Nafsan Language
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The Nafsan language, also known as South Efate or Erakor, is a Southern Oceanic language spoken on the island of Efate in central
Vanuatu Vanuatu ( or ; ), officially the Republic of Vanuatu (french: link=no, République de Vanuatu; bi, Ripablik blong Vanuatu), is an island country located in the South Pacific Ocean. The archipelago, which is of volcanic origin, is east of no ...
. , there are approximately 6,000 speakers who live in coastal villages from Pango to Eton. The language's grammar has been studied by Nick Thieberger, who is working on a book of stories and a dictionary of the language. Nafsan is closely related to Nguna and to Lelepa. Based on shared features with southern Vanuatu languages (including echo–subject marking, and the free and preposed 1st-singular-possessive morphemes), Lynch (2001) suggests it could form part of a southern Vanuatu subgroup that includes New Caledonia.


Phonology

Nafsan has a total of 20 phonemes consisting of 15 consonant and 5 vowel sounds.Thieberger (2006: 45). As seen in the above chart, Nafsan's vowel phoneme inventory is that of a five-vowel system; this is one of the most commonly seen vowel inventories in any given language in the world and also especially evident in many
Oceanic languages The approximately 450 Oceanic languages are a branch of the Austronesian languages. The area occupied by speakers of these languages includes Polynesia, as well as much of Melanesia and Micronesia. Though covering a vast area, Oceanic languages ...
. There is a distinction between short and long vowels but it is currently in a process of change that makes its status unclear.Thieberger (2006: 54).


Degemination

In Nafsan, it is typical that two contiguous identical consonants occurring in a utterance undergo a process of degemination to be realised as a single consonant. In (1), the two contiguous identical consonants /n/ result in the phonetic attachment of
demonstrative Demonstratives (abbreviated ) are words, such as ''this'' and ''that'', used to indicate which entities are being referred to and to distinguish those entities from others. They are typically deictic; their meaning depending on a particular frame ...
''ne'' 'this' to the preceding word ''nawen ne''
awene Awena is a weekly independent Kurdish newspaper, published every Tuesday in Sulaymaniyah, Iraqi Kurdistan . Awena means “The Mirror” in Kurdish. The newspaper was founded by Asos Ahmed Hardi, former editor-in-chief of Hawlati ''Hawlati ...
'this sand'.
AD:Addressee deictic DET:Determiner DST:Distant DUR:Durative IR:Irrealis IRR:Irrealis subject NEG:Negative marker PREP:Preposition PS:Perfect subject PSP:Prospective REL:Relativiser RS:Realis subject TR:Transitive marker TS:Transitive suffix DP:Direct possession


Vowel centralisation

High vowels in prepositions acting as a prefix often undergo a process of vowel centralisation to reduce the
unstressed syllable In linguistics, and particularly phonology, stress or accent is the relative emphasis or prominence given to a certain syllable in a word or to a certain word in a phrase or sentence. That emphasis is typically caused by such properties as i ...
. In (2), the high vowel /i/ in the preposition ''ki'' is reduced to when preceding the demonstrative ''nen'' 'that'.


Numerals

The system of numerals in Nafsan is base-5 (
quinary Quinary (base-5 or pental) is a numeral system with five as the base. A possible origination of a quinary system is that there are five digits on either hand. In the quinary place system, five numerals, from 0 to 4, are used to represent an ...
). Numbers two through five are distinct numerals that are then seen repeated in slight variation for the numbers seven to ten. The pattern of the numerals can be seen in the table below.Thieberger (2006: 77). ''Ralim iskei'' can be used as an example to see the method for displaying numbers ten and above in South Efate; the numeral for ten ''ralim'' is followed by its multiplier, which in this case is ''iskei'' for one. The term for and ''atmat'' is added after the multiplier with an additional numeral to form a number such as thirty seven:


Morphosyntax


Adnominal possession

There are two ways of marking
adnominal In linguistics, an adjunct is an optional, or ''structurally dispensable'', part of a sentence, clause, or phrase that, if removed or discarded, will not structurally affect the remainder of the sentence. Example: In the sentence ''John helped Bill ...
possession in Nafsan: through the use of a possessive pronoun (indirect possession), or directly on the noun (direct possession). Indirect possession is used for general possession, while direct possession is used for nouns that are closely associated items (e.g., body parts or products, kinship terms, etc.). Thieberger (2006: 127).


