Lardil language


Lardil, also spelled Leerdil or Leertil, is a moribund language spoken by the Lardil people on Mornington Island, in the Wellesley Islands of Queensland in northern Australia. Lardil is unusual among Australian languages in that it features a ceremonial register, called Damin. Damin is regarded by Lardil-speakers as a separate language and has the only phonological system outside Africa to use click consonants.

Associated languages

Lardil is a member of the Tangkic family of Non-Pama–Nyungan Australian languages, along with Kayardild and Yukulta, which are close enough to be mutually intelligible. Though Lardil is not mutually intelligible with either of these, it is likely that many Lardil speakers were historically bilingual in Yangkaal, since the Lardil people have long been in contact with the neighboring Yangkaal tribe and trading, marriage and conflict between them seem to have been common. There was also limited contact with mainland tribes including the Yanyuwa, of Borroloola; and the Garawa and Wanyi, which groups ranged as far east as Burketown. Members of the Kaiadilt tribe also settled on nearby Bentinck Island in 1947.

Outlook

The number of Lardil speakers has diminished dramatically since Kenneth Hale's study of the language in the late 1960s. Hale worked with a few dozen speakers of Lardil, some of these fluent older speakers, and others younger members of the community who had only a working or passive understanding. When Norvin Richards, a student of Hale's, returned to Mornington Island to continue work on Lardil in the 1990s, he found Lardil children had no understanding of the language and that only a handful of aging speakers remained; Richards has stated that "Lardil was deliberately destroyed" by assimilation and relocation programs in the years of the "Stolen Generation". A dictionary and grammatical sketch of the language were compiled and published by the Mornington Shire Council in 1997, and the Mornington Island State School has implemented a government-funded cultural education program incorporating the Lardil language. The last fluent speaker of so-called Old Lardil died in 2007, though a few speakers of a grammatically distinct New variety remain.

Kinship terms

Lardil has an intensely complex system of kinship terms reflecting the centrality of kin-relations to Lardil society; all members of the community are addressed by the terms as well as by given names. This system also features a few dyadic kinship terms, i.e. titles for pairs rather than individuals, such as kangkariwarr 'pair of people, one of whom is the paternal great uncle/aunt or grandparent of the other'.
TitleRelation
kangkarFaFa, FaFaBr, FaFaSi
kanthaFa, FaBr
babeFaMo, FaMoSi, FaMoBr
jembeMoFa, MoFaBr, MoFaSi
nyerreMoMo, MoMoBro, MoMoBrSoCh
merrkaFaSi
wuyinjinWiFa, HuFa, FaFaSiSo, FaMoBrSo
ngamaMo, MoSi, SoWi, BrSoWi
kunawunWiMo, WiMoBr
yakuMoBrDaDa, sister, elder sister
kambinCh, BrCh
kardaCh, SiCh, WiFaSi, MoMoMo
kerndeWi, WiSi, ‘second cross-cousin’
kangkurSoSo, SoDa ; BrSoSo, BrSoDa
nginnginSoCh, SiSoCh
benyinDaSo, DaDa

Initiate languages

Traditionally, the Lardil community held two initiation ceremonies for young men. Luruku, which involved circumcision, was undergone by all men following the appearance of facial hair; warama, the second initiation, was purely voluntary and culminated in a subincision ceremony.
Luruku initiates took a year-long oath of silence and were taught a sign language known as marlda kangka, which, though limited in its semantic scope, was fairly complex. Anthropologist David McKnight's research in the 1990s suggests that marlda kangka classifies animals somewhat differently from Lardil, having, for example, a class containing all shellfish and lacking an inclusive sign for ‘dugong+turtle’. In addition to its use by luruku initiates, marlda kangka had practical applications in hunting and warfare.
While marlda kangka was essentially a male language, the non-initiated were not forbidden to speak it. Damin, on the other hand, was a secret language spoken only by warama initiates and those preparing for second initiation, though many community members seem to have understood it. Damin, like marlda kangka, was phonologically, lexically and semantically distinct from Lardil, though its syntax and morphology seem to be analogous. Research into the language has proved controversial, since the Lardil community regards it as cultural property and no explicit permission was given to make Damin words public.

Necronyms

Death in Lardil tends to be treated euphemistically; it is common, for example, to use the phrase wurdal yarburr 'meat' when referring to a deceased person. Yuur-kirnee yarburr has the sense 'You-know-who has died', and is preferable to a more direct treatment. It is taboo to speak the name of a deceased person, even when referring to living people with the same name; these people are addressed as thamarrka. The deceased is often known by the name of his/her death or burial place plus the necronym suffix -ngalin, as in Wurdungalin 'one who died at Wurdu'. Sometimes other strategies are used to refer to the dead, such as circumlocution via kinship terms.

