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Papuan Languages

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 It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Papuan Languages

 

a conventional designation for a number of language groups and isolated languages in New Guinea, the Bismarck Archipelago, and the Solomon Islands that do not belong to the Malayo-Polynesian (Austronesian) family. There are more than 2 million speakers of Papuan languages (1970, estimate). Various estimates place the number of Papuan languages at between 300 and 700, with no reliable data on genetic relations between the languages. According to the preliminary data of the Australian scholar S. Wurm, the languages may be classified as follows: Trans-New Guinea phylum (approximately 1.4 million speakers), Sepik Ramu (approximately 100,000), Western Papuan phylum (fewer than 100,000), Wapei-Palei phylum (approximately 65,000), Toaripi phylum (approximately 30,000), the Bougainville phylum on the island of Bougainville (approximately 40,000), and a number of smaller genetic groupings. The major Papuan languages, in numbers of speakers, are Enga (110,000), Hagen (60,000), Chimbu (60,000), Huli (54,000), Kamano (40,000), Wahgi (40,000), and Kewa (40,000). Bilingualism and multilingualism are common. In eastern New Guinea a number of regional languages are spoken in addition to Neo-Melanesian, a Pidgin English used by more than 0.5 million people in New Guinea and the neighboring islands. In western New Guinea (Irian Jaya), Indonesian is widely used as a common language.

The Papuan languages are typelogically diverse. They are distinguished by rich consonant systems that include preglottal-ized and prenasalized consonants and by a specific set of allo-phonic alternations, in which, for example, [t] and [p] are frequently allophones of a single phoneme. Verbal affixes with single grammatical functions form an extremely complex inflectional system. There are complex morphophonemic alternations at affix junctures. Many Papuan languages have grammatical classes, unusual counting systems, and forms known as medials (types of adverbial participles).

N. N. Miklukho-Maklai was the first to provide a scholarly description of Bongu and other Papuan languages. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the Papuan languages were studied by the British scholar S. Ray. Most research in the mid-20th century has been done by Dutch, Australian, and American linguists, including S. Wurm, A. Capell, C. Voorhoeve, and H. K. J. Cowan. The Papuan languages have not been fully described.

The languages generally do not have writing systems and are not used for instruction in schools. Literature is practically nonexistent.

REFERENCES

Puchkov, P. I. Naselenie Okeanii. Moscow, 1967.
Butinov, N. A. Papuasy Novoi Gvinei. Moscow, 1968.
Leont’ev, A. A. Papuasskie iazyki. Moscow, 1974.
Capell, A. A Linguistic Survey of the South-Western Pacific, 2nd ed. Nouméa, 1962.
Capell, A. A Survey of New Guinea Languages. [Sydney, 1969.]
Linguistics in Oceania. The Hague-Paris, 1971.

A. A. LEONT’EV

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
1SG mango fetch 'I fetched the mango.' Whilst Bunaq retains roughly half of the prefixes of Pantar languages, these have been all but lost in the other Papuan languages of Timor.
examine variation among mostly Papuan language groups of eastern New Guinea.
It is generally agreed that the 800 or so Papuan languages predate the Oceanic (Oc) languages in Melanesia by as much as 50,000 years (Spriggs 1997).
In contrast, Islanders of the Eastern Group speak a Papuan language known as Meriam Mir.
The insular remoteness of Dauar to the northeast in particular--where Meriam Mir is spoken, a Papuan language with strong Australian and Austronesian elements--and the proximity of Saibai to New Guinea, suggest that these islands are unlikely to have been colonised from the south.
Of the last ten years, the Papuan languages of Timor, Alor, and Pantar have finally received the attention they deserve.
Since prefixal agreement and alienability contrasts are also features of the island Papuan languages of this region, and since Papuan influence is independently required to explain a number of additional traits of these eastern Austronesian languages (Reesink 2002; Donohue 2004, 2005, 2007b; Arka 2007; Mbete 2007), the simplest explanation is that Papuan influence has shaped the construction of an internal division in the Austronesian family tree, and that the 'Central-Eastern Malayo-Polynesian' label represents those languages that display a strong Papuan substrate rather than a linguistic split.
Papuan Languages and the New Guinea Linguistic Scene.
Awar, like many Papuan languages, has an SOV order: Mo kan vasat You tree saw S O V
The samples included show what Renck feels is a style too "verbose" for written style, though "very close to the way many people actually speak", with the tail-head sentence-linking redundancy and the discourse particles so typical of most Papuan languages. In my experience, unlike Renck's, materials in that kind of style are easier for new readers, not more difficult.
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