiyoiki
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The dual forms end with the locative suffix -yo and is derived from the singular. The inclusive dual is often substituted with the inclusive plural, especially in narrative stories.[3]

Verbs

Kilmeri verb forms can express complex modality. Examples:[6]

de-lePROB-go‘will probably go’
lam < le-mgo-POT‘might go’
lou < le-ougo-FRUST‘go in vain’
lap < le-pgo-IMP‘go!’
klam < k-le-mNEG.IMP-go-NEG.IMP‘don’t go!’
loipap < le-ipe-pgo-first-IMP‘go first, and then…’

Circumfixes can also be applied to verbs in Kilmeri.

Number agreement in Kilmeri is absolutive rather than accusative.[6]

In Kilmeri, intransitive verbs, as well as the two transitive verbs ‘eat’ and ‘throw down to’, agree with subjects in number. This pattern is also present in Amanab. These verbs are:[6]

More information gloss, singular ...
glosssingularplural
‘eat’niile
‘throw down to’pakʊnepakʊpi
‘come’pulepulupi
‘die’suisupuli
‘go’lemole
‘sit’nakemape
‘sleep’nuisapi
‘speak’muimolive
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However, number marking for transitive verbs, except for ‘eat’ and ‘throw down to’, refers to the number of the object, rather than the subject.[6]

More information gloss, singular ...
glosssingularplural
‘carry’wilimoli
‘carry hanging’lalilaluli
‘cook’sisepi
‘cut’sukesukeli
‘dig’rarirararpi
‘erect’newenewaupi
‘fetch someone’lakiveleki
‘fill’norivenororpi
‘harvest’lapiyelapapi
‘mark’lopilopapi
‘sharpen’merivemererpi
‘take out’pulivepuloli
‘tear’pikepikeki
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References

Further reading

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