Leti language
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Leti (or Letti) is an Austronesian language spoken on the island of Leti in Maluku. Although it shares much vocabulary with the neighboring
Luang language Luang, also known as (Letri Lgona), is an Austronesian language spoken in the Leti Islands and the Babar Islands in Maluku, Indonesia. It is closely related to the neighboring Leti language, with 89% shared basic vocabulary. Phonology ...
, it is marginally
mutually intelligible In linguistics, mutual intelligibility is a relationship between languages or dialects in which speakers of different but related varieties can readily understand each other without prior familiarity or special effort. It is sometimes used as a ...
. Fewer than 1% of Leti speakers are literate in Leti, though between 25% and 50% of them are literate in another language.


Varieties

The main dialectological division in Leti is between eastern varieties, spoken in the domains of Laitutun and Luhuleli, and western varieties, spoken in the domains of Batumiau, Tutukei, Tomra, and Nuwewang. This article focusses on the Tutukei variety and is based on a descriptive study by Aone van Engelenhoven (2004), a Dutch linguist of Leti descent. Tutukei itself divides into two sociolects, i.e. 'village language' ( 'language', '(walled) village'), and i.e. 'city language' ( 'language', 'city'). Leti also has two literary or ritual varieties, ('royal language') and ('sung language'). Both of them prominently feature lexical parallelism. Per van Engelenhoven 2004, "the major issue in formal Leti discourse is to keep speaking as long as possible. Indeed, the important element in 'royal speech' is not what is said, but rather how it is said and how long it takes to be said". In particular features formulaic pairs of clauses which are syntactically identical, each pair of corresponding words in the two clauses forming a lexical pair. is the sung form of . It employs a repertoire of approximately 150 Luangic-Kisaric words with distinctive sound changes: e.g. 'flower' and 'point' are and in . Often borrowings from Malay are inserted as well. Again per van Engelenhoven 2004, "in Southwest Malukan society
turn-taking Turn-taking is a type of organization in conversation and discourse where participants speak one at a time in alternating turns. In practice, it involves processes for constructing contributions, responding to previous comments, and transitioning ...
in singing is ritualized and as such a fixed strategy, which makes it a powerful rhetoric device in Leti discourse. .. song may not be interrupted when performed. Singing is thus a means to prevent interruption in a speech event or an instrument to surpass the other speech participants".


Phonology


Consonants

In addition, the phonemes , , , , and occur only in loans, mostly from Indonesian,
Tetum , nativename=Tetun , states= Indonesia East Timor , speakers=, mostly in Indonesia , date=2010–2011 , ref=e18 , speakers2=50,000 L2-speakers in Indonesia and East Timor , familycolor=Austronesian , fam2=Malayo-Polynesian , fam3= Central–East ...
, and the local variety of Malay.


Vowels

These vowels can also occur
long Long may refer to: Measurement * Long, characteristic of something of great duration * Long, characteristic of something of great length * Longitude (abbreviation: long.), a geographic coordinate * Longa (music), note value in early music mensu ...
; the phonemic status of long vowels hangs on the interpretation of Leti's pervasive metathetic processes. The mid vowels are restricted to the penult of lexical morphemes, which is stressed. The majority of these morphemes provide no evidence for the height contrast — are found before an ultimate and in other positions — and diachronically there was no contrast. However, the contrast is set up synchronically on account of certain exceptions ( 'he, she', 'refuse', 'stay'), and the fact that when suffixed the conditioning vowel can disappear: : 'dry' → 'it dries first' : 'descend' → 'he descends first'


Phonological processes

Metathesis and
apocope In phonology, apocope () is the loss ( elision) of a word-final vowel. In a broader sense, it can refer to the loss of any final sound (including consonants) from a word. Etymology ''Apocope'' comes from the Greek () from () "cutting off", fro ...
, together ''binding'' processes, are pervasive in Leti as a feature of combinations of morphemes. The preferred "flow of speech" in Leti seems to involve chains of CCV units. The free form of any Leti morpheme always features a final vowel, so those whose
bound form In linguistics, a bound morpheme is a morpheme (the elementary unit of morphosyntax) that can appear only as part of a larger expression; a free morpheme (or unbound morpheme) is one that can stand alone. A bound morpheme is a type of bound form ...
s end in consonants feature two allomorphs which are related by CV metathesis. Thus 'skin, fly (n.), fish, bird' have bound forms (the latter two with long vowels) but free forms . When a morpheme whose bound form ends in a vowel is prefixed to another component, that final vowel may apocopate or metathesise into the following component. CV metathesis happens when the metathesising vowel is high and it's followed by at most one consonant and a nonhigh vowel. The metathesised vowel is realised as a glide, written as ''ï ü''. Thus 'chicken + egg' becomes 'chicken egg', 1st sing. pronoun + 'go' becomes 'I go'. In other contexts apocope happens, unless this would leave an illicit three-consonant cluster. So 'chicken + bone' becomes 'chicken bone', 'cat + tongue' becomes 'cat's tongue'. A similar metathesis is found with the nominaliser, historically an infix ''-in-'', but now taking the form ''-nï-'' among many other allomorphs (detailed more below): thus 'sew' derives 'needle'.


