Maskelynes language

Maskelynes (/ˈmæskəlɪns/), or Kuliviu (Uliveo), is an Oceanic language spoken on the Maskelyne Islands off south Malekula, Vanuatu.

Maskelynes
Kuliviu, Uliveo
Native toVanuatu
RegionMalekula
Native speakers
1,100 (2001)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3klv
Glottologmask1242[2]

Phonology

Consonants

Labial Dental/alveolar Dorsal
Plain Labiovelarized
Nasal m n ŋ
Plosive Unvoiced p k
Voiced ᵐb ᵐbʷ ⁿd̪ ᵑg
Fricative β βʷ s x~ɣ~ʀ
Approximant w l j
Rhotic r~ɾ
  • /ᵐb, ⁿd, ᵑg/ are in free variation as unreleased [ᵐb̚, ⁿd̚, ᵑg̚] or unvoiced [p, t, k] word-finally or before a consonant[3]
    • /ᵑg/ is also in free variation as nasal [ŋ] word-finally, especially among young speakers[4]
  • /ᵑg/ is realized as a voiceless [k] among some speakers, especially young[4]
  • /p, pʷ, t/ are unreleased [p̚, p̚, t̚] word-finally or before a consonant (though /p/ has never been recorded before a consonant)[5]
  • /mʷ, pʷ, ᵐbʷ, βʷ/ lose their labialization word-finally when not followed by a vowel and before /o, u/[6]
    • /ᵐbʷ/ is in free variation as trilled [ᵐʙ] (tapped [ᵐⱱ̟] in Peskarus) before /u/ and sometimes before /ə/[4]
  • /βʷ/ is [β] before voiced consonants[7]
  • /β, βʷ/ are [ɸ] before voiceless consonants and word-finally[7]
  • /β/ is in free variation with [ɸ] for some speakers[7]
  • /w, j/ are vocalic [u, i] when in nucleus following /e, a, o/[8]

Vowels

Front Central Back
Close i u ()
Mid ɛ ə o
Open ɑ
  • /i/ is near-close [ɪ] between front consonants[9]
  • /ɛ/ is close-mid [e] word-finally[9]
  • /ə/ is [ɵ] after labiovelarized consonants or before /xu̥/[9]
  • /əj, əw/ are realised as single morphemes, [i, u][8]
  • /u/ is realised as front [y] between front consonants, and near-close [ʊ] when proceeded or preceded by back consonants[10]
  • /o/ is front [ø] between front consonants[10]

Voiceless vowel

A voiceless [u̥] occurs at the ends of words. It is uncertain if it is an allophone of /u/ or a separate phoneme[11]

Phonotactics

Possible syllable structures in Maskelynes: (C/S)V(S)(C)[12]

Letter-to-phoneme correspondence

Maskelynes alphabet
Letter a b d e ǝ g h i k l m n ŋ o p r s t u w v w/u y/i
IPA ɑ ᵐb ᵐbʷ ⁿd̪ ɛ ə ᵑg x i k l m n ŋ o p r s u β βʷ w j

Grammar

Verbs

The verbs of Maskelynes are agglutinative, mostly being modified by prefixes, though the stem of a verb can stand on its own. These prefixes encode for, in order of appearance in verb: 1. tense-aspect-modes; 2. subject, person and number; 3. various modes, including realis and irrealis; 4. two tense-modes; 5. reduplication. The object of a sentence is encoded by a suffix.[13]

Examples of verbal agglutination:[14]

sa-g-e-mun-i

PROH-2SG.SUBJ-IRR-drink-3SG.OBJ

sa-g-e-mun-i

PROH-2SG.SUBJ-IRR-drink-3SG.OBJ

Don't you drink it.

go-to-madha-mun-mun-i

2SG.SUBJ-REL-IMM.PST-ITER~drink-3SG.OBJ

go-to-madha-mun-mun-i

2SG.SUBJ-REL-IMM.PST-ITER~drink-3SG.OBJ

You who just now kept drinking it

Reduplication

Reduplication in Maskelynes has various usages, and can encode for e.g. plurality, habituality, iterative aspect, etc.[15]

gollark: You should make the thing not crash, too.
gollark: it did not, in fact, give me unused sessions.
gollark: Apparently if I wipe the cookie it just assigns me another session which someone may already have!
gollark: > but you can at least build arbitrary pure expressions using the free variable button and bindingYou can?
gollark: I am in fact FINE with the monadoforms!

References

  1. Maskelynes at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  2. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Maskelynes". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
  3. Healey 2013, pp. 14-15.
  4. Healey 2013, p. 15.
  5. Healey 2013, p. 13.
  6. Healey 2013, p. 19.
  7. Healey 2013, p. 17.
  8. Healey 2013, pp. 18-19.
  9. Healey 2013, p. 20.
  10. Healey 2013, p. 21.
  11. Healey 2013, pp. 24-25.
  12. Healey 2013, p. 25.
  13. Healey 2013, Section 8.1: Verb morphology.
  14. Healey 2013, p. 181.
  15. Healey 2013, section 8.5: Reduplication.

Bibliography


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