Misima language
Austronesian language spoken in Papua New Guinea
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Misima-Panaeati, also called Misiman or panapanaeati, is an indigenous Austronesian language spoken on the islands of Misima, Panaeati, and the islands of the eastern half of the Calvados Chain of Papua New Guinea.
Native speakers
18,000 (2002)[1]4,000 monolinguals
Austronesian
-
Malayo-Polynesian
- Oceanic
- Western
- Papuan Tip
- Peripheral
- Kilivila–Misima
- Misima
- Kilivila–Misima
- Peripheral
- Papuan Tip
- Western
- Oceanic
| Misima | |
|---|---|
| Misima-Panaeati | |
| Region | Milne Bay Province, Papua New Guinea |
Native speakers | 18,000 (2002)[1] 4,000 monolinguals |
Austronesian
| |
| Latin | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | mpx |
| Glottolog | misi1243 |
Phonology
Vowels
Consonants
Syllables
In Misima-Paneati, the following syllable types commonly occur: V, CV, CVC, and VC.[3]
The open syllables V and CV are found in all positions of words, whereas the closed syllables CVC and VC are only found word finally and across morpheme boundaries, with the exception of the following five words:[3]
- /ˈamna/ – 'feelings'
- /ˈkimpos/ – 'centre pole'
- /kinˈbʷai/ – 'fingernail'
- /sinˈɡili/ – 'centre rib of coconut leaf'
- /tabˈnaha/ – 'sneeze'
The only monomorphemic consonant clusters that always occur across syllable boundaries are:[4]
- /mn/
- /mp/
- /nb/
- /nɡ/
- /bn/