Yareban languages

Trans–New Guinea language group From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Yareban or Musa River languages are a small family of Trans–New Guinea languages spoken near the Musa River in the "Bird's Tail" (southeastern peninsula) of New Guinea. They are classified within the Southeast Papuan branch of TransNew Guinea.

Geographic
distribution
Southeastern peninsula of Papua New Guinea:
Oro Province
Quick facts Geographic distribution, Linguistic classification ...
Yareban
Musa River
Geographic
distribution
Southeastern peninsula of Papua New Guinea:
Oro Province
Linguistic classificationTrans–New Guinea
Language codes
Glottologyare1250
Close

Languages

The languages are,

Barijian is suggested by lexicostatistics in Dutton (1971).

The only pronouns which are known in enough languages to reconstruct are na 1sg and a 2sg, which are common to all Yareban languages.

Proto-language

Phonemes

Usher (2020) reconstructs the consonant inventory as follows:[2]

*m*n
*pʰ*tʰ[*s]*kʰ
*b*d[*dz][*g]
*w*j

*s and *dz were acquired through loans, but may have already been present in the protolanguage. *ʔ and *g may have been allophones.

Vowels are *a *e *i *o *u.

Pronouns

Usher (2020) reconstructs the pronouns as:[2]

More information sg, du ...
sgdupl
1excl *na*ewa
1incl *uwa*i[j]a
2 *a*ja
3 *dawa*ema(wa)
Close

Basic vocabulary

Some lexical reconstructions by Usher (2020) are:[2]

More information gloss, Proto-Musa River ...
glossProto-Musa River
head*bo-tai
hair/feather*idi
ear*ome
eye*nai-tai
nose*iboʔo
tooth*ni[ʔ]o
tongue*meana
foot/leg*buɾi
blood/salt*iwa
bone*tai
skin/bark*ope
breast*ama
louse*uʔa
dog*kua
pig*boɾo
bird*gasiɾa; *ada
egg*baka; *uɾimi
tree*ana
man/person*e[ʔe]me
woman/wife*aweta
sun*eweaka
moon*maɾabe; *sakaɾa
water*adua
fire*inaʔa
stone*oma; *gebiɾo
path*daʔaba
name*ibi
eat/drink*it-
one*demu
Close

Evolution

Yareban reflexes of proto-Trans-New Guinea (pTNG) etyma are:[3]

Yareba language:

  • ama ‘breast’ < *amu
  • uyaucassowary’ < *ku(y)a
  • rarara ‘dry’ < *(ŋg,k)atata
  • baba ‘father’ < *mbapa
  • iji ‘hair’ < *iti[C]
  • ifu ‘name’ < *imbi
  • kofiti ‘head’ < *kV(mb,p)(i,u)tu
  • ogo ‘water’ < *ok[V]
  • eme ‘man’ < *ambi

Abia language:

  • amai ‘mother’ < *am(a,i)
  • sagai ‘sand’ < *sa(ŋg,k)asiŋ

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI