Naman Language
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Litzlitz, also known as Naman, is an endangered
Oceanic language 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 ...
of central
Malakula Malakula Island, also spelled Malekula, is the second-largest island in the nation of Vanuatu, formerly the New Hebrides, in Melanesia, a region of the Pacific Ocean. Location Malakula is separated from the islands of Espiritu Santo and Malo by ...
,
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 ...
. Many of the languages in Malakula can be referred to by different names, Litzlitz being an example of this. Naman was spoken in central Malakua in an area referred to as the "Dog's Neck" by the locals. The territory over which the Naman language was spoken is about 13 kilometers. This language once had many speakers, but now has been classified as a dying language with only fifteen to twenty native speakers. Native Naman speakers who one resided in the small villages of Metenesel in the Lambumbu area of Malakula had moved to what is now known as the Litzlitz village. They had moved because of diseases such as influenza and other epidemics, which contributed to the population decrease in the Naman speakers. Malakula has many languages, however
Uripiv Uripiv Island is a small inhabited island in Malampa Province of Vanuatu in the Pacific Ocean. Uripiv lies off the north coast of Malekula Island. The estimated terrain elevation above the sea level is some 8 meters. Population As of 2015, the o ...
has become the dominant language of the Northeast Malakula area.


Phonology


Consonants

The table below shows the set of consonants in the Litzlitz language, based on the International Phonetic Alphabet. Contrasts between pairs of phonetically similar consonants can be based on the following minimal and sub-minimal pairs: * /t/ and /d/ /toro/ 'old' /doro/ 'white-throated pigeon' * /k/ and /g/ /nikəj/ 'whitewood species' /igər/ 'it fell from above' /kəlue/ 'you will shoot it' /gəlo/ '(s)he looked' * /t/ and /s/ /təɣ/ '(s)he took it' /səɣ/ '(s)he poked it' * /c/ and /s/ /bəcbəc/ 'break to pieces' /bəsbəs/ '(s)he spoke' * /c/ and /j/ /cəbən/ 'his/her grandfather' /jəbən/ 'his/her finger/toe' * /s/ and /j/ /səl/ '(s)he entered' /jəl/ '(s)he sewed it' * /t/ and /c/ /təɣ/ '(s)he took it' /cəɣən/ 'to (person)' * /l/ and /r/ /laɣe/ 'to the bush' /raɣe/ 'above'


Vowels

Litzlitz has an inventory of six contrasting short vowels and three long vowels, as shown below in the table. Only the high and low vowels have corresponding long forms, with the three mid vowels having only short forms.


Phonotactics

Lexical roots in the Litzlitz language begin mostly with consonants rather than vowels. There is only a limited number of words that begin with the vowels /u/, /a/, /e/, or /ə/. The words that begin with the vowel /u/ include /user/ 'resemble', /usus/ 'ask', /utbu/ 'run', and // 'white' and one verb beginning with /e/ which is /esəɣ/ 'not exist'. The only vowel that is used commonly at the beginning of lexical roots is /i/. The vowel-sequencing possibilities within Litzlitz roots can be summarized with these generalizations: * sequences of the low vowel /a/ followed by any of the mid vowels are prohibited. i.e. */ae/, */ao/. * sequences of */eo/ and */oe/ are prohibited. * sequences of any like vowels are prohibited. * sequences of a long vowel with any other vowel are prohibited. * sequences of any vowel and schwa other than /iə/ are prohibited: */aə/, */uə/, */oə/, */eə/.


Nouns and noun phrases


Pronouns

Within the Litzlitz language, pronouns are distinguished between three categories which include first, second, and third person. They each mark a three-way number distinction between singular, dual, and plural. In the first person non-singular, there is a distinction made between inclusive and exclusive pronouns. The table below shows the words for each of the pronouns. The letters in brackets are indicators of variability, however the function or meaning does not change. The first person singular ''kine'' and the third person plural ''air'' are the only two pronouns without variations.


Possession

The only inflection of morphology associated with nouns in the Litzlitz language involves the expression of possession with a particular subset of nouns. As it is often found it in other Oceanic languages, there is a distinction in Litzlitz between what can be called indirectly and directly possessed nouns. With indirectly possessed nouns, both the possessor and possessum are expressed as free forms. With directly possessed nouns, the possessum is expressed by means of a bound nominal root to which an inflectional possessive suffix is obligatorily attached. An example of this is shown below: * ''jëbë-g'' 'my grandfather' * 'my canoe' There are different suffix forms for all categories of singular pronominal possessor, and for any category of third person pronominal possessor. There are no separate possessive suffixes for dual and plural pronominal possessors in the first and second person, all of which is illustrated in the table below. An example of these suffixes can be seen on the noun ''jëbë-'' 'grandfather': * ''jëbë-g'' 'my grandfather' * ''jëbë-m'' 'your grandfather' * ''jëbë-n'' 'his/her grandfather


References


External links


Collection of Paradisec with Litzlitz materials
{{Austronesian languages Malekula languages Languages of Vanuatu Critically endangered languages