Wena: Difference between revisions

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* <small><sup>1</sup></small> The plain plosives /b d g/, the prenasalised plosives /<sup><small>m</small></sup>b <sup><small>n</small></sup>d <sup><small>ŋ</small></sup>g/ and the non-glottal fricatives /v z/ are pronounced voicelessly in a register called '''''nenge la''''', which, at any one time, is spoken by most speakers: [p t k], [<sup><small>m</small></sup>p <sup><small>n</small></sup>t <sup><small>ŋ</small></sup>k], [f s]. The voiced pronunciation is only used in a register called '''''nenge hu''''', which is exclusively spoken by men who have passed initiation. The early missionaries who first described and wrote down the language were only allowed contact with initiated men, which is why the voiced allophones, although used by less than half of the speakers, are traditionally used to describe these phonemes.
* <small><sup>1</sup></small> The plain plosives /b d g/, the prenasalised plosives /<sup><small>m</small></sup>b <sup><small>n</small></sup>d <sup><small>ŋ</small></sup>g/ and the non-glottal fricatives /v z/ are pronounced voicelessly in a register called '''''nenge la''''', which, at any one time, is spoken by most speakers: [p t k], [<sup><small>m</small></sup>p <sup><small>n</small></sup>t <sup><small>ŋ</small></sup>k], [f s]. The voiced pronunciation is only used in a register called '''''nenge hu''''', which is exclusively spoken by men who have passed initiation. The early missionaries who first described and wrote down the language were only allowed contact with initiated men, which is why the voiced allophones, although used by less than half of the speakers, are traditionally used to describe these phonemes.
* <small><sup>2</sup></small> In '''''nenge hu''''', /d/ is frequently pronounced as a tap or flap [ɾ] when before an unstressed vowel.
* <small><sup>2</sup></small> In '''''nenge hu''''', /d/ is frequently pronounced as a tap or flap [ɾ] when before an unstressed vowel.
* <small><sup>3</sup></small> ''Post pausa'', the prenasalised plosives /<sup><small>m</small></sup>b <sup><small>n</small></sup>d <sup><small>ŋ</small></sup>g/ are preceded by a syllabic nasal [m̩.p  n̩.t  ŋ̩.k] or [m̩.b  n̩.d  ŋ̩.g]. When immediately following a vowel, the nasalised onset can phonetically be regarded as belonging to the previous syllable Some speakers of '''''nenge hu''''', pronounce the prenasalised plosives in all positions as geminate nasals [mː nː ŋː]. This same tendency in '''''nenge la''''' retains the lack of voicing during the release into the vowel, causing these to sound like [mh nh ŋh].
* <small><sup>3</sup></small> ''Post pausa'', the prenasalised plosives /<sup><small>m</small></sup>b <sup><small>n</small></sup>d <sup><small>ŋ</small></sup>g/ are preceded by a syllabic nasal [m̩.p  n̩.t  ŋ̩.k] or [m̩.b  n̩.d  ŋ̩.g]. When immediately following a vowel, the nasalised onset can phonetically be regarded as belonging to the previous syllable. Some speakers of '''''nenge hu''''' pronounce the prenasalised plosives in all positions as geminate nasals [mː nː ŋː]. This same tendency in '''''nenge la''''' retains the lack of voicing during the release into the vowel, causing these to sound like [mh nh ŋh].
* <small><sup>4</sup></small> /j/ has a palatalising effect on preceding consonants, especially alveolar consonants and /h/. The sequence /hj/ is pronounced [ç]. The sequences /dj <sup><small>n</small></sup>dj nj zj lj/ generally end up pronounced towards [t͡ɕ~d͡ʒ <sup><small>n</small></sup>t͡ɕ~d͡ʒ ɲ ɕ~ʒ ʎ]. This effect on obstruents tends to be stronger in '''''nenge hu''''', resulting in postalveolar [d͡ʒ <sup><small>n</small></sup>d͡ʒ ʒ] whereas '''''nenge la''''' tends to use palatalised [t͡ɕ <sup><small>n</small></sup>t͡ɕ ɕ] or [t͡s<small><sup>j</sup></small> <sup><small>n</small></sup>t͡s<small><sup>j</sup></small> s<small><sup>j</sup></small>]. Three additional phonemes */d͡ʒ <sup><small>n</small></sup>d͡ʒ ʒ/ are sometimes suggested in order to explain the presence of a contrast between plain and palatalised pronunciations of /d <sup><small>n</small></sup>d z/ before /i/, while the sequence /ji/ is elswhere prohobited. Analyses that do not posit these extra phonemes simply allow /ji/ to appear in this location.
* <small><sup>4</sup></small> /j/ has a palatalising effect on preceding consonants, especially alveolar consonants and /h/. The sequence /hj/ is pronounced [ç]. The sequences /dj <sup><small>n</small></sup>dj nj zj lj/ generally end up pronounced towards [t͡ɕ~d͡ʒ <sup><small>n</small></sup>t͡ɕ~d͡ʒ ɲ ɕ~ʒ ʎ]. This effect on obstruents tends to be stronger in '''''nenge hu''''', resulting in postalveolar [d͡ʒ <sup><small>n</small></sup>d͡ʒ ʒ] whereas '''''nenge la''''' tends to use palatalised [t͡ɕ <sup><small>n</small></sup>t͡ɕ ɕ] or [t͡s<small><sup>j</sup></small> <sup><small>n</small></sup>t͡s<small><sup>j</sup></small> s<small><sup>j</sup></small>]. Three additional phonemes */d͡ʒ <sup><small>n</small></sup>d͡ʒ ʒ/ are sometimes suggested in order to explain the presence of a contrast between plain and palatalised pronunciations of /d <sup><small>n</small></sup>d z/ before /i/, while the sequence /ji/ is elswhere prohobited. Analyses that do not posit these extra phonemes simply allow /ji/ to appear in this location.
* <small><sup>5</sup></small> /w/ has a labialising effect on preceding consonants, with /hw/ most notably being pronounced [ʍ].
* <small><sup>5</sup></small> /w/ has a labialising effect on preceding consonants, with /hw/ most notably being pronounced [ʍ].

