Yagaria language
Yagaria | |
---|---|
Native to | Papua New Guinea |
Region | Yagaria Rural LLG, Goroka District, Eastern Highlands Province |
Native speakers | 38,000 (2000)[1] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | ygr |
Glottolog | yaga1260 |
Yagaria is a Papuan language spoken in the Goroka District of Eastern Highlands Province, Papua New Guinea. Named dialects are Kami-Kulaka, Move, Ologuti, Dagenava, Kamate, Hira, Hua (Huva) and Kotom. Yagaria has a total number of 21,116 speakers.
History and culture
The Yagaria people live in low areas about 1,400 meters (4,500 ft.) above sea level with a warm and dry climate around Kami and Gotomi. They practice substance agriculture and live in small hamlets where their population is barely 400 people for each clan. They harvest and plant sweet potatoes, taro, yams, sugarcane, bananas, beans, "pitpit", and different types of spinach. They domesticated pigs, dogs, and chickens. Their diets are usually sweet potatoes, marsupials and birds. When coffee plantations were introduced in the late fifties, cash profit changed most of the Yagaria lifestyle. Now rice, tinned meats and fish, and other food items are easy to find in their stores. Men wear European clothes while most women still wear traditional clothing.[2]
Dialects
Yagaria consists of eight main dialects.[2]
Dialect Name | Number of speakers |
---|---|
Dagenava | 373 |
Move | 4,519 |
Kamate | 2,369 |
Ologuti | 2,165 |
Gotomi | 2,032 |
Kani-Kuluka | 4,469 |
Hira | 2,318 |
Huva | 2,871 |
Phonology
Vowels
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
Close | i | u | |
Mid | ɛ | o | |
Open | a | ɑ | |
Diphthong | /ɛi, ou, ɑɛ, ɑo/ |
- /i/ - Voiced high close unrounded front vocoid occurring word initially, medially, and finally
- /ɛ/ - Voiced mid open unrounded front vocoid gliding to high close unrounded front, occurring word initially, medially, and finally
- // - Voiced mid open unrounded front vocoid gliding to high close unrounded front, occurring word initially, medially, and finally
- /u/ - Voiced high close rounded back vocoid occurring word initially, medially, and finally
- /o/ - Voiced mid close rounded back vocoid occurring word initially, medially, and finally
- // - Voiced mid close rounded back vocoid gliding to high close rounded back, occurring word initially, medially, and finally
- /a/ - Voiced low open unrounded central vocoid occurring word initially, medially, and finally
- // - Voiced unrounded central-front
- // - Voiced central-back[2]
Consonants
Bilabial | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Stop | voiceless | p | t | k | ʔ | |
voiced | b | d | g | |||
Nasal | m | n | ||||
Fricative | v | s | h | |||
Continuant | j | ʟ |
Distribution of Phonemes
The syllable structure used in the Yagaria language is (C)V(ʔ). The four syllable patterns are V, CV, CVʔ, and Vʔ where CV is the most used.[3]
Morphology
Pronouns
Personal, Possessive, Emphatic, and Interrogative pronouns are used. Personal and Possessive pronouns happens in free word and affixed forms. Emphatic pronoun occurs in suffixes.[4]
Singular | ||
---|---|---|
POV | Subject (Yagaria) | Subject (English) |
1 | dagaea | I |
2 | gagaea | you |
3 | agaea | he/she |
Dual | ||
---|---|---|
POV | Subject (Yagaria) | Subject (English) |
1 | la'agaea | we |
2 | latagaea | you |
3 | tagaea | they |
Plural | ||
---|---|---|
POV | Subject (Yagaria) | Subject (English) |
1 | lagaea | we |
2 | lapagaea | you |
3 | pagaea | they |
Short Forms Open/Closed | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Personal Pronouns | POV | Open | Closed | English |
Singular | 1 | dagae | dagae' | I |
2 | gagae | gagae' | you | |
3 | agae | agae' | he/she | |
Dual | 1 | la'agae | la'agae' | we |
2 | latagae | latagae' | you | |
3 | tagae | tagae' | they | |
Plural | 1 | lagae | lagae' | we |
2 | lapagae | lapagae' | you | |
3 | pagae | pagae' | they |
Nouns
The main noun classes used in the Yagaria language are Class 1 and Class 2.
Class 1
Nouns can indicate living and non-living objects. They occur in two forms, long-form where carrying suffix -na, and short-form where the suffix is removed and ends with a glottal stop. Long-form nouns are used less and mostly for citation, some as a subject, and mostly used in intransitive clauses.