Indirect/general possession

Indirect possession is morphosyntactically represented through the use of the possessive markers ''ni'' (of) or ''knen'' (of it), or of the presence of a possessive pronoun such as ''nakte'' (my/mine). When possession is marked by a possessive pronoun, the pronouns follow the possessed NP: ''ni'' possession: the preposition ''ni'' only occurs when the possessum is a noun. The NP follows the form of ‘possessed ni possessor’. ''knen'' possession: This form is used as an inanimate referent, and often indicates a previously mentioned participant in the discourse. It is positioned following the referent noun.


Direct possession

Direct possession is used for inalienably possessed nouns. This is similar to other languages of Vanuatu that denote inalienable nouns as those that refer to relationships of part-whole association such as kinship terms, body parts or products, and associated parts (such as leaf/stem). These nouns take directly suffixed possession markers, however they can also occur without possessive marking when the possessor is encoded by a noun. The directly possessed (DP) suffix only attaches to the class of directly possessed nouns. For sg and 3p forms, an unpredictable vowel (V) may be inserted to aid DP suffixation. If the directly possessed noun has no possessive suffix, the referent is presumed unknown or disembodied. Lack of possession also occurs when possession is encoded by the possessed noun preceding the possessor. As in the following example, the directly possessed noun ''rait'' (mother) is preceded by the noun ''tesa'' (child).


Negation

Negation in Nafsan occurs in two ways. The first is the use of the intransitive verb ''tik'' (no, nothing), which can be used singularly or paired with the generic proclitic ''i='' (3sgRS). The second, more widely used method, is through the use of discontinuous negative particles ''ta ... mau''. Nafsan also does not differentiate between the negation of predicates and the negation of whole propositions. Thieberger (2006: 78)


Tik

''Tik'' is a verb translated as 'no' or 'nothing' and is used in similar contexts to its English translations.Thieberger (2006: 74)In the following example, ''tik'' is used in the same way as in the English translation. Tik is also able to be made into a transitive verb through the addition of the transitive suffix ''-ki.'' When this occurs, the new gloss is 'to not have'. As such, in the following example there is no instance of a possessive verb being negated, instead the verb in the sentence (''tik-ki)'' is negative in meaning. Another verb that is negative in meaning is ''tap'', meaning 'to not do something'.


Negative particles

The other way of negating predicates in Nafsan is through the use of two negative particles: ''ta(p)...mau.'' There is free variation between the use of ''ta'' and ''tap,'' ie the usage does not change according to any specific environment. Thieberger (2004: 250)''Ta(p)'' is used preceding the proposition to be negated, and ''mau'' follows at the end of the sentence. The following examples show a positive sentence, which is then negated in the second example. Sometimes, in the casual speech of young people predominantly, the second negative particle ''mau'' is left off, as seen in the following example. The ''ta'' marker can also act a durative marker, so in negative sentences where both uses of ''ta'' are present it can result in two different readings of a sentence. In the first example below, reading the first ''ta'' as the negative one results in the whole proposition being negated. In the second example, exactly the same sentence, reading the second ''ta'' as the negative results in only the final verb (''puet'' 'to take') being negated, thus creating a different meaning entirely.


