Urim language

Urim is a Torricelli language of Papua New Guinea. It is also known as Kalp; dialects are Kukwo, Yangkolen. There is a grammatical description by Hemmilä and Luoma (2009).[3]

Urim
Native toPapua New Guinea
RegionEast Sepik Province, Sandaun Province
Native speakers
3,700 (2003)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3uri
Glottologurim1252[2]

Phonology

Urim has vowel length contrast, but only for monosyllabic words. Urim also has the prestopped nasals /pm/, /tn/, and /kŋ/.[4]

Urim minimal pairs with short and long vowels:[4]

  • waŋ ‘time’, waːŋ ‘tree trunk’
  • hen ‘wild sago’, heːn ‘outside’

Pre-stopped nasals contrast with non-pre-stopped nasals:[4]

  • wak ‘species of plant’, waŋ ‘time’, wakŋ ‘fire’
  • yat ‘enough’, yan ‘father’, hatn ‘walk’
  • lim ‘nose’, kipm ‘you (pl)’
  • melp ‘wasp’, yelm ‘earthquake’, walpm ‘liver’

Pronouns

Pronouns are:[4]

singulardualpaucalplural
1incl mentepm
1excl kupmmentakŋmintomen
2 kitnkipmekŋkipmteŋkipm
3 kiltuwekŋtuteŋtu

Like the Lower Sepik-Ramu languages, Urim (as well as Kombio) distinguishes dual and paucal pronouns.[4]

gollark: The configuration for HTTPS is mildly more irritating, but I can live with it.
gollark: It turned out it didn't, and caddy v2 has annoying things, so nginx it is.
gollark: Well, caddy v1 was apparently "deprecated" - there were annoying warnings about this on the site before there was even a non-release-candidate v2 - and I had an issue, so I thought "hmm yes maybe a newer webserver would fix this".
gollark: I actually migrated from caddy v1 to caddy v2 yesterday, and now I'm going back to nginx after... a few years?
gollark: I imagine it was sort of valid enough that nginx *logged* it.

References

  1. Urim at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  2. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Urim". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
  3. Hemmilä, Ritva, and Luoma, Pirkko. 2009. Urim grammar. http://www.sil.org/pacific/png/abstract.asp?id=52255
  4. Foley, William A. (2018). "The Languages of the Sepik-Ramu Basin and Environs". 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. 197–432. ISBN 978-3-11-028642-7.
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