Tape language

Tape
Maragus
Native toVanuatu
RegionCentral Malekula
Native speakers
15 (2006)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3mrs
Glottologmara1399[2]

Tape, also known as Maragus, is a Southern Oceanic language which has a classification of 8B meaning the language has become nearly extinct.[3] The population of speakers of the Tape language is reduced to approximately 15 speakers who are among the older generations.[4] The language is part of the Malayo-Polynesian subgroup of the Austronesian Language family and is spoken on the islands of Vanuatu.[3]

The Vanuatu Islands are not the original location of where the Tape language was spoken in the past. The original location was located in an area in Malakula, including the coast from Anuatakh to Lowinsinwei, the area between the Lowisinwei River valley, the eastern bank of the Brenwei River, and a mountain in the south known as Pwitarvere. Since part of the Tape territory was close to the ocean, it allowed the people living in the area to harvest salt which was used to trade with the Tirakh people.[4] However, the Tape people mostly lived their lives "towards the bush," meaning their lives were more oriented towards the land even though they had access to the ocean. This is shown in their language because although they lived along the coast, their descendants were not very knowledgable or could not come up with a significant amount of terms related to the sea.[4]

Originally, there was no distinct name for the Tape language. Tape was the name of the area that the speakers lived on while in the past the language was referred to as vengesien Tape, meaning 'the language of Tape'. Over time however, people have come to use and recognize the name of the language to be "Tape". This language also has a few alternative names known as Marakus, Maragus, Maragaus, and Maraakhus, which were used by the speakers of the Naman language who were living in the Litzlitz area. The name has two roots, mar (person of (place)) and aakhus (bush) and when they are put together, the name's literal translation is 'person of the bush'.[4]

Phonology

Vowels

Table 1: Vowel Contrasts[4]
Front Central Back
High i u
Mid e ə o
Low a

In the Tape language, there are a total of six vowels /a, e, i, o, u, and ə./ Although schwa (/ə/) is part of the list, there is a lot of debate on the role schwa plays in the language.[4]

Comparing the use of /i/ and /e/

  • /ičičər/ means '(s)he swept'
  • /ičečər/ means '(s)he slipped'
  • /čənin/ means 'his/her intestines
  • /čənen/ means 'because of it'

Comparing the use of /e/ and /a/

  • /niet/ means 'sago'
  • /niar/ means 'casuarina'
  • /ipel/ means '(s)he choked'
  • /ipar/ means '(s)he is blind'

Comparing the use of /a/ and /o/

  • /maren/ means 'tomorrow'
  • /mornen/ means 'his/her left hand'
  • /iɣaɣas/ means it is cold'
  • /iɣos/ means 'too much'

Comparing the use of /o/ and /u/

  • /ilo/ means '(s)he planted'
  • /ilu/ means '(s)he fired shots'
  • /nio/ means 'armband'
  • /niu/ means 'dew'

Letter exceptions

The letter /i/

When the letter /i/ comes before the velar fricative /ɣ/ it becomes a high vowel.[4]

Examples

  • /liɣnana/ is pronounced [lɨyanan] meaning 'his/her face'
  • pəliliɣ/ is pronounced [pəlilɨx] meaning 'wild kava'
  • /tiɣ/ is pronounced [tɨx] meaning 'grave'

When the letter /i/ is the first letter and comes before the velar fricative /ɣ/, a palatal glide comes after.[4]

Examples

  • /iɣəč/ pronounced [ɨɣəts ~ jɣəts] meaning '(s)he killed it'
  • /iɣan/ pronounced [ɨɣan ~ jɣan] meaning '(s)he ate'
The letter /u/

When the /u/ is followed by another vowel, an optional rounded glide occurs between the two vowels.[4]

Examples

  • /dui/ pronounced [ⁿdui ~ ⁿduwi] meaning 'man'
  • /nuo/ pronounced [nuo ~ nuwo] meaning 'water'
  • /duen/ pronounced [ⁿduen ~ ⁿduwen] meaning 'with'
The letters /ue/ and /uo/

When using the combination of /ue/, one can substituted it for /uo/, but /uo/ cannot be substituted for /ue/.[4]

Examples

  • /duen/ pronounced [ⁿduen ~ ⁿduon] meaning 'with'
  • /na:bues/ pronounced [na: ᵐbues ~ ᵐbuos] meaning 'New Guinea rosewood'
  • /buok/ pronounced [ᵐbuok] meaning /water taro'
  • /nuot/ pronounced [nuot] meaning 'tendon'

Schwa

Comparing the use of /i/ and /ə/

  • /ičile/ meaning '(s)he washed it'
  • /ičəle/ meaning 's(he) combed it'
  • /ilŋiliŋ meaning '(s)he walked'
  • /iləŋləŋ meaning '(s)he left it'

Comparing the use of /e/ and /ə/

  • /ives/ meaning 'four'
  • /ivəs/ meaning 'how many?'
  • /isel/ meaning 'it floated'
  • /isəl/ meaning '(s)he went fishing by torchlight'

Comparing the use of /a/ and /ə/

  • /ilaɣ/ meaning '(s)he is married'
  • /iləɣ/ meaning '(s)he tied it up'
  • /nisaɣ/ meaning 'banana'
  • /nisəɣ/ meaning 'kingfisher'

Comparing the use of /o/ and /ə/

  • /ičpaɣ/ meaning '(s)he squatted'
  • /čəpaɣ/ meaning 'earth oven'
  • /noɣmo/ meaning 'slitgong'
  • /nəɣmo/ meaning 'island teak'

Comparing the use of /u/ and /ə/

  • /nuɣru/ meaning 'Christmas'
  • /nəɣsen/ meaning 'his/her name'
  • /isusur/ meaning '(s)he swore'
  • /səsən/ meaning 'her breast'

