Alamblak language
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The Alamblak language is spoken in the Angoram District of East Sepik Province, Papua New Guinea. One dialect is spoken in nine villages on the Middle Karawari and Wagupmeri rivers, and another in four villages near Kuvanmas Lake. It is the easternmost of the Sepik Hill languages.


Geographic distribution


Dialects/Varieties

There are two major dialects of Alamblak: Karawari and Kuvenmas. These dialects demonstrate extensive differences in phonology, grammar, and lexicon. Speakers of the Karawari dialect live along the Karawari and Wagupmeri Rivers, and those of the Kuvenmas dialect live along the southern shore of Lake Kuvenmas and eastward. In 1984, it was noted by linguist Les Bruce that there are approximately 800 speakers of Karawari and 400 speakers of Kuvenmas. Speakers of the Karawari dialect constitute four of six Alamblak social groups: Këmbrofm, Marhëmbom, Yimanifm, and Bnarm. The Këmbrofm people live in the villages of Tanganbit (Meingenda), Amongabi, Morwok, and in some traditional hamlet sites among the hills between the Karawari River and the Black Water River to the west. The Marhëmbom people live in the villages of Maramba and Chimbut. The Yimanifm people live in the villages of Skayum (Sikaium) and Barabijim (Barapidjin) on the Wagupmeri River and Gitfat Creek. The Bnarm people live in the villages of Yanitabak (Yenitabak) and Denyik (Danyig). Speakers of the Kuvenmas dialect constitute two of the six Alamblak social groups: Bahwidëh and Wolpam. The Bahwidëh and Wolpam people live in the villages of Tarakai, Sevenbuk, Anganamei, and Mariamei.


Phonology


Consonants

Unlike the Tama languages and Sare language, Sare, Alamblak does not distinguish between /r/ and /l/.


Vowels


Syllable structure

There are three basic syllable patterns in Alamblak: # C(C) (C)V(C) (C) # V(C) (C) # CVV(C)


Typology

Alamblak is a Polysynthetic language, polysynthetic language. It is highly Agglutination, agglutinative with some fusional elements. It exhibits several linguistic features that generally indicate polysynthesis in a Papuan language context. Some of these include: Polypersonal agreement, polypersonalism (marking of multiple arguments on verbs) and heavy Head-marking language, head-marking. Its basic word order is SOV, and several other morphosyntactic features generally associated with SOV languages are also exhibited in Alamblak. Specifically, subordinate clauses precede independent clauses (e.g. relative clauses precede the head), Grammatical case, case relators follow the noun (as enclitics or suffixes), and the interrogative element is not fronted in a clause, but remains ''in situ''. Examples of these Linguistic typology, typological features can be seen below. Examples are from Bruce (1984).


See also

*Yimas-Alamblak Pidgin


References

* *


External links


OLAC resources in and about the Alamblak languageEmotions in the Alamblak lexicon
{{Languages of Papua New Guinea Alamblak languages Languages of East Sepik Province