Bukiyip language
Bukiyip (Bukiyúp), or Mountain Arapesh, is an Arapesh language (Torricelli)[1] spoken by around 16,000 people between Yangoru and Maprik[2] in the East Sepik Province of Papua New Guinea.[3] Bukiyip follows the SVO typology.[1] The Arapesh languages are known for their complex noun-phrase agreement system (Bukiyip has 18 of these noun classes).[4] ClassificationThere are two primary dialects of Bukiyip Chamaun-Yabonuh and Ilipeim-Yamil (western)[3] and two minor dialects Buki and Lohuhwim.[4] Given significant variation among dialects, linguist Robert Conrad suggests that Bukiyip is likely part of dialect chain that also involves other Arapesh languages.[2] The dialects may be further generalized as Coastal Arapesh and Mountain Bukiyip.[4][5] PhonologySyllable structureSyllabic stress is usually placed on the penultimate syllable, which has a higher pitch. There are four contrastive intonation contours.
Consonants
written as: p, t, k, b, d, g, s, ch, j, h, m, n, ny, l, r, w, y[4] VowelsInitial vowels clusters: ou, au, ai, ia Medial vowel clusters: e (a,o,i,u), a (u,e,i), i (é,a,e), o (u,i), uu, úo Final vowel clusters: eo, ou, uu
written as: i, e, a, o, u, æ, é, ú[4] MorphophonemicsBukiyip has 18 basic rules for morphophonemic shifts (rules 8-18 primarily apply to the Chamaun-Yabonuh and Buki dialects).[4]
The above rules use the following abbreviations: Vr - rounded vowels Vc - central unrounded vowels Vu - unrounded vowels Vf - front vowels C - consonant Calv - alveopalatal consonants Cr - rounded consonants # - morpheme boundary in phonological word WordsNounsThere are 18 noun classes with a closed set of suffixes of the form: noun nucleus + number (-unú).[4]
V1 is the first vowel in a medial vowel cluster, V2 is the second vowel in a medial vowel cluster. Pronouns and demonstrativesPronouns and demonstratives must agree with the noun class and have singular and plural forms, pronouns also encode proximal and distal information.[4]
Possessive pronouns have the form: pronoun + -i + unú (noun number class) VerbsVerb structureVerbs have a complex structure of affixes encoding mood, object, benefactive, and direction which either have their own classes or must agree with the noun class. The structure is:[4] Subject (n-) + Mood (u- 'irrealis', a- 'realis') + Object (unú-) + Verb Nucleus (verb root 1–6, verb stem 1-2)+ Object 2 (-unú) + Benefactive (-m 'benefactive' + -unú or -ag 'here') + Directional (-u 'displaced', -i 'toward speaker', '-uk' permanent). Object 2 and Benefactive may not occur in all verbs. Verb subject prefixes
Mood markerAll verbs (with the exception of class 6 have a mood marker). The realis mood (mood marker 'a-') concerns events that have happened in the past and present. The irrealis mood (mood marker 'u-') concerns future events and events that did not happen in the past (such as in the case of a mistaken memory). The imperative mood (used for commands) and interrogative mood (used for questions) are formed by clausal transformations.[citation needed] Verb object suffixes
Verb root classes
Class 8 has a second object while class 4 only has one. AdjectivesAdjectives consist of a root word followed by the appropriate noun-class suffix (see the noun class table).[4] AdverbsThere are three adverb classes in Bukiyip: 'natimogúk' (all) in the irrealis mood and '-nubu' (completely) and '-gamu' (well) in the realis mood. All adverbs are inflected, and may have free or bound stems depending on which modifier slot they are placed in the clausal, phrase, or sentence syntax.[4] Counting systemThere are two basic numeral roots 'atú-' (one) and 'bia-' (two). These numeral prefixes are added to noun root words and then undergo a morphological process (see the Morphophonemics section) that combines them.