Mbula language
Mbula is an Austronesian language spoken by around 2,500 people on Umboi Island and Sakar Island in the Morobe Province of Papua New Guinea. Its basic word order is subject–verb–object; it has a nominative–accusative case-marking strategy.
Name
Mbula speakers generally display difficulty expressing a name for their language. Historically it has been referenced as Mangap or Kaimanga but Kaimanga is considered an offensive term along the lines of "unsophisticated bush person". Mangap is not in known use however Mangaaba is the name given to Mbula speakers by Siassi Islanders. Mbula is the only name known to have been used by Mbula speakers themselves, though many of them are unfamiliar with this.Language Family and Origin
Mbula is a member of the Oceanic group of Austronesian languages. It was originally proposed as a member of the Siassi Family language group which is a set of languages extending from Karkar Island in the Madang Province of Papua New Guinea, along the coast of Finschafen and across New Britain. However more recent evidence suggests that it is a descendant of the Vitiaz Dialect Linkage. Its nearest genetic relations are the Kilenge and Maleu languages, its nearest geographic neighbour is the Papuan Kovai language.Location
Mbula speakers are generally located in seven villages: Gaura, Yangla, Birik, Marile, Kampalap, Kabi and Sakar. These villages are located on Sakar Island and the eastern half of Umboi Island. Both islands are inactive volcanos and both are rich in game, timber and fish. Location has influenced the language in that there are many specific vocabular items for species of fish, shells, canoes, nets, spears and a pair of motion verbs '-pet - to go out, appear, happen' and '-le - to enter' which specifically describe paths of motion which are radially outward toward the sea or radially inward from the sea.People and Culture
Colonialism has had a fair impact on the culture of Mbula speakers. Missionization began in 1884 and the vast majority of Mbula speakers now identify themselves as Christian. Some traditions are retained from tribal religions, foremost among them are those concerning sorcery, white magic and divination. Two general types of magic are identified among speakers, naborou, a beneficial love magic used by many young men in their pursuit of young ladies and yaamba, a kind of mildly destructive magic used to curse and hurt others. A third kind, pu, is considered the most evil, used only to kill or disable people.Language Contact
The Mangap-Mbula are part of a previously extensive trading network with bordering language groups, especially those in the Ngero language group of the Siassi islands which formed the hub of the trading network. As a result, approximately 65% of Mbula speakers are at least somewhat bilingual in Tok Pisin and some 30% speak and understand some Ngero. Due to missionization and other factors, 35% can speak and write English.[Phonology]
[Consonants]
The consonant phonemes of Mbula are as shown in the following table:The consonant is realised as intervocalically. Prenasalised stops, while requiring two phonetic units, exist as a single phonemic unit. The palatal glide is treated as being underlyingly vocalic in morphophonemic analysis while the labio-velar glide is analysed consonantally. All voiceless plosives,, are optionally pronounced with a voiceless nasal release word finally. All velars are fronted or backed, depending on the vowel immediately contiguous to them within the same syllable. is palatalized to a voiceless, laminal, post-alveolar plosive when followed by a morpheme boundary and.
[Vowels]
Mbula has five vowels phonemes as shown in the following table. Phonetically front vowels are unrounded and back vowels are rounded. and can be lax or tense and can be half close tense and half open lax. All vowels can be short or long though this is interpreted in the phonology as a sequence of two vowels rather than