Nawuhu

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Nawuhu
na’a wúhu
WuhuIslandFlag.png
Flag of the Wuhu Autonomous Zone
Pronunciation[na.a ˈwu.ɦu]
Created byJukethatbox
Date2024
Native toWuhu Island
EthnicityWuhu people
Native speakers90 (2024)
Official status
Regulated byWuhu Autonomous Zone
Development bodyWuhu Island Community Discord
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Nawuhu(na'a wúhu, Nawuhu: [na.a ˈwu.ɦu]), also called Wuhu or Nauhu is a language isolate that was once predominantly spoken by the inhabitants of Wuhu Island(wúhu, aijé wúhu [aiˌʑe ˈwu.ɦu]). It was spoken primarily by the civilisation that probably encompassed the entire island, the ruins of which can be seen on the southern half of the island.[1] Today, it is only spoken by around 90 native speakers, most elderly.

Phonology

Orthography

Nawuhu is written in a form of the Latin script. There is one diacritic: the acute accent, ⟨◌́⟩, which signifies where stress is placed in a word.

Majuscule A B C K D E G H I J L Ł M N O P S T U V W Y Z
Minuscule a b c k d e g h i j l ł m n o p s t u v w y z
IPA a b ɕ k d e g h i ʑ l ʎ m n o p s t u ʉ w j z
ç ɘ̯ ɦ ɘ̯

Note that ⟨Vv⟩ is a vowel, representing the sound /ʉ/, as well as the sound /ɘ̯/ in intervocalic, non-syllabic positions.

Variations

The romanisation shown above is the Mark Mii romanisation system, which was developed following the Second World War by Mark Mii, who later became president of Wuhu Island, famously meeting with Richard Nixon at the 1972 Delfino Conference.

Consonants

Bilabial Alveolar Alveolo-
palatal
Palatal Velar Glottal
Plosive p b t d k g
Nasal m n ɲ ŋ
Fricative s z ɕ ʑ (ç) h~ɦ
Semivowel w j
Lateral l ʎ

/h/ and /ɦ/ are interchangeable, but most speakers only pronounced /ɦ/ in intervocalic positions(between vowels), hence the /ɦ/ in hu.

Vowels

Front Central Back
Close i ʉ u
Close-mid e (ɘ̯) o
Front a

/ɘ/ is an unstressed intervocalic allohpone of /e/ and /ʉ/, e.g. íean, "one", pronounced [ˈiɘ̯an].

Stress and pitch

Morphology

Nouns

Number

Nawuhu has five categories of grammatical number: singular, dual, paucal, greater paucal and plural. If there is not sufficient context, all nouns in a phrase have to be marked with suffixes denoting their number, including if the noun is singular. If a word ending in -a must be denoted as singular, the suffix -’a is placed instead.

Adjectives do not have to agree with nouns, though verbs do. Agreeing verbs have their own suffixes to indicate number, please see the Verbs section for more information.

Base suffixes for nouns
Singular Dual Paucal Greater Paucal Plural
-a -an -avn -avne -nóa

Pronouns

Personal

Singular Dual Paucal Greater Paucal Plural
First ja jan jv'vn jvlván ja'aon
Second ádo ádon yuín ná'ayun neíyo
Third ain aina avni avnin enawe

There are no gendered third person pronouns in Nawuhu, though some older translations of excavated texts translated the third person pronoun as "he". Today, most translators translate the ain pronoun as "they".

Demonstrative

Demonstrative pronouns are placed after the noun, and have to agree with the grammatical number of the noun.

Singular Dual Paucal Greater Paucal Plural
Proximal pa pi’i piwa bevan ni’imu
Speaker-Medial co coi nvna nvna‘a a’anca
Addressee-Medial jv jv’v mvna mvna‘a a’anja
Distal nis eonis zola zeóya miła’a

References

  1. ^ See [1].