Roviana (language)
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Roviana is a member of the North West Solomonic branch of Oceanic languages. It is spoken around
Roviana Roviana is a member of the North West Solomonic branch of Oceanic languages. It is spoken around Roviana and Vonavona lagoons at the north central New Georgia in the Solomon Islands. It has 10,000 first-language speakers and an additional 16,000 ...
and Vonavona lagoons at the north central New Georgia in the
Solomon Islands Solomon Islands is an island country consisting of six major islands and over 900 smaller islands in Oceania, to the east of Papua New Guinea and north-west of Vanuatu. It has a land area of , and a population of approx. 700,000. Its capita ...
. It has 10,000 first-language speakers and an additional 16,000 people mostly over 30 years old speak it as a second language (Raymond 2005). In the past, Roviana was widely used as a trade language and further used as a lingua franca especially for church purposes in the Western Province but now it is being replaced by the Solomon Islands
Pijin Pijin (Solomons Pidgin or Neo-Solomonic) is a language spoken in Solomon Islands. It is closely related to Tok Pisin of Papua New Guinea and Bislama of Vanuatu; these might be considered dialects of a single language. It is also related to To ...
. Few published studies on Roviana language include: Ray (1926), Waterhouse (1949) and Todd (1978) contain the syntax of Roviana language. Corston-Oliver (1996 & 2002) discuss about the ergativity in Roviana. Todd (2000) and Ross (1988) discuss the clause structure in Roviana. Schuelke (2020) discusses grammatical relations and syntactic ergativity in Roviana.


Phonology and orthography


Consonants

The Roviana alphabet is based on the Latin alphabet and consists of the above letters. allophones: ( voiced / V_V → 'bathing' / _V back→ 'strong' is lightly trilled in unstressed syllables and strongly trilled in stressed syllables.


Vowels

V → V: / stressed Vs V → Ṽ / _N / _V →


Phonotactics

(C) V (C represents a single consonant and V represents a monophthong or diphthong.)


Diphthongs

There are five diphthongs; , , , , and The majority of lexical morphemes consist of two or three syllables. Lexical morphemes consisting of four syllables or a single syllable are uncommon whereas morphemes consisting of more than four syllables have never occurred.


Stress

Stress is not contrastive. # Roots of one syllable, with the exception of prepositions and articles; ## 'go', 'come' # Roots of two syllables are stressed on the initial syllables; ## 'talk', 'taro' # Roots of more than two syllables are stressed on the first and second syllables; ## 'blood', 'cigarette' The nominalising infix occurs within the first syllable of the root, it always receives stress; : 'eat', 'food' All material which precedes the root (prefixes and reduplicated material) is assigned stress as if it were a single root; : 'fight', 'chair' The transitive suffix takes stress; : 'hit him/her/it' Other suffixes, however, do not take stress and are ignored in determining the placement of stress. Material following the root is not treated as a unit for the purpose of stress assignment; : 'see us (EXClusive)' The suffix does not receive stress. Stress is assigned independently to each root in a compound: : → 'church ('pray' + 'house')'


Grammar

Roviana word order is
verb–subject–object A verb () is a word (part of speech) that in syntax generally conveys an action (''bring'', ''read'', ''walk'', ''run'', ''learn''), an occurrence (''happen'', ''become''), or a state of being (''be'', ''exist'', ''stand''). In the usual descri ...
(VSO).


Pronouns


Pronominal suffixes

These are suffixed to direct/
inalienable possession In linguistics, inalienable possession (abbreviated ) is a type of possession in which a noun is obligatorily possessed by its possessor. Nouns or nominal affixes in an inalienable possession relationship cannot exist independently or be "alie ...
s such as kin terms and parts of the body.


Preposed possessor

These are suffixed to indirect or alienable possessions:


Postposed possessor

These are suffixed to a second kind of indirect or alienable possessions: The possessive for food is prefixed ge or ga: The possessive for desire is prefixed o or e:


Interrogative pronouns


Indefinite pronouns


Demonstrative pronouns


Nouns

There are two classes of nouns in Roviana. The first includes kin terms, body parts and some local nouns. These are used with suffixed personal pronouns such as: : - 'my mother'
''mata-na'' - 'her/his /its eyes' Nouns of the second class are used with separate possessive words such as: : - 'my book'
''nana vetu'' - 'his/her/its house' Local nouns are formed from verbs by the suffix 'ana'. They denote a place where an action is performed: : - 'sit'
''habo-habotu-ana'' - 'chair' Nouns are formed from verbs & adjectives by the infix . When the verb or adjective begins with a vowel, is prefixed: : - 'to walk'
''inene'' - 'a journey' When the verb or adjective begins a consonant in is infixed after the first consonant: : - 'sing'
''kinera'' -'song' A noun can also be formed by in from the causative or reciprocal forms of verbs: : -'to know'
''vagila'' - 'to show'
''vinagila-gila'' - 'a sign'


Demonstratives

Articles in Roviana occur before the noun, marking the noun phrase as common or proper. Roviana has definite and indefinite articles. The indefinite article is 'na': na can also be exchanged with sa 'na' and 'sa' may also be applied with pl.nouns: The definite article is 'sa' The personal articles are the non- absolutive 'e' and absolutive 'se'. E is commonly used with a proper noun in the subjective case, 'se' in the objective:


Syntax


Imperative and interrogative sentences


Imperative sentences

An actor can optionally be omitted (1); otherwise there is no structural difference from a declarative clause (2).


Interrogative sentences

Yes-no questions are structurally identical to declaratives, but have a distinct rising intonation. The two single word answers are 'yes' and 'no'. Wh-questions or information questions contain an interrogative phrase in focus position (i.e. clause initial) and optionally is followed by the focal particle si; for example, : 'where?' : 'who?' : 'how many/much?' : 'what?' : 'how?, why?' Interrogative morphemes are frequently preceded by the disjunctive particle na; : 'why?' : 'what?'


