Overview
There are 15 villages where Mauwake is the main language, seven of them on or near the coast along a stretch of 15km between the Kumil and Nemuru rivers, and up to 12 km inland from the coast. Mauwake is principally spoken about 120 km northwest of Madang town, an area of about 100 square kilometres. Mauwake speakers generally agree that the language migrated to Madang from further inland; a fact supported by the compacted diversity of the coastal area in particular, as well as by the comparatively minor role in Mauwake culture of fishing, which focuses more on gardening for both food and profit. Though not a uniform group socially or politically, Mauwake society typically follows a patrilineal tradition. Villages are based around a system of extended families and clans, with adoption as a common practice. The Madang area was strongly affected by thePhonology
Though it does not exhibit the simplest phonological system of the Papuan languages, Mauwake has a small phonological spread, with only 14 consonants and 5 vowels. It also lacks the glottal stop that is typical of many Papuan languages. The voiced alveolar trill /r/ occurs in free variation with the voiced alveolar tap ¾in word-initial, medial and final positions. While in many Papuan languages, and are allophonic, in Mauwake they are contrastive, except for in a few words such as /eliwa/ ˈliva∼ ˈriva‘good’, possibly due to dialectal variation. The approximants /w/ and /j/ both show allophonic realisation. The alveo-palatal semivowel /j/ is realised as ’instead of in the inland and Ulingan dialects. When followed by the central vowel /a/, or preceded by a word-initial consonant, /i/ and /u/ are realised as the open allophones ªand ‹respectively. All vowels are contrastive in word-initial, medial and final positions, and length is phonemically contrastive in word-initial syllables.Notes
References
* * Kumil languages Languages of Madang Province {{Madang-lang-stub