Grammar


Morphology

Human nouns pluralise with the third person plural pronominal clitic ''-ra'', which must follow another suffixed element: 'woman', 'the woman', 'the women'. Nonhuman nouns pluralise by repetition: 'horse', 'horses'. Leti has four
possessive suffix In linguistics, a possessive affix (from la, affixum possessivum) is an affix (usually suffix or prefix) attached to a noun to indicate its possessor, much in the manner of possessive adjectives. Possessive affixes are found in many languages o ...
es, which undergo binding. The vowel V in the first person plural and third person suffix copies the last vowel of its base. Nouns can be zero-derived to verbs: e.g. 'roof' → 'he roofs' or 'it has a roof'. Nominal
compounding In the field of pharmacy, compounding (performed in compounding pharmacies) is preparation of a custom formulation of a medication to fit a unique need of a patient that cannot be met with commercially available products. This may be done for me ...
is highly productive as a derivational process. For example ''rai + lavna'' 'king' + 'big' → ''ralïavna'' 'emperor', ''pipi + ïadmu'' 'goat' + 'shed' → ''pipïadmu'' 'goat shed', ''vutu + müani'' 'ribbon' + 'man' → ''vutumüani'' 'man's ribbon', ''vika + papa'' 'buttocks' + 'cucumber' → ''vikpapa'' 'cockroach', ''kapla + nèma'' reduplicated 'ship' + 'fly' → ''kapalnèmnèma'' 'airplane'. Verbs fall into two classes according to whether their subject prefixes exhibit binding or not: those of Class I do not, those of Class II do. By default verbs are in Class II. Certain verbs are lexically in Class I (like ''nòa'' 'advise'), together with all verbs with complex onsets (''ssòrna'' 'cough') and denominal or causativised verbs (''veli'' 'buy', from the noun ''veli'' 'price'). The subject prefixes are as follows. Verbs with first person singular inflection necessarily take the pronoun ''a='' 'I' as a proclitic. Some causatives are marked only by class change: ''pali'' means 'float' in class II and 'make float' in class I. The nominalising affix productively derives nouns from verbs. It takes various forms, most of which are
infix An infix is an affix inserted inside a word stem (an existing word or the core of a family of words). It contrasts with '' adfix,'' a rare term for an affix attached to the outside of a stem, such as a prefix or suffix. When marking text for i ...
es, depending on the phonological shape and the class of its base.
Reduplication In linguistics, reduplication is a morphological process in which the root or stem of a word (or part of it) or even the whole word is repeated exactly or with a slight change. The classic observation on the semantics of reduplication is Edwa ...
, which usually copies a root-initial CV or CVCV sequence with binding, has a variety of functions, among them adjectivisation of nouns (''üau'' 'idiot' → ''üa-üau'' 'idiotic') and verbs (''mèra'' 'redden' → ''mèr-mèra''), derivation of nouns, especially instruments (''sòra'' 'sew' → ''sòr-sòra'' 'needle'), marking atelicity, and relativising on an object (''n-vèèta'' 'he pulls' → ''(n-)vèvèèta'' 'which he pulls').