Long Form | Short Form | Translation |
---|---|---|
ana | a' | women |
yona | yo' | house |
yana | ya' | taro |
gokolena | gokole' | chicken |
Examples of using Long forms
ba
sweet potato
yana
taro
ege
banana
gilena
corn
sweet potato taro banana corn
ana
woman
hoya
work
no'-eli-e
PROG-do-IND
the woman is working
Long forms as an object:
ve
man
agaea
he
ana
woman
eli-d-i-e
take-PAST-3.SG-IND
the man took the woman
Short forms as subject in intransitive clause and as an object:
faya'
fish
ni-pi'
water-IN
bei-d-i-e
live-PAST-3.SG-IND
there are fish in the water
yale
people
pagaea
they
yo'
house
gi-d-a-e
build-PAST-3.PL-IND
the people built a house
Class 2
Class 2 nouns have some ending in -na, and is never omitted. Suffixation happens after that syllable.
Examples:
bina
price
bina-'a
price-ita
its price
Class 2 nouns that behave somewhat like class 1 nouns. They carry suffix -'na, has short form without ending in a glottal stop. All suffixation occurs with long form carrying the suffix -'na.
Examples:
dote'na
food
dote'
edible
yava
tree
laga-'a
fruit-its
edible tree-fruit
dote'na-ka
food-your
no-k-am-u-e
PROG-you-give-1.SG-IND
I am giving you your food
filite'na
death
filite'
dead
yale
people
dead people
filite'na-e'
death-BEN
l-amota
us-fear
no'-ei-e
IND
we are afraid of death
nalu-di
wife-my
my wife
da-nalu-di
my-wife-my
my wife
Adjectives
Yagaria has a distinction between primary and secondary adjectives. Primary adjectives are used to determine the morphological behavior of "adjectives". Secondary adjectives are obtained from nouns or verbs, or local or temporal expressions occurring as noun adjuncts.[2]
Primary adjectives
Morphological pattern of class 1 nouns, and class 2 nouns are the two groups being used in the primary adjectives. Most adjectives have short or not-suffixed form for attributive occurrence, and long or suffixed form for predicative occurrence.
Adjectives following Class 1 | Translation |
---|---|
haga'. / hagana | tasty |
fagi' / faina | far |
fate' / fatena | far |
havá' / havána | unimportant |
lava' / lavana | unimportant |
lakoli' / lakolina | flat |
bonu' / bouna | round |
legi' / legina | true |
havu' / havuna | uncultivated |
Adjectives following Class 2 | Translation |
---|---|
soko / sokona | good |
feipa / feipana | bad |
buko / bukona | warm |
gata / gatana | heavy |
hogo / hogona | short |
hepa / hepana | bad |
fotogo / fotogona | good |
Numerals
Numbers are made using a system of only one, two, and fives. The sum of numbers are usually expressed by hands and feet.
Number (English) | Number (Yagaria) |
---|---|
one | bogo |
two | lole |
three | lole-'e' bogo-'e' |
four | lole-'e' lole-'e' |
five | d- anita bogo-ko' |
six | d- anita bogo-kayagati' bogo-ko' |
seven | d- anita bogo-kayagati' lole |
eight | d- anita bogo-kaygati' lole-'e' bogo-'e' |
nine | d- anita bogo-kayagati' lole-'e' lole-'e' |
ten | d- anita lole |
eleven | d- anita su ho- na d- eiya -logati' bogo |
twelve | d- anita su ho- na d- eiya -logati' lole |
thirteen | d- anita su ho- na d- eiya -logati' lole-'e' bogo-'e' |
fourteen | d- anita su ho- na d- eiya -logati' lole-'e' lole-'e' |
fifteen | d- anita su ho- na d- eiya bogo-kayaga'a |
sixteen | d- anita su ho- na d- eiya bogo-kayagati' bogo-ko' |
seventeen | d- anita su ho- na d- eiya bogo-kayagati' lole |
eighteen | d- anita su ho- na d- eiya bogo-kayagati' lole-'e' bogo-'e' |
nineteen | d- anita su ho- na d- eiya bogo-kayagati' lole-'e' lole-'e' |
twenty | d- eiya d- anita buki'a |
References
- ^ Yagaria at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022)
- ^ a b c d Renck (1975), pp. 1–2
- ^ Renck (1975), pp. 12
- ^ Renck (1975), pp. 15–18
- Renck, G.L. (1975). A Grammar of Yagaria (PDF). Pacific Linguistics Series B No. 40. Canberra: Dept. of Linguistics, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University. doi:10.15144/pl-b40. hdl:1885/145156. ISBN 9780858831308.
- Renck, G.L. (1977). Yagaria Dictionary, With English Index (PDF). Pacific Linguistics Series C - No. 37. Canberra: Dept. of Linguistics, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University. doi:10.15144/pl-c37. hdl:1885/146588. ISBN 9780858831612.
Further reading
- Haiman, John (1980). Hua: A Papuan Language of the Eastern Highlands of New Guinea. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
- Renck, G. L. "Organised Phonology Data" (PDF).
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