Phonology

Consonants

The consonant inventory is as follows, with the practical orthography in parentheses.
Lardil's consonant inventory is fairly typical with respect to Australian phonology; it does not distinguish between voiced and unvoiced stops, and features a full set of stops and nasals at six places of articulation The distinction between ‘apical’ and ‘laminal’ consonants lies in whether the tip of the tongue or its flattened blade makes contact with the place of articulation. Hale's 1997 practical orthography has ‘k’ for in order to disambiguate nasal+velar clusters from instances of the velar nasal phoneme and to avoid suggesting -gemination in clusters. The sounds represented by the digraphs ‘nh’ and ‘ly’ are not common in Lardil, but speakers perceive them as distinct, respectively, from and, and they do occur in some words.

Vowels

Lardil has eight phonemically distinct vowels, differentiated by short and long variants at each of four places of articulation. Phonemic vowel length is an important feature of many Australian languages; minimal pairs in Lardil with a vowel length distinction include waaka/waka ‘crow’/’armpit’ and thaldi/thaldii ‘come here!’/’to stand up’. Long vowels are roughly twice as long as their short counterparts. Some sources describe /e eː/ as low vowels, closer to /æ æː/.

Stress

Primary word stress in Lardil falls on the initial syllable, and primary phrase stress on the final word in the phrase. These stress rules have some exceptions, notably compounds containing tangka ‘man’ as a head noun modified by a demonstrative or another nominal; these expressions, and other compound phrases, have phrase-initial stress.

Phonotactics

Common alternations (consonants)

In addition to the common phonological alterations noted above, Lardil features some complex word-final phonology which is affected by both morphological and lexical factors.
Augmentation acts on many monomoraic forms, producing, for example, /ʈera/ 'thigh' from underlying *ter.
High vowels tend to undergo lowering at the end of bimoraic forms, as in *penki > penke 'lagoon'. In several historical locative/ergatives, lowering does not occur. It does occur in at least one long, u-final stem, and it coexists with the raising of certain stem-final /a/s.
In some trimoraic forms, final, underlying short vowels undergo apocope, as in *jalulu > jalul 'fire'. Front-vowel apocope fails to occur in locatives, verbal negatives, many historical locative/ergatives, and a number of i-final stems such as wan̪t̪alŋi 'a species of fish'. Back-vowel apocope also has lexically-governed exceptions.
Cluster reduction simplifies underlying word-final consonant clusters, as in *makark > makar 'anthill'. This process is "fed" in a sense by apocope, since some forms that would otherwise end in a short vowel arise as cluster-final after apocope.
Non-apical truncation results in forms like ŋalu from underlying *ŋaluk, in which the underlying form would end in a non-apical consonant. This process is also fed by apocope, and seems to be lexically governed to an extent, since Lardil words can end in a laminal; compare kakawuɲ 'a species of bird', kulkic 'a species of shark'.
In addition to the dropping of non-apicals, a process of apicalization is at work, giving forms such as ŋawit from underlying laminal-final *ŋawic. It has been proposed that the process responsible for some of these forms is better described as laminalization, but apicalization explains the variation between alveolar /t/ and dental /t̪/ in surface forms with an underlying non-apical, and does not predict/generate as many invalid forms as does the laminalization model.

Grammar

Parts of speech

Verbs

The first major lexical class in Lardil is its verbs, which may be subclassified as intransitive, transitive, and intransitive- and transitive complemented. Verbs are both semantically and, morphologically distinct from nominals.

Nominals

s are a semantically and functionally diverse group of inflected items in Lardil. Some of them are 'canonical nouns' which refer to items, people or concepts; but many, the stative or attributive nominals, are semantically more like adjectives or other predicates. Kurndakurn 'dry', durde 'weak', and other lexical items with adjectival meanings inflect exactly like other nominals Determiners rr 'that, are also morphological nominals, as are inherently temporal and spatial adverbs.

Pronouns

Lardil has a rich pronominal system featuring an inclusive-exclusive plurality distinction, a dual number and generational harmony.
A ‘harmonic’ relationship exists between individuals of alternate generations ; a ‘disharmonic’ relation is between individuals of consecutive or odd-numbered generations.
HarmonicDisharmonic
1ngada
2nyingki
3niya
1du exc. nyarrinyaan
1du inc. ngakurringakuni
2du kirrinyiinki
3du birrinyiinki
1P exc. nyalinyalmu
1P inc. ngakulingakulmu
2P kilikilmu
3P bilibilmu

Uninflected elements

elements in Lardil include:

Verbal morphology

Nine basic inflectional endings appear on verbs in Lardil:
The future marker indicates anticipation/expectation of an event, or, when combined with the particle mara, either the proposed outcome of a hypothetical or an unachieved intention; it also marks embedded verbs in jussive clauses.
The non-future is used primarily in dependent clauses to indicate a temporal limit to an action.
The contemporaneous ending marks a verb in a subordinate clause when that verb's referent action is contemporaneous with the action described in the main clause.
The evitative ending, which appears as -nymerra in objective case, marks a verb whose event or process is undesirable or to be avoided, as in niya merrinymerr ‘He might hear’ ; it is somewhat analogous to English ‘lest’, though more productive.
When one imperative follows another closely, the second verb is marked with a Sequential Imperative ending.
Negation is semantically straightforward, but is expressed with a complex set of affixes; which is used depends on other properties of the verb.
Other processes, which may be characterized as derivational rather than inflectional, express duration/repetition, passivity/reflexivity, reciprocality, and causativity on the verb. Likewise, nouns may be derived from verbs by adding the suffix, as in werne-kebe-n ‘food-gatherer’ or werne-la-an ‘food-spearer’; the negative counterpart of this is, as in dangka-be-jarr ‘non-biter-of-people’.

