Keuw language

Keuw (Keu, Kehu) is an unclassified language of New Guinea.

Keuw
Kehu
Native toPapua
RegionWapoga River, in the foothills inland from Cenderawasih Bay: Wapoga District, Nabire Regency, Papua province
Native speakers
200 (2007)[1]
Lakes Plain?
  • Wapoga
    • Keuw
Language codes
ISO 639-3khh
Glottologkehu1238[2]

Keuw is spoken in a swampy lowland region along the Poronai River in Keuw village (kampung) of Wapoga District, Nabire Regency, Papua province, Indonesia. According to oral folklore, the Keuw were originally from Woisaru, and then moved to Sanawado, which may be locations in Wapoga District.[3]

Classification

Mark Donohue (2007) said that Kehu is "probably a Geelvink Bay language, but no one knows enough about those languages, systematically, to say this with confidence for [any of them] beyond Barapasi, T(ar)unggare and Bauzi."[4]

Timothy Usher (2018) classifies it as a Lakes Plain language, closest to Awera and RasawaSaponi. According to Foley, based on some lexical and phonological similarities, Keuw may possibly share a deep relationship with the Lakes Plain languages.[5] Palmer (2018) treats Keuw as a language isolate.[6]

Phonology

Phonology of Keuw from Kamholz (2012), quoted in Foley (2018):[7][5]

Consonants

Keuw has ten consonants.

ptk
bdɡ
s
l
wj

Vowels

Keuw has five vowels.

iu
eo
a

Tone

Keuw has contrastive tone. Some minimal pairs demonstrating phonemic tonal contrasts:

  • áalìyò ‘tongue’, áalíyò ‘house’
  • kíilyô ‘possum’, kíilyò ‘arrow’
  • úukyò ‘grandfather’, úunyô ‘woman’

Syntax

Keuw has SOV word order, as exemplified by the sentence below. The morphemic suffixes remain unglossed.[5]

kómúul-yòyúmséet-yònúu-nô
boar-?cassava-?eat-?
‘The boar ate the cassava.’

Basic vocabulary

Basic vocabulary of Keuw from Kamholz (2012), quoted in Foley (2018):[8][5]

Keuw basic vocabulary
glossKeuw
‘bird’páupǝn
‘blood’kpíi
‘bone’ntyéns
‘breast’túulí
‘ear’téemé
‘eat’núu
‘egg’bléemí
‘eye’mlúul
‘fire’núup
‘go’páwì
‘ground’píi
‘hair’plíikd
‘head’kpúunt
‘leg’páud
‘louse (body)’máa
‘louse (head)’bréen
‘man’méeli
‘moon’dyúutǝn
‘one’bíisìp
‘path, road’ngkéempúkə
‘see’líyè, tíyè, kúntáb
‘sky’tpáapí
‘stone’tóotí
‘sun’tandən
‘tooth’mée
‘tree’kúd
‘two’páid
‘water’yél
‘woman’úun
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gollark: https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/496350845609181185/565270068254998528/IMG_20190409_212056.jpgI had a spare Raspberry Pi and small HDMI screen. With a lot of fiddling around, it now displays a bunch of RSS feeds so I can read about how horribly Brexit is going in real time.

References

  1. Keuw at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  2. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Kehu". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
  3. Kamholz, David. 2012. The Keuw isolate: Preliminary materials and classification. In Harald Hammarström and Wilco van den Heuvel (eds.), History, contact, and classification of Papuan languages, 243–268. Special issue of Language and Linguistics in Melanesia. Port Moresby: Linguistic Society of Papua New Guinea.
  4. Donohue (2007)
  5. Foley, William A. (2018). "The languages of Northwest New Guinea". In Palmer, Bill (ed.). The Languages and Linguistics of the New Guinea Area: A Comprehensive Guide. The World of Linguistics. 4. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton. pp. 433–568. ISBN 978-3-11-028642-7.
  6. Palmer, Bill (2018). "Language families of the New Guinea Area". In Palmer, Bill (ed.). The Languages and Linguistics of the New Guinea Area: A Comprehensive Guide. The World of Linguistics. 4. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton. pp. 1–20. ISBN 978-3-11-028642-7.
  7. Kamholz, David. 2012. The Keuw isolate: preliminary materials and classification. Language and Linguistics in Melanesia Special Issue: History, Contact and Classification of Papuan Languages: 243–268.
  8. Kamholz, David. 2012. The Keuw isolate: preliminary materials and classification. Language and Linguistics in Melanesia Special Issue: History, Contact and Classification of Papuan Languages: 243–268.
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