Demonstratives

There are three common forms of demonstratives in Nafsan: ''go'' 'that, near addressee', ''ne'' 'this', and ''nen'' 'that'. Similar to other Southern Oceanic languages, these forms serve both spatio-temporal and discourse deictic functions.Thieberger (2006: 149-153) The form ''go'' 'that' is addressee-anchored referent to a spatial location nearer to the addressee from the speaker's perspective or something previously said by the addressee. This encoding is found in other
languages of Vanuatu The Republic of Vanuatu has the world's highest linguistic density per capita. For a population of 0.3 million, Vanuatu is home to 138 indigenous Oceanic languages. In addition, modern history has brought new languages, including the country's t ...
, such as
Ske Ske is an Icelandic band whose origins can be traced back to 1992, when a band called ''Skárren ekkert'' was founded by Eiríkur Þorleifsson, Frank Hall and Guðmundur Steingrímsson, and joined by Hrannar Ingimarsson in 1998. History In 1999 ...
, that do not belong to the Central Vanuatu subgroup. There is an ability for syntactic ambiguity stemming from the two common functions encoded by demonstratives resulting in dual interpretations possible in some utterances. This is shown in example (16) and (17) where the noun ''kal'' 'digging stick' used with the demonstrative ''go'' can mean 'the digging stick near you' from the spatial sense of the form or 'the digging stick you talked about' from the discourse sense of the form. In Nafsan, demonstratives have a noun-demonstrative word order which is typical of Austronesian languages according to the World Atlas of Language Structures. They typically appear in two locations within a sentence as shown in examples (18) and (19); as a modifier of the noun phrase and following a directional adverb, respectively. Otherwise, demonstratives must undergo nominalisation through the addition of the prefix ''te-'' (see 3.4.1) as they cannot occur as the only exponent of a noun phrase. While demonstratives can co-occur with lexical nouns and focal pronouns, they cannot do so with clitic pronouns in Nafsan. The form ''nen'' 'that' frequently occurs in
collocation In corpus linguistics, a collocation is a series of words or terms that co-occur more often than would be expected by chance. In phraseology, a collocation is a type of compositional phraseme, meaning that it can be understood from the words th ...
with the subordinator ''kin'' to create the English equivalent 'that which' as seen in example (19). As the form ''nen'' 'that' has the potentially to act as a demonstrative or a relativiser, the pause given between the two forms ''nen'' and ''kin'' indicates that it is likely the form ''nen'' 'that' is acting as a demonstrative that is modifying the noun phrase in this context.Thieberger (2006: 300) The demonstratives ''ne'' 'this', and ''nen'' 'that' also often occur in collocation with the noun m''al'' 'time' to create the forms ''malne'' 'this time', as seen in example (20) and ''malnen'' 'that time'.


Distant Clitic

The distinction between demonstrative forms ''ne'' 'this', and ''nen'' 'that' is a result of the distance-encoding
clitic In morphology and syntax, a clitic (, backformed from Greek "leaning" or "enclitic"Crystal, David. ''A First Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics''. Boulder, CO: Westview, 1980. Print.) is a morpheme that has syntactic characteristics of a w ...
''=n.'' This clitic can occur with several word classes as shown in the table below. Furthermore, like spatio-temporal demonstratives, it also has the deictic function of acting as a referent to previous parts of a discourse as shown in example (21).Thieberger (2006: 124)


Presentative Demonstrative

The presentative morpheme is a demonstrative in Nafsan which has no paradigmatic relationship with the demonstrators detailed above. The form ''kia'' is often collocated with
interrogatives An interrogative word or question word is a function word used to ask a question, such as ''what, which'', ''when'', ''where'', ''who, whom, whose'', ''why'', ''whether'' and ''how''. They are sometimes called wh-words, because in English most of ...
such as, such as ''fei kia'' 'who here', and typically places emphasis on the preceding nominal or utterance, as shown in example (22). This function of drawing attention to its preceding forms has been used alongside
fillers In processed animal foods, a filler is an ingredient added to provide dietary fiber, bulk or some other non-nutritive purpose. Products like corncobs, feathers, soy, cottonseed hulls, peanut hulls, citrus pulp, screening, weeds, straw, and cere ...
''iwel, gawan, tkanwan'' which are all used to mean 'thus', 'that's the way', or 'like that', the latter of which is used at the end of the story as seen in example (23). The emphatic purpose of this demonstrative is similar to those found in other languages of Vanuatu such as the form ''na-'' in Ske in example (24).Johnson (2014: 207)


Nominalisation


'Te-' Nominalisation

Nominalisation of demonstratives, verbs, possessives, ordinal numbers, quantifiers, and nouns occurs in Nafsan through the attachment of the determiner prefix ''te-''. The productive process of ''te-''nominalisation allows for the derivation of a large class of demonstrative pronouns.Thieberger (2006: 142) Example (25) reflects how addressee deixis is encoded in the demonstratives that have undergone ''te-''nominalisation. The prefix ''ka-'' is attached to nominals greater than one in Nafsan to form ordinal numbers which can then further gain the prefix ''te-'' to form a demonstrative as shown in example (26).Thieberger (2006: 144)