Revision as of 18:21, 23 February 2017

Wena (also known as Hibu, Hibuese, Mannenese or Nenge) is a language isolate spoken by around 60,000 people on the Hibu Islands in the Hibu Province of Papua New Guinea. It is called by its speakers either nenge wena or nenge wana, both essentially meaning 'our language', the former using the exclusive word 'we, not you' and the latter using the inclusive word 'we, including you'. The closest land to the Hibu Islands is Simberi Island about 150 kilometres to the southwest. Nuguria Atoll is a similar distance away to the southeast. About half of the Wena people are monolingual, the other half also having knowledge of Tok Pisin and a much smaller percentage know English. Dialectal differences are little-documented and appear to be small, most likely owing to the high degree of travel around the island.

Wena appears to be a language isolate. It is a right-branching, strongly isolating language, notable for its largely oligoanalytic nature, its complete lack of verbs other than the non-inflecting copula i, and for its sex-based speech registers, whereby initiated men pronounce all consonants other than /h/ as voiced.

Classification and history

Phonology

Consonants

Bilabial Labiodental Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Plain plosive b 1 d 1, 2, 4 g 1 ( ʔ ) 6
Prenasalised plosive mb 1, 3 nd 1, 3, 4 ŋg 1, 3
Nasal m n 4 ŋ
Fricative v 1 z 1, 4 ( ʒ ) 1, 4 h 4, 5
Affricate ( d͡ʒ ) 1, 4
Prenasalised affricate ( nd͡ʒ ) 1, 4
Lateral l 4
Approximant w5 j 4