[4] For example: atú + -p + utom → atum → otum or bia + -ch + batowich → biech The numeral root 'nobati-' (four) is an exception to this assimilation pattern. In addition to the atú- and bia- numeral roots, there is also a stem éné- meaning one, an, or some depending on context. PhrasesThere are 23 phrase formations in Bukiyip.[4] Verb phrases1. Modified Verb Phrase: Modifier (class 1-2 adverb) + Head (verb class 1-7) + Modifier (class 3 adverb, adverb phrase) 2. Repeated Verb Phrase: Head (verb class 10, motion verb) + Modifier (class 3 adverb) + Head (verb class 10, '-lto') + Modifier 3. Coordinate Verb Phrase: Head (verb class 1–5, coordinate phrase) + Head (verb class 1–5, modified phrase) + Modifier 4. Motion Verb Phrase: Head (motion verb, motion verb phrase) + Head (verb class 3, coordinate verb phrase) + Modifier (adverb class 3) Noun phrases5. Modified Noun Phrase 1: Modifier (demonstrative, numeral phrase, quantitative stem) + Modifier (class 2 adjective, adjective phrase, nominalised clause, limiter phrase) + Possessive (possessive phrase, possessive pronoun) + Head (class 1-15 noun, coordinate noun phrase) 6. Modified Noun Phrase 2: Modifier (noun stem, class 17-18 noun, class 3 locative phrase) + Head (noun) 7. Apposition Noun Phrase: Head (apposition noun phrase, coordinate noun phrase, demonstrative, intensive phrase, class 18 noun, pronoun, temporal stem) + Apposition (clause, nominalised clause, coordinate noun phrase, modified noun phrase, class 17-18 noun, derived noun stem, pronoun, temporal stem) + Identification (pronoun) 8. Coordinate Noun Phrase: Head (apposition noun phrase, modified noun phrase, class 17 noun, pronoun) + Head (apposition noun phrase, modified noun phrase, class 17 noun, pronoun) + Coordinate ('o', 'úli', ⟨n-⟩ + a- + -nú, ⟨n-⟩ + ú- + -nú) Modified noun phrases9. Possessive Phrase: Head (apposition noun phrase, coordinate noun phrase, demonstrative, class 3 locative phrase, modified noun phrase, class 17-18 noun, noun stem) + Possessive (personal pronoun, '-i-') 10. Limiter Phrase: Head (adverb, demonstrative, modified noun phrase, noun stem, pronoun) + Limiter (at- + <únú>, ati) 11. Intensive Phrase: Head (pronoun) + Intensifier ('kénak', 'meho') 12. Instrumental-Benefactor Phrase: Benefactive (umu) + Head (intransitive clause, transitive clause, modified noun phrase) 13. Similarity Phrase: Similarity ('(ko)bwidou(k)') + Head (intransitive clause, transitive clause, demonstrative, pronoun, modified noun phrase) + Similarity ('-umu') 14. Accompaniment Phrase: Head (pronoun, modified noun phrase, apposition noun phrase) + Accompaniment ('nagún') Locative phrase15. Locative Phrase 1: Locative (locative) + Head (locative clause, locative word, class 2-3 locative phrase 2, modified noun phrase, class 18 noun) + Identifier (class 18 noun) 16. Locative Phrase 2: Head (intransitive clause, transitive clause, locative, noun, pronoun) + Locative ('-umu', '-ahah') 17. Locative Phrase 3: Head (class 2 locative) + Head (class 3 locative) Temporal phrase18. Temporal Phrase 1: Head (temporal stem) + Temporal ('-abali') 19. Temporal Phrase 2: Modifier ('húlúkati-mu) + Head (temporal word) 20. Serial Temporal Phrase: Head (temporal word) + Head (temporal word) Numeral phrase21. Numeral Phrase: Head (modified noun phrase, numeral stem) + Head (numeral stem) + Head (numeral stem) Interrogative phrase22. Interrogative Phrase: Modifier (interrogative word) + Head (class 1-14 noun) Adjective/adverb phrase23. Adjective Phrase: Head (adjective stem) + Head (adjective stem) 1-14 noun References
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