Pronoun and person marker

There are mainly two classes of
pronoun In linguistics and grammar, a pronoun (abbreviated ) is a word or a group of words that one may substitute for a noun or noun phrase. Pronouns have traditionally been regarded as one of the parts of speech, but some modern theorists would not co ...
in Nafsan. The free pronoun and the bound pronoun.Thieberger (2006: 103)


Free pronoun

The free pronouns incorporate three area, demonstrative pronouns, focal pronouns(function as both subject and object) and the oblique free pronoun (in either possessive or benefactive form).


Focal pronoun

The focal pronoun (Lynch, 2000), also known as an independent pronoun (Crowley, 1998), functions as both the subject and object in an argument. It allows the pronoun itself to be the NP on their own unlike the bound pronouns which have to be attached to a verb. Focal pronouns express singular and plural but do not distinguish dual number. :1a) subject role :1b) object role The examples (1a)& (1b) show the 1st person singular pronoun ''kineu'' performed as the subject and object correspondingly. And the following is a list of the focal pronouns in Nafsan.


Oblique free pronoun

Oblique free pronoun function in
possessive A possessive or ktetic form (abbreviated or ; from la, possessivus; grc, κτητικός, translit=ktētikós) is a word or grammatical construction used to indicate a relationship of possession in a broad sense. This can include strict owne ...
also
benefactive case The benefactive case (abbreviated , or sometimes when it is a core argument) is a grammatical case used where English would use "for", "for the benefit of", or "intended for", e.g. "She opened the door ''for Tom''" or "This book is ''for Bob''" ...
. For the possessive pronoun, it follows the possessed NP, generally made up of the preposition -''nig'' ‘from’/ ‘of’. :2) Possessive pronouns follow the possessed NP There are variation forms of the suffix -''nig'' , when it combines with an unstressed syllable, the high vowel will become lower. E.g. (''niger → neger)''


= Benefactive

= In the benefactive, the argument shares the same possessive morphology, yet the possessive morpheme is used in the pre-verbal position to express the beneficiary. The following example shows how beneficiary expressed by a pre-verbal position.


Bound Pronoun

Bound pronoun comprises subject proclitics, object suffix for direct object and direct possessive. For the subject proclitics, there is neither separate set of dual object, nor oblique form. The obligatory subject proclitic pronouns are being seen as the arguments of the verb. For the pronominal suffixes of bound pronouns, the plural form is used to express any number that is greater than one.


Bound subject pronouns

The proclitic subject pronoun cannot stand alone without attaching to the first element of the Verb compound. They are considered to be
clitic In morphology and syntax, a clitic (, backformed from Greek "leaning" or "enclitic"Crystal, David. ''A First Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics''. Boulder, CO: Westview, 1980. Print.) is a morpheme that has syntactic characteristics of a w ...
s since they can attach to any part of the Verb compound. Subject proclitics happened in three archetypes, realis, irrealis and perfect. The subject proclitic represents the subject argument since it is the only obligatory element in the sentence except for the verb.


= Realis/irrealis pronominal

=
Proclitic In morphology and syntax, a clitic (, backformed from Greek "leaning" or "enclitic"Crystal, David. ''A First Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics''. Boulder, CO: Westview, 1980. Print.) is a morpheme that has syntactic characteristics of a wo ...
subjects distinguish realis and irrealis situation. The realis is unmarked, and the irrealis being marked in the subject to show the action is yet to be realised, including most of the future events but not all, all the imperatives and hortatives. There is a strong preference for the subject of desideratives, achievement and predicates to be using irrealis form. :4)realis and irrealis paradigm The examples (4) show all realis form of pronouns in all cases except the subject of the verb mai ‘to come’ which is appeared in a desiderative complement.