Vocabulary


Lexical parallelism

Many of Leti's lexical items are organised into lexical pairs, which are always deployed as fixed combinations in a fixed order. A few pairs involve adjectives or numerals, but the vast majority consist of nouns (e.g. ''püata // müani'' 'woman // man', ''üèra // vatu'' 'water // stone') or verbs (e.g. ''kili // toli'' 'look // see', ''keri // kòi'' 'scratch / scrape'). Some words are confined to lexical pairs, such as ''tirka'' in ''tirka // llena'' 'lightning', or both ''dupla'' and ''mavla'' in ''dupla // mavla'' 'witchcraft'; these pairs are restricted to ''lirmarna''. In ''lirmarna'' the function of lexical pairs is to highlight particular elements of a sentence, or simply to mark formality. When used in ordinary speech, the meanings of lexical pairs can relate in various ways to those of their components: : ''leli // masa'' 'ivory // gold', meaning 'treasure' : ''lòi // spou'' '
proa Proas are various types of multi-hull outrigger sailboats of the Austronesian peoples. The terms were used for native Austronesian ships in European records during the Colonial era indiscriminately, and thus can confusingly refer to the ...
// sailing boat', meaning 'traditional fleet' : ''nusa // rai'' 'island // mainland', meaning 'archipelago' : ''ili // vatu'' 'hill // stone', meaning 'fort' : ''püata // müani'' 'woman // man', meaning either 'married couple' or 'gender' Or they can simply have the sense of a conjunction, e.g. ''asu // vavi'' 'dog // pig' = 'the dog and the pig'; these are the only sort of conjoined phrases that do not require the conjunction ''na''.


History

The phones of Luangic-Kisaric continue those of
Proto-Malayo-Polynesian Proto-Malayo-Polynesian (PMP) is the reconstructed ancestor of the Malayo-Polynesian languages, which is by far the largest branch (by current speakers) of the Austronesian language family. Proto-Malayo-Polynesian is ancestral to all Austrones ...
according to the following sound changes (based on Mills 2010). In Western Leti, LK has vanished and LK from MP *e is manifested as . In Eastern Leti, LK becomes and LK becomes in the penult before a low vowel. Roger Mills suggests that Luangic-Kisaric retained distinct reflexes of PMP *ŋ, on the basis of other languages in the family, and *Z. Moreover, although the status of *Z as a PMP phoneme is unclear — Mills along with John U. Wolff and
Robert Blust Robert A. Blust (; ; May 9, 1940 – January 5, 2022) was an American linguist who worked in several areas, including historical linguistics, lexicography and ethnology. He was Professor of Linguistics at the University of Hawaii at Mānoa. Blu ...
no longer admit it, realigning it with *z — the Luangic languages have no clear examples of inherited *z, despite numerous examples of *Z > . Mills explains the metathesis found in consonant-final basis as arising from an original
echo vowel An echo vowel, also known as a synharmonic vowel, is a paragogic vowel that repeats the final vowel in a word in speech. For example, in Chumash, when a word ends with a glottal stop and comes at the end of an intonation unit, the final vowel ...
added to consonant-final forms, e.g. *''kúlit'' 'skin' > ''kúliti'', after which the original post-tonic vowel was deleted, e.g. yielding ''kúlti'' > Leti ''ulti''. Jonker (1932) was the first full-scale investigation of Leti, based on a native informant and the few 19th-century works on the language then available.


Examples

The following paragraph is the opening of the Sailfish story as told by Upa S. Manina of ''Talvunu // Resïara'' house in the Ilwiaru quarters in Tutukei and reproduced in van Engelenhoven (2004). The Sailfish story is of great importance to Leti society: it provides an origin story for the Leti 'boat owner clans' of Luang origin, describing the destruction of the mythical former Luang continent and the migrations that brought its inhabitants to Leti. Leti # ''Ululude müani ida mpatròme püata idalo Lïòno.'' # ''Apo rasaamme.'' # ''Rasaappo raorïaambo ira aanne ria vòruo.'' # ''Kòkkòi müani vòrupo nïaulu nvava Retïelüai, üari nvava Sairmòraso.'' # ''Apo kòkkòi rmapo rapninmüaato.'' # ''Ne rakkusalkaitmaato.'' # ''Ne inne nmatio.'' English # In olden times a man begot a woman on Luang. # So they married. # They married and begot two children. # It was two boys and the firstborn was named Retieluai, the youngest was named Sairmoras. # So the children did not know anything yet. # They were still very little. # And their mother died.


References


Further reading

* Taber, Mark (1993).
Toward a Better Understanding of the Indigenous Languages of Southwestern Maluku
" ''Oceanic Linguistics'', Vol. 32, No. 2 (Winter, 1993), pp. 389–441. University of Hawai'i. {{DEFAULTSORT:Leti Language Languages of Indonesia Timor–Babar languages