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Malayo-Polynesian Languages

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The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Malayo-Polynesian Languages

 

(Austronesian languages), a language family that includes the languages of four traditionally distinct groups: Indonesian, Polynesian, Melanesian, and Micronesian. Despite the paucity of knowledge about these languages, there is no doubt as to the existence of an Austronesian family, although its limits in certain areas, notably among the Melanesian languages, have not been precisely determined.

The Malayo-Polynesian languages (or, more precisely, their basic nucleus) are united by a large number of etymological roots; they are not uniform grammatically. These languages have polysyllabic (more often disyllabic) roots, agglutination (affixes in various positions), and an analytic syntax. In addition to independent personal pronouns, there are usually short, pronominal morphemes which perform various functions (possessive suffix, subject or object indicator with a verb).

The first detailed linguistic classification of the entire family was the lexicostatistical classification proposed by the American scholar I. Dyen in 1965. For Dyen, the terms “Malayo-Polynesian languages” and “Austronesian languages” are not synonymous. In his system Malayo-Polynesian is the largest subdivision of the Austronesian family and includes most Indonesian languages, all the Polynesian languages, and some Melanesian languages. However, there is as yet no generally accepted genealogical classification of the Malayo-Polynesian languages.

REFERENCES

Okeaniia. Moscow, 1971. (Reference work.)
Dyen, I. “A Lexicostatistical Classification of the Austronesian Languages.” International Journal of American Linguistics, Memoir, no. 19, 1965.
Grace, G. W. “Austronesian Lexicostatistical Classification: A Review Article.” Oceanic Linguistics, 1966, vol. 5, no. 1.

IU. KH. SIRK

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
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Evidence for these now-vanished Papuan populations is found in the structure and distribution of contemporary Austronesian languages of eastern Indonesia, with particular reference to the western border of the so-called Central-Eastern Malayo-Polynesian languages (Figures 2 and 3), a grouping that has been proposed as a major subgroup within the Austronesian family (Blust 1993).
Furthermore, given new evidence of a more western extent for this Papuan substrate (Donohue 2007b) than has previously been assumed (Capell 1975), the border of the so-called Central-Eastern Malayo-Polynesian languages matches exactly the past distribution of Papuan languages, providing strong support for the idea that there was, until relatively recently, a significant seafaring Papuan presence across eastern Indonesia.
The purpose of the present exercise is to draw attention to words that translate as 'taboo' in a variety of Malayo-Polynesian languages, but which refer not only to disapproved human actions but also to the behaviours of certain animals.
Indeed, other Malayo-Polynesian languages provide clear examples of words for 'taboo' that refer to the behaviour of non-humans.
In Western Malayo-Polynesian languages there are two constructions for encoding most two-place predicates.
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