  • 1 The plain plosives /b d g/, the prenasalised plosives /mb nd ŋg/ and the non-glottal fricatives /v z/ are pronounced voicelessly in a register called nenge la, which, at any one time, is spoken by most speakers: [p t k], [mp nt ŋk], [f s]. The voiced pronunciation is only used in a register called nenge hu, which is exclusively spoken by men who have passed initiation. The early missionaries who first described and wrote down the language were only allowed contact with initiated men, which is why the voiced allophones, although used by less than half of the speakers, are traditionally used to describe these phonemes.
  • 2 In nenge hu, /d/ is frequently pronounced as a tap or flap [ɾ] when before an unstressed vowel.
  • 3 Post pausa, the prenasalised plosives /mb nd ŋg/ are preceded by a syllabic nasal [m̩.p n̩.t ŋ̩.k] or [m̩.b n̩.d ŋ̩.g]. When immediately following a vowel, the nasalised onset can phonetically be regarded as belonging to the previous syllable. Some speakers of nenge hu pronounce the prenasalised plosives in all positions as geminate nasals [mː nː ŋː]. This same tendency in nenge la retains the lack of voicing during the release into the vowel, causing these to sound like [mh nh ŋh].
  • 4 /j/ has a palatalising effect on preceding consonants, especially alveolar consonants and /h/. The sequence /hj/ is pronounced [ç]. The sequences /dj ndj nj zj lj/ generally end up pronounced towards [t͡ɕ~d͡ʒ nt͡ɕ~d͡ʒ ɲ ɕ~ʒ ʎ]. This effect on obstruents tends to be stronger in nenge hu, resulting in postalveolar [d͡ʒ nd͡ʒ ʒ] whereas nenge la tends to use palatalised [t͡ɕ nt͡ɕ ɕ] or [t͡sj nt͡sj sj]. Three additional phonemes */d͡ʒ nd͡ʒ ʒ/ are sometimes suggested in order to explain the presence of a contrast between plain and palatalised pronunciations of /d nd z/ before /i/, while the sequence /ji/ is elswhere prohobited. Analyses that do not posit these extra phonemes simply allow /ji/ to appear in this location.
  • 5 /w/ has a labialising effect on preceding consonants, with /hw/ most notably being pronounced [ʍ].
  • 6 The glottal stop [ʔ] can appear any time two vowels are adjacent to each other. This is most common between two identical vowels and more frequent in clear speech but there is a large degree of variation. Because its possible distribution is predicted by the distribution of vowels and is non-contrastive, the glottal stop is not phonemic.

Consonant Spelling

The consonants are written using their phonemic representations in IPA with the exception of the prenasalised plosives /mb nd ŋg/, written mb, nd and ngg respectively, /ŋ/, written ng and /j/ written y. The letter r is used in some texts to indicate where the tapped or flapped allophone of /d/ appears. This is not consistent, although the Wena bible uses this and many names are spelled this way.

The following table shows the basic pronunciation of each written letter or letter combination.


Writing Nenge La Nenge Hu
b [p] [b]
bw [pw] [bw]
by [pj] [bj]
d [t] [d]~[ɾ]
dw [tw] [dw]
dy [t͡ɕ]~[tsj] [d͡ʒ]
g [k] [g]
gw [kw] [gw]
gy [kj] [gj]
h [h] [h]
hw [ʍ] [ʍ]
hy [ç] [ç]
l [l] [l]
lw [lw] [lw]
ly [ʎ] [ʎ]
m [m] [m]
mb [mp]~[mh] [mb]~[mː]
mbw [mpw]~[mʍ] [mbw]~[mːw]
mby [mpj]~[mç] [mbj]~[mːj]
mw [mw] [mw]
my [mw] [mw]
n [n] [n]
nd [nt]~[nh] [nd]~[nː]
ndw [ntw]~[nʍ] [ndw]~[nːw]
ndy [nt͡ɕ]~[ntsj] [nd͡ʒ]
ng [ŋ] [ŋ]
ngg [ŋk]~[ŋh] [ŋg]~[ŋː]
nggw [ŋkw]~[ŋʍ] [ŋgw]~[ŋːw]
nggy [ŋkj]~[ŋç] [ŋgj]~[ŋːj]
ngw [ŋw] [ŋw]
ngy [ŋj] [ŋj]
nw [nw] [nw]
ny [ɲ] [ɲ]
r [t] [ɾ]
v [f] [v]
vw [fw] [vw]
vy [fj] [vj]
w [w] [w]
y [j] [j]
z [s] [z]
zw [sw] [zw]
zy [ɕ]~[sj] [ʒ]

Vowels

front central back
close i u
open mid e o
low a


The true values of the vowels /a e i o u/ tend to be closer to [ä ɛ ɪ ɔ ʊ] although, for simplicity's sake, they tend to be transcribed with <a e i o u> even in narrow phonetic transcription. Each vowel has a fairly wide allophonic range and the cardinal [a e i o u] values fall within these ranges.

The high vowels /i u/ have non-syllabic allophones, [i̯~j] and [u̯~w] respectively. These appear when these vowels are unstressed and following another vowel.

Phonotactics

Prosody

Word classes

Nouns

Monosyllabic nouns

Echo nouns

Polysyllabic nouns

Compounding

Reduplication

Gendered nouns

Pronouns

The pronominal system of Wena is, like most other parts of the language, composed of transparent compounds. Syntactically, Wena's pronouns are no different from any other nouns.