= Perfect pronominal

= When dealing with aspectual past (event that is over), regarding the speaking event and past time reference, the perfect form of proclitic is used. Generally, perfect proclitics directly followed by the perfective particle pe, yet it is not a necessary criterion. Notably, perfect proclitics never occur in imperatives. Perfect proclitics can be found in narratives that deal with long events like World War 2. :5) narrative The example(5) shows the perfect proclitics being used to refer to those who are long dead in a narrative sentence. Traditional stories in Nafsan often use perfect proclitic form as they are set in the past. The example(6) of an extract of a custom story telling also shows that perfective particle ''pe'' is not necessary to appear in perfect proclitic sentence. :6) Storytelling


Bound Object pronoun

There are two separate types of object suffix, can be distinguished by the roles they encoded and the host they attached to. One type is for direct objects, the direct object suffixes attached to the object of the predicator to encode it. The other type is for oblique objects, the oblique object suffixes encode typically the location and the case of semi-transitive verbs. Based on the semantics of the semi-transitive verbs in the oblique case, the oblique object suffixes apply to movement to, at, or from a location. There are list of distinctive bound suffix being used in two types of object in table.2.


= Direct object

= Object suffixes encode the object of derived transitive verbs, ambitransitive verbs, ditransitive verbs and of the preposition ''-ki''. To reference an object in Nafsan can be either by an object suffix or a lexical NP. Therefore, object suffix cannot appeared in the Verb Complex while there is a referential lexical NP for object indication. 7) transitive verb/ preposition ''-ki'' This is an example (7) showing how object suffix used in transitive verb. The intransitive verb ''pes-kerai'' takes the transitivising suffix ''-ki'' to become transitive which allows it to take the object suffix ''-k'' in the first use. However, to emphasize the object, the last clause used the focal pronoun ''ag'' ‘you(singular)’ instead of the object suffix. 8) ambitransitive verb In general, ambitransitive verbs requires a transitive suffix before the addition of the object suffix. The example (8) shows that transitive suffix ''-e'' is added before the object suffix ''-r'' occurred. 9) ditransitive verb The object suffix indicates the recipient when it is with a ditransitive verb. The example (9) shows when the suffix ''-r'' is used to encode the addresses.


= Oblique object

= The oblique suffix has a locational meaning. The oblique case can also be indicating temporal and spatial references. The example shows the suffix -''wes'' encoded the day that the race was held. 10) oblique suffix


Bound direct possessive pronouns

The direct possessive suffix can only be attached to direct possessed nouns and reflexive/reciprocal morpheme yet not being a clitic. The 3 person singular is the most common form of direct possessive pronoun being found, even though there is other direct possessive pronoun see table.2. The following example(11) shows the 3sg direct possessive suffix -''r''. 11) direct possessive suffix


Common abbreviations

Below is a table explaining the common abbreviations used in negation examples above:Thieberger (2006: xviii-xix)


Access to resources

Thieberger's field recordings have been archived with
Paradisec The Pacific and Regional Archive for Digital Sources in Endangered Cultures (PARADISEC) is a cross-institutional project that supports work on endangered languages and cultures of the Pacific and the region around Australia. They digitise reel-to ...
:
summary of the collection of materials in Nafsan

listing of all material available via the ''Open Language Archives Community'' for Nafsan


Notes

* Pages from: * Other references:


References

* Anon. 1868. ''Nalag nig Efat''. Trans. D. Morrison. Sydney: Mason, Firt, nigar asler (Mason, Firth and Co). * Anon. 1892. ''Tusi nalag Efate Niu Ebrites''. Sydney: F. Cunninghame and Co. * Anon. 1979. ''Natus nalag'' (213 pp). * Bible. 1864. ''Nadus iskei nig Fat''. Aneityum: Mission Press. * Bible. 1866. ''Nafsanwi nig Iesu Krist nag Mark''. Trans. D. Morrison. Sydney: Sheriff and Downing. * Bible. 1874. ''Kenesis natus a bei nag Moses ki mtir i''. Trans. Cosh, J. Sydney: British and Foreign Bible Society. * Bible. 1875? ''Nafisan nafousien''. Sydney: F. Cunninghame and Co. * Bible. 1883. ''The Gospel according to Luke''. Trans. Macdonald, D.D. Melbourne: M.L. Hutchinson. * Bible. 1885. ''The Gospel according to John, Tus Nanrognrogona Uia ni Iesu Kristo nag Ioane i mitiria''. Trans. Mackenzie, J., Macdonald, D.D. Sydney: F. Cunninghame and Co. * Bible. 1919. '' Natus bei ni nafisan ni Efate''. Sydney: Epworth Press. * Bible. 1919. ''Tusi tab fao (New Testament)''. Trans. Mackenzie, J., Macdonald, D.D. Melbourne: British and Foreign Bible Society. * Bible. 1923. ''Scripture History''. Sydney: Epworth Printing and Publishing House. * Bible. 1923. ''Nafakoron ni aliat. Erakor Efate, New Hebrides''. Nouméa: Imprimerie A.-L. Laubreaux. * Bible. n.d. ''Nawisien nig Nagmer Apostol''. Sydney: F. Cunninghame and Co. * Clark, Ross. 1973. Transitivity and case in eastern Oceanic languages. ''Oceanic Linguistics'' 12(1–2). 559–606. * ––––– 1978. The New Hebridean outliers. In Wurm, S.A. and L.Carrington, (eds.), ''Second International Conference on Austronesian Linguistics: proceedings''. Fascicle 2: eastern Austronesian. (Pacific Linguistics Series) Department of Linguistics, Research School of Pacific Studies, The Australian National University. 911–928. * ––––– 1982. "Necessary" and "unnecessary" borrowing. In Halim, A. (ed.), ''Papers from the Third International Conference on Austronesian Linguistics''. Vol.3: Accent on variety. C 76 ed. (Pacific Linguistics Series): Department of Linguistics, Research School of Pacific Studies, The Australian National University. 137–143. * ––––– 1985. The Efate dialects. ''Te Reo'' 28.:3–35. * ––––– 1996. Linguistic consequences of the Kuwae eruption. In J. M. Davidson, G. Irwin, B. F. Leach, A. Pawley and D. Brown (eds.), ''Oceanic culture history: essays in honour of Roger Green''. New Zealand Journal of Archaeology Special Publication. 275–285. * ––––– n.d. The Efate-Tongoa dialects (Ms). * Codrington, Robert Henry (R. H.). 1885. ''The Melanesian Languages''. Oxford: Clarendon Press. * Crowley, Terry. 1998. ''An Erromangan (Sye) Grammar''. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press. * Lynch, John. 2000. South Efate phonological history. ''Oceanic Linguistics'' 39(2):320–338. * ––––– 2000. ''A grammar of Anejom''. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics. * ––––– 2001. ''The linguistic history of Southern Vanuatu''. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University. * ––––– 2004. The Efate-Erromango Problem in Vanuatu Subgrouping. ''Oceanic Linguistics'' 43(2):311–338. * Thieberger, Nicholas. 2004
''Topics in the grammar and documentation of South Efate, an Oceanic language of Central Vanuatu''
PhD thesis, Department of Linguistics and Applied Linguistics, University of Melbourne. * ––––– 2006a
''A Grammar of South Efate: An Oceanic Language of Vanuatu''
Oceanic Linguistics Special Publication, No. 33. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. * ––––– 2006b. The benefactive construction in South Efate. ''Oceanic Linguistics'', Volume 45, no. 2, 297-310. * ––––– 2007. The demise of serial verbs in South Efate. Diana Eades, John Lynch and Jeff Siegel (eds.), ''Language Description, History and Development: Linguistic Indulgence in Memory of Terry Crowley''. Amsterdam: Benjamins. 237-251. * ––––– 2011a
nig Efat''
Melbourne: The author. . * ––––– 2011b
dictionary of South Efate''
Melbourne: The author. . * ––––– 2012. Mood and Transitivity in South Efate. ''Oceanic Linguistics''. Volume 51, no. 2, 387-401. * Thieberger, Nicholas and Chris Ballard. 2008. Daniel Macdonald and the 'compromise literary dialect' in Efate, central Vanuatu. ''Oceanic Linguistics'', Volume 47, no.2: 365-382 * Payne, Thomas Edward. 1997.
Describing morphosyntax: a guide for field linguists
'' Cambridge, U.K.; New York: Cambridge University Press.


External links


''Topics in the grammar and documentation of South Efate, an Oceanic language of Central Vanuatu'' by Nicholas ThiebergerA collection of texts in the language with media, by Nicholas Thieberger
{{DEFAULTSORT:Efate, South Central Vanuatu languages Languages of Vanuatu