Although schwa (/ə/) is a contrastive vowel among some languages, it is not a universal vowel in all the languages in the area. In the Tape language, schwa is very common and is in 16.5% of the lexicon. The schwa is a unique vowel because it cannot begin or end a word. It also cannot follow or come before another vowel, meaning that there must be simultaneously preceded and followed by a consonant.[4]

Consonants

Table 2: Consonants contrasts[4]
Plain Obstruents p t č k
Prenazalized stops b d g
Fricatives v s ɣ
Nasals m m n ŋ
Lateral l
Rhotic r
Glides w y

There are many similarities as well as differences in the consonants available in the languages around the Tape area. For example, Tape does not contain any apicolabial consonants which is similar to the languages in the northeastern part of Malakua. Also the Tape language includes the contrastive palatal affricate, /č/, which is not present in V'ënen Taut, a language located near Tape. In addition, the Tape language contains a contrastive series of labiovelar consonants[disambiguation needed] which the languages, V'ënen Taut, Larevat, and Naman lack.[4]

Grammar

Nominalization

One is able to obtain a noun by adding a -ien to the a verb root.[4]

Examples

  • mekar meaning 'work'
  • mekar-ien meaning 'work, job'
  • mësit meaning 'sick'
  • mësit-ien meaning 'illness, disease'
  • vërëng meaning 'think'
  • vërëng-ien meaning 'thought

By adding -ien to a verb ending in p, the p will usually change to a v.[4]

Examples

  • ngep meaning 'breathe
  • ngev-ien meaning 'asthma'

One is able to obtain a noun By adding në- to a verb.[4]

Examples

  • jijër meaning 'sweep'
  • në-jijër meaning 'broom'

Compounding

By combining two nouns together, one is able to form a new noun related to both words.[4]

Examples

  • lumlum - (waterweed) tes - (sea)
    • lumlum tes meaning 'seaweed'
  • netite - (child) dui - (man)
    • netite dui meaning 'boy'

Adding a place after a noun indicates the noun is originating from that particular place.[4]

Examples

  • dui - (man) Tape - (location)
    • dui Tape meaning 'Tape man'
  • dui - (man) elo - (coast)
    • dui elo meaning 'coastal person'

Possession

In many Oceanic languages, there is a distinction between indirect and direct possession of nouns. Indirect possession usually occurs when adding another phrase or word after the possessive noun while direct possession occurs when adding a prefix to the noun it is possessing.[4]

Examples

  • nisip (knife) ese (POSS) mwëliun (chief)
    • nisip ese mwëliun meaning 'the chief's knife'
  • pëti (head) - k (1SG)
    • pëti-k meaning '

Indirectly possessed nouns

There are special markers indicating the different types of possession like using ese- for general possession. Besides the general possession, there is possession towards, eating, chewing, and drinking. By adding de-, jomo-, and mëne-, one is referring to eating, chewing, and drinking respectively.

Possessive Pronouns (Edible)[4]
Singular Dual Trial Plural
1 dok dedru dedëtël ded
2 dom - - -
3 den daru dartël dar

Examples

  • mëtiu (coconut) do-m (ED:2SG)
  • mëtiu do-m meaning 'your coconut (for eating)'
Possessive Pronouns (Chewable)[4]
Singular Dual Trial Plural
1 jomok jomodru jomodëtël jomod
2 jomom - - -
3 jomon jomaru jomartël jomar

Example

  • niji (sugarcane) jomo-m (CHEW-2SG)
  • niji jomo-m meaning 'your sugarcane (for chewing)'
Possessive Pronouns (Drinkable)[4]
Singular Dual Trial Plural
1 mënok mënedru mënedëtël mëned
2 mënom - - -
3 mënen mënaru mënartël mënar

Example

  • nuo (water) mëno-m (DRINK-2SG)
  • nuo mëno-m meaning 'your water (for drinking)'
General Pronouns (General)[4]
Singular Dual Trial Plural
1 (g)esek (g)esedru (g)esedëtël (g)esed
2 (g)esom - - -
3 (g)esen (g)esaru (g)esartël (g)esar

Example

  • nisip (knife) eso-m (POSS-2SG)
  • nisip eso-m meaning 'your knife'

Directly possessed nouns

Possessive Suffixes[4]
Singular Dual Trial Plural
1 -k -dru -dëtël -d
2 -m - - -
3 -n -ru -rtël -r

Example

  • pëti-m (head - 2SG) meaning 'your head'

Numerals

  1. isimëk, isig
  2. iru
  3. itël
  4. ives
  5. ilëm
  6. lëmjis
  7. jiru
  8. jitël
  9. jevet
  10. isngel
  11. isngel dëmon isimëk
  12. isngel dëmon iru
  13. isngel dëmon itël
  14. isngel dëmon ives
  15. isngel dëmon ilëm
  16. isngel dëmon lëmjis
  17. isngel dëmon jiru
  18. isngel dëmon jitël
  19. isngel dëmon jevet
  20. ingelru
  21. ingelru dëmon isig

When counting from 1-10, it is like counting in any other language where an arbitrary meaning is attached to a word. After counting to ten, one must add the word, isngel and dëmon before the numerals 1-9 to make teen numbers. The form, dëmon, has no meaning by itself in the Tape language.[4]

References

  1. ^ Tape at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  2. ^ Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Maragus". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
  3. ^ a b "Maragus". Ethnologue. Retrieved 2019-10-07.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Crowley, Terry. (2006). Tape, a declining language of Malakula (Vanuatu). Pacific Linguistics, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University. ISBN 0858835673. OCLC 932552524.

External links


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