Nominal morphology

Lardil nominals are inflected for objective, locative and genitive cases, as well as future and non-future; these are expressed via endings that attach to the base forms of nominals.
Nominative case
The nominative case, which is used with sentence subjects and objects of simple imperatives is not explicitly marked; uninflected nouns carry nominative case by default.
Objective (oblique) case
The objective case has five general functions, marking the object of a verb in plain form, the agent of a passive verb in plain form, the subject of a contemporaneous dependent clause, the locative complement of a verb in the plain negative or negative imperative, and the object of the sequential imperative. Lardil displays some irregularities in object-marking morphology.
Locative case
The locative marker appears on the locative complement of a verb in plain form. The objective case serves this purpose with negative verbs. Locative case is formed by lengthening the final vowel in instances of vowel-final base forms such as barnga ‘stone’. While the Locative case can denote a variety of locative relations, such relations may be specified using inherently locative nominals that do not themselves inflect for this case. Nominals corresponding to animate beings tend not to be marked with Locative case; Genitive is preferred for such constructions as yarramangan ‘on the horse’. On pronouns, for which case-marking is irregular, Locative case is realized via ‘double-expression’ of Genitive case: ngada ‘I’ > ngithun ‘I = my’ > ngithunngan ‘I+gen = on me’.
Genitive case
The genitive morpheme marks a possessor nominal, the agent of a passive verb in the future, non-future or evitative; the pronominal agent of any passive verb, the subject of a relative clause, if it is a non-subject in the sentence; and the subject of a cleft construction in which the topic is a non-subject.
Future
The object of a verb in future tense is marked for futurity by a suffix, as in the sentence below:
The future marker also has four other functions. It marks: the locative complement of a future verb, the object of a verb in contemporaneous form, the object of a verb in the evitative form, and the dative complement of certain verbs. The instrumental case inflection is homophonous with the future marker, but both may appear on the same nominal in certain instances.
Non-future
The object of a verb in the marked non-future also inflects for non-futurity. The non-future marking is also used to mark time adverbials in non-future clauses as well as the locative complement of a non-future verb.
Verbal case
In addition to these inflectional endings, Lardil features several morphologically verbal affixes that are semantically similar to case markers and, like case endings, mark noun phrases rather than individual nouns. Allative and ablative meanings are expressed with these endings; as are the desiderative and a second type of evitave; comitative, proprietive and privative.
Verbalizing suffixes
Lardil nominals may also take one of two derivational suffixes: the Inchoative, which has the sense ‘become X’, and the Causative, which has the sense ‘make X Y’; other verbalizing suffixes exist in Lardil but are far less productive than these two.

Reduplication

is productive in verbal morphology, giving a non-future durative with the pattern V-tharr V, having the sense 'keep on V-ing', and a future durative with V-thururr V-thur.
In some instances nominal roots may be reduplicated, in their entirety, to indicate plurality, but Lardil nominals are not generally marked for number and this form is fairly rare.

Syntax

Given the rich morphology of Lardil, it is not surprising that its word order is somewhat flexible; however, the basic sentence order has been described as SVO, with direct object either following or preceding indirect object and other dependents following these. Clitics appear clause-second and/or on either side of the verb.

Syntax and case assignment

Lardil is unique among the Tangkic languages in being non-ergative. In an ergative language, the subject of an intransitive verb takes nominative case while the subject of a transitive verb takes ergative case. In Lardil, subjects of both verb types are inflected for nominative case, and both indirect and direct objects marked for accusative as in the following sentences:
Kun, glossed as ‘EV’, is an eventive marker, marking a verb referring to something that actually occurred or is occurring.
Subjects of passive verbs also take nominative case, and their objects, take accusative, as in:
Here, R is a maker of reflexivity.

Part-whole compounds

Though part-whole relations are sometimes expressed using the genitive case as in below, it is more common to mark both part and whole with the same case, placing the ‘part’ nominal immediately after its possessor nominal, as in.

New Lardil

While very few speakers of Lardil in its traditional form remain, Norvin Richards and Kenneth Hale both worked with some speakers of a "New Lardil" in the 1990s which displays significant morphological attrition compared to the Old variety. Previously minor sentence forms in which the object of a verb takes nominative case have become generalized, even in instances where the verb is in future tense. One of a number of negation patterns has become generalized, and the augmented forms of monosyllabic verb roots reinterpreted as base forms.