Personal

The personal pronouns of Wena mark for three types of clusivity: exclusive, inclusive of third person, and inclusive of second person. The third person pronoun is generally glossed as DEF.E (definite entity) as it is used as a definite article in a lot of situations.


Absolutive Pronouns
Person Singular Exclusive Plural Inclusive of 3rd Inclusive of 2nd
1st na wena wena wana
2nd wa wewa wade -
3rd de dwe / de (we) - -


The distinction between wena "we" and wana "we" is that the latter includes any listeners whereas the former does not. In the second person, wewa is used to refer to a group with all members present and being addressed. Wede refers to a group whose members are not all present or being spoken to.

All the pronouns have distinct genitive forms equivalent to being preceded with ya. For example, ya na is equivalent to nga, with the former being more emphatic and the latter being more common. The forms are shown in the following table.


Genitive Pronouns
Person Singular Exclusive Plural Inclusive of 3rd Inclusive of 2nd
1st nga vyena vyena wona
2nd wo vyewa wode -
3rd zyi zyi (we) - -


Note that zyi we is often pronounced as one syllable, losing the /i/. This is sometimes indicated in writing as zy'we.

Modified and replaced

Any of the pronouns may be followed by any of the kinds of modifiers that any other noun can. Appositional modifiers are quite frequent. Wa da is used as an honorific when speaking to an important man. When speaking to a chief, however, one should avoid the above listed pronouns entirely and refer to him simply with the word mwada 'chief'. People addressing a chief humble themselves by referring to themselves as na di unless given permission not to.

In the third person, when talking about a number of people or things, modifiers are frequently used to disambiguate between referents that would otherwise all be referred to as de. Some commonly used phrases are de la 'the woman', de hu 'the man', de ngo 'the person', de nu 'the thing'. These are also very commonly used without de, as definiteness tends not to be marked explicitly except through the use of the genitive form zyi.

Reciprocal

The reciprocal pronoun is dede 'each other', 'one another'. It has the genitive form zyide.


Wena i le zyide.
wena i le zyide
1p.EXCL COP love.AG GEN.each_other
We love each other.


Hu gwe ndudu i li dede.
hu gwe ndudu i li dede
man and frog COP become.AG each_other
The man and the frog swapped bodies.
Lit.: The man and the frog became each other.


Reflexive

Reflexive pronouns may be formed by suffixing -zu onto any of the personal pronouns. In the first and second persons, the -zu is only used emphatically and otherwise dropped. In the third person, the zu is a separate word and it is the important part of the phrase, with the de able to be dropped.


Absolutive Pronouns
Person Singular Exclusive Plural Inclusive of 3rd Inclusive of 2nd
1st ABS na(zu) wena(zu) wena(zu) wana(zu)
1st GEN nga(zu) vyena(zu) vyena(zu) wona(zu)
2nd ABS wa(zu) wewa(zu) wade(zu) -
2nd GEN wo(zu) vyewa(zu) wode(zu) -
3rd ABS (de) zu (dwe) zu / (de we) zu - -
3rd GEN zyizu / ya zu zyizu (we) - -


Quite frequently, -zu attaches as a compound element on to the end of other nouns in order to create a lexical reflexive. Compare the following three sentences.


Na i ze ngu nga.
na i ze ngu nga
1s COP NEG.E murder.AG GEN.1s
I'm not going to kill myself.


Na i ze ngu ngazu.
na i ze ngu ngazu
1s COP NEG.E murder.AG GEN.1s.REFL
I'm not going to kill myself.


Na i ze nguzu.
na i ze nguzu
1s COP NEG.E murder.self.AG
I'm not going to commit suicide.


It should be noted that the reflexive pronouns are not used to highlight the subject, as they can in English. This is instead done by repeating the subject in an adjunctive modifier.


Na i ze ngu o na.
na i ze ngu u na
1s COP NEG.E murder.AG ADJN 1s
I'm not going to kill (anyone) myself.
Indefinite
Interrogative

Genitive forms

Demonstratives

Particles

Interjections

Noun Phrases

Modifiers

Appositional modifiers

Attributive modifiers

Genitive modifiers

Adjunctive modifiers

Definiteness

Degree

Modality

Number

Specificity

Tense and aspect

Clauses

NP clauses

Predicate clauses

Subject predicate clauses

Topic fronting

Questions

Coordination

Subordination

Conditional sentences

Miscellaneous

Affirmation and negation

Comparison

Imperatives

Names

Numerals

Registers

Nenge di

Nenge la

Nenge hu