Classification
Like most Trans New Guinea languages, Kaluli is verb-final, as Subject-Object-Verb (SOV). The unmarked word order for bivalent clauses is AOV, but OAV is also possible. Kaluli allows a great deal of deletion and ellipsis in all genres of talk. Utterances may consist of a single verb, or a verb with one or more other sentence constituents. When a person opens a discourse all major NPs (Numeral Phrase) are usually specified, but if one NP does not change, and there is no likelihood of ambiguity, that NP will probably not be repeated. *Aimele (140 speakers in 2000) * Beami (4200 speakers in 1981) * Dibiyaso (1950 speakers in 2000) * Edolo (1670 speakers in 2000) * Kasua (600 speakers in 1990) * Onobasulu (1000 speakers in 2010) * Sonia (400 speakers in 1993) * Turumsa (5 speakers in 2002)Typology
The Kaluli tense system appears to show properties of both egophoricity and more typical person-marking. Present tense apparently distinguishes first vs non-first subjects, whereas future tense markers follow a more typically egophoric distribution. This suggests that language can include bothHistory and culture
The Kaluli are more closely related to the low land Papuan cultural groups than to those of the nearby highlands, physiological and cultural evidence shows this but there is no hard evidence to suggest that they originated anywhere outside of the general territory that they currently occupy. Early trade relations and cultural borrowings appear to have been mainly with peoples from the north and from the west. Over time, the Kaluli moved eastward, away from established settlement areas, moving even more deeply into the forests. Some of this movement may be attributed to a need to seek fresh garden lands, but it may also be explained in part as a defensive response to the expansionist pressures of the Beami andPhonology
Vowels
Based on the properties of the present consonant and vowel inventories, Kaluli is a typologically typical language. It features a traditional seven vowel system, where there is a vowel height contrast. In addition, there is a rounding contrast that is dependent on a front-back contrast between six of the seven vowels. The three front vowels are also unrounded, where they contrast the other three back vowels that are rounded.Consonants
Similar to its vowels, Kaluli’s consonant inventory follows several common generalizations about consonants in the world’s languages. For example, the consonant chart lists only voiceless obstruents, nasal consonants, and an overall larger inventory that includes a few complex consonants (ex: glottal consonants, alveolar lateral flap, voiced labio-velar approximant).Nasalisation
All Kaluli vowels may be nasalised, although nasalisation occurs only on a small percentage of words in the language. Nasalisation does not appear to be predictable, but there is also no clear examples of contrast. Some speakers nasalise words a lot more than others. However, no distinct group of individuals have been identified for consistently using more nasalisation, for either age or geographic group. When a nasalised vowel precedes a d g most speakers pre-nasalise the stop in continuous speech, e.g. /tapo/ ‘all’ is pronounced as tʰ ɑ̃^mbo /atep/ ‘two’ as ⁿ depʼand /wakapi/ ‘angry’ as ãⁿˡ gabi Some speakers maintain the nasalisation on the vowel along with the prenasalised stop, whereas other speakers use an oral vowel with the prenasalised stop. If, however, these words are broken into their component syllables, then the pre-nasalisation disappears, and the nasal vowel remains.Orthography
The Kaluli orthography uses seven vowels. The sixth and seventh vowels are represented by "a:" and "o:". Kaluli does have tone and nasalization that is not symbolized in the orthography as it is presently used. Kaluli words are much longer compared to Tok Pisin words, and this makes it difficult for all Kaluli readers. Verbal morphology in Kaluli is very complicated, and there has been little standardization of rules concerning the writing of these morphological changes.See also
* Kaluli creation myth *References
External links
* {{Languages of Papua New Guinea Bosavi languages Languages of Southern Highlands Province Languages of Western Province (Papua New Guinea)