The Sepik or Sepik River languages are a
family of some 50
Papuan languages spoken in the
Sepik river basin of northern
Papua New Guinea, proposed by
Donald Laycock in 1965 in a somewhat more limited form than presented here. They tend to have simple phonologies, with few consonants or vowels and usually no tones.
The best known Sepik language is
Iatmül. The most populous are Iatmül's fellow
Ndu languages Abelam
The Abelam are a people who live in East Sepik Province of Papua New Guinea. They are a farming society in which giant yams play a significant role. They live in the Prince Alexander Mountains near the north coast of the island. Their language b ...
and
Boiken, with about 35,000 speakers each.
The Sepik languages, like their
Ramu neighbors, appear to have three-vowel systems, , that distinguish only
vowel height in a
vertical vowel system. Phonetic are a result of palatal and labial
assimilation
Assimilation may refer to:
Culture
*Cultural assimilation, the process whereby a minority group gradually adapts to the customs and attitudes of the prevailing culture and customs
**Language shift, also known as language assimilation, the progre ...
to adjacent consonants. It is suspected that the Ndu languages may reduce this to a two-vowel system, with
epenthetic (Foley 1986).
Classification
The Sepik languages consist of two branches of Kandru's Laycock's
Sepik–Ramu proposal, the Sepik subphylum and Leonhard Schultze stock. According to
Malcolm Ross, the most promising external relationship is not with Ramu, ''pace'' Laycock, but with the
Torricelli family.
Palmer (2018) classifies the
Leonhard Schultze languages as an independent language phylum.
Usher (2020)
In the cladogram below, the small, closely related families in bold at the ends of the branches are covered in separate articles.
Foley (2018)
Foley (2018) provides the following classification, with 6 main branches recognized.
;Sepik family
*
Middle Sepik languages
**
Ndu languages
**
Nukuma languages
The Nukuma languages are a small family of three clearly related languages:
* Kwoma
*Kwanga–Mende
** Kwanga
** Seim
They are generally classified among the Sepik languages of northern Papua New Guinea; Malcolm Ross places them in a Middle Se ...
**
Yerakai (Garamambu)
**
Yellow River languages
*
Tama languages
*
Sepik Hill languages
The Sepik Hill languages form the largest and most ramified branch of the Sepik languages of northern Papua New Guinea. They are spoken along the southern margin of the Sepik floodplain in the foothills of Central Range of south-central East Se ...
**
Eastern (Alamblak)
**
Central
Central is an adjective usually referring to being in the center of some place or (mathematical) object.
Central may also refer to:
Directions and generalised locations
* Central Africa, a region in the centre of Africa continent, also known as ...
(Bahinemo)
**Western:
Saniyo-Hiyewe,
Paka
Paka may refer to:
Places Europe
* Paka (river), a river in northern Slovenia
* Paka, Mislinja, a settlement in the Municipality of Mislinja, Slovenia
* Paka pri Predgradu, a settlement in the Municipality of Kočevje, Slovenia
* Paka pri Velenj ...
(
Setiali),
Gabiano
Gabiano (Gabian in Piedmontese) is a rural ''comune'' in the northwest of the province of Alessandria, some west of Casale Monferrato. This area straddles the lowland immediately south of the Po and the furthest extension of the Monferrato hi ...
(
Niksek),
Piame,
Bikaru,
Umairof,
Hewa
*
Ram languages
*
Upper Sepik languages
**
Wogamus languages
**
Iwam languages
**
Abau
*
Amal Amal may refer to:
* Amal (given name)
* Åmål, a small town in Sweden
* Amal Movement, a Lebanese political party
** Amal Militia, Amal Movement's defunct militia
* Amal language of Papua New Guinea
* ''Amal'' (film), 2007, directed by Richi ...
Like the neighboring
Torricelli languages, but unlike the rest of the Sepik languages, the
Ram and
Yellow River languages do not have clause chaining constructions (for an example of a clause chaining construction in a
Trans-New Guinea language, see ''
Kamano language#Clause chaining''). Foley (2018) suggests that many of the Ram and Yellow River-speaking peoples may have in fact been Torricelli speakers who were later assimilated by Sepik-speaking peoples.
Foley classifies the
Leonhard Schultze languages separately as an independent language family.
Pronouns
The pronouns Ross reconstructs for proto-Sepik are:
[Ross (2005)]
:
Note the similarities of the dual and plural suffixes with those of the
Torricelli languages.
Ross reconstructs two sets of pronouns for "proto–Upper Sepik" (actually, Abau–Iwam and Wogamusin (Tama)). These are the default set (Set I), and a set with "certain interpersonal and pragmatic functions" (table 1.27):
:
:
Most Sepik languages have reflexes of proto-Sepik *na ~ *an for 1sg, *no for 1pl, and *ni for 2sg.
Cognates
Proto-Sepik forms reconstructed by Foley (2018) that are widespread across the family:
:
Typological overview
Even internally within Sepik subgroups, languages in the Sepik family can have vastly different typological profiles varying from
isolating to
agglutinative, with example languages listed below.
:
In contrast, languages within the
Ramu,
Lower Sepik, and
Yuat families all have relatively uniform typological profiles.
Gender
Like the isolate
Taiap, but unlike the
Lower Sepik-Ramu,
Yuat, and
Upper Yuat families, Sepik languages distinguish masculine and feminine
genders, with the feminine gender being the more common default unmarked gender. Proto-Sepik gender-marking suffixes are reconstructed by Foley (2018) as:
:
In Sepik languages, gender-marking suffixes are not always attached to the head noun, and can also be affixed to other roots in the phrase.
Typically, the genders of lower animals and inanimate objects are determined according to shape and size: big or long objects are typically classified as masculine (as a result of
phallic imagery), while small or short objects are typically classified as feminine. In some languages, objects can be classified as either masculine or feminine, depending on the physical characteristics intended for emphasis. To illustrate, below is an example in
Abau, an
Upper Sepik language:
*''youk se'' ‘paddle ’ focuses on the ''length'' of the paddle
*''youk ke'' ‘paddle ’ focuses on the ''flat nature'' of the two-dimensional paddle blade
Except for the
Middle Sepik languages, most Sepik languages overtly mark nouns using gender suffixes.
See also
*
Papuan languages
*
Sepik–Ramu languages
The Sepik–Ramu languages are an obsolete language family of New Guinea linking the Sepik, Ramu, Nor–Pondo (Lower Sepik), Leonhard Schultze (Walio–Papi) and Yuat families, together with the Taiap language isolate, and proposed by Donal ...
*
Donald Laycock
*
William A. Foley
William A. Foley (''William Auguste "Bill" Foley;'' born 1949) is an American linguist and professor at Columbia University He was previously located at the University of Sydney. He specializes in Papuan and Austronesian languages. Foley develo ...
References
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External links
Sepik languages database at TransNewGuinea.org
{{language families
Language families
Languages of Momase Region
Papuan languages
Vertical vowel systems