Complex sentences


Coordination

Coordination is marked by a conjunction between the two clauses; the conjunction belongs with the second clause; :''ba'' 'but' :''ke'' 'so, thus' :''me(ke)'' 'and' (''me'' is far more common in texts) :''na'' 'or' :''pude'' 'purposive' :''tiqe'' 'then'


Subordination

Three major classes are relative clauses, complement clauses and adverbial clauses.


=Relative clauses

= Relative clauses follow the head N and are introduced by the invariant relative clause marker sapu. They may only be formed on A, S and O and on the argument nominal of a
verbless clause Verbless clauses are comprised, semantically, of a predicand, expressed or not, and a verbless predicate. For example, the underlined string in 'With the children so sick,'we've been at home a lot'' means the same thing as the clause ''the chil ...
. More detailed explanation is below.


=Complement clauses

= Complement clauses are introduced by the subordinator sapu; otherwise, no different from the main clauses. Complement clauses occur after Vs of cognition, speech or perception, whereas subordinate clauses (with the exception of relative clauses) occur in focus position; Complement clauses are considered to be intermediate between main and subordinate clauses. In texts, complement clauses in Roviana are rare. Direct quotation is more frequent than subordination to higher predicates of information, while epistemic modals (e.g. 'maybe', 'EMPH) are often used rather than subordination to higher predicates of cognition (ergativity).


=Adverbial clauses

= Adverbial clauses occur in focus position and never contain new mentions in core argument positions. They are introduced by a subordinator and followed by the focal particle si, a consequence of being in focus position; : 'after' : 'if' : 'while, when' Subordination is extremely limited in Roviana. Subordinate clauses never contain other subordinate clauses, nor do they contain relative clauses. Similarly, relative clauses do not contain either subordinate clauses or relative clauses.


Ergativity

The subject of an intransitive verb has the same morphological marker as a direct object, and a different morphological marker from the subject of a transitive V. A- transitive subject, O- transitive direct object, S- intransitive subject respectively. Whether Roviana is an ergative language or not is argumentative, however, relative clauses in this language can be categorised by ergativity, so it can be described as an ergative language.


=Relative clauses

= Relative clauses in Roviana follow the head N and are introduced by an invariant relative marker sapu. The coreferent of the N in the matrix clause is never overt within the relative clause. This feature may be according to whether the notional coreferent within the relative clause is A, S or O.


Relative clauses on A

Relative clauses on A use clausal nominalisation. The notional A has no overt realisation. The nominalised verb in a relative clause on A carries a suffix 'NSUF', which is also used to index the possessor in possessives; When the O in the relative clause is a proper N, it is marked with the article e;


Relative clauses on S

Given that the coreferent in the relative clause does not have overt realisation;


Relative clauses on O

In relative clauses on O, A is overt in the relative clause and full verbal morphology is used to index the O. The nominal suffixes are not used in relative clauses on O; In the context of a relative clause which is by definition subordinate, e is glossed simply ART, since it is used with proper Ns which are A or O. These following two examples have got e; the first one is on A whereas the second one is on O.


'WHEN' clauses

'When' clauses are introduced by the subordinator 'time' or the syncopated form , but they do not specify the precise nature of the temporal relation involved;


'AFTER' clauses

The event of an 'after' clause is introduced by the subordinator 'finish' and temporally precedes the event of the matrix clause to which it is syntactically subordinate;


'CONTEMPORANEOUS' clauses

'Contemporaneous' clauses have imperfective aspect, usually accompanied by reduplication of the verb, with the meaning 'While ...-ing' or 'As ...-ing';


Conditionals

In a conditional, the protasis is a subordinate clause. As with the subordinate clauses, there is a neutral system of case marking;


External links

*
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 ...
ha
a number of Open Access collections
that include Rovianan materials, including the Arthur Cappell collections
AC1AC2
and Don Laycock collection
DL1
.


Footnotes


References

* Corston, Simon H. (1996) Ergativity in Roviana, Solomon Islands. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics. * Corston-Oliver, Simon H. (2002) 'Roviana.' In John Lynch, Malcolm Ross & Terry Crowley (eds.) The Oceanic languages. London: Curzon. lengthy sketch grammar of the language.* Hall, Allen.(2000). A Roviana and English dictionary/Allen and others for New Georgia, Solomon Islands. Brisbane.Jollen Press. * Ray, Sidney H. (1926) A comparative study of the Melanesian island languages. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. riefly describes a few key features of the grammar of Roviana.* Ross, Malcolm D. (1988) Proto Oceanic and the Austronesian languages of western Melanesia. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics.
p240–247 discusses clause structure in Roviana. P, or p, is the sixteenth letter of the Latin alphabet, used in the modern English alphabet, the alphabets of other western European languages and others worldwide. Its name in English is ''pee'' (pronounced ), plural ''pees''. History The ...
* Todd, Evelyn M. (1978) 'Roviana syntax.' In Stephen A. Wurm & Lois Carrington (eds.) Second International Conference on Austronesian Linguistics: Proceedings fascicle 2. Eastern Austronesian. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics. pp1035–1042. * Todd, Evelyn M. (2000) 'Roviana clauses.' In Bill Palmer & Paul Geraghty (eds.) SICOL. Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Oceanic Linguistics: vol.2. Historical and descriptive studies. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics. pp137–154. * Waterhouse, J.H.L. (1928) A Roviana and English dictionary. Sydney: Epworth. (Revised and enlarged 1949 by L.M. Jones and edited by Loata Parkinson in 2005

{{Austronesian languages Northwest Solomonic languages Languages of the Solomon Islands Languages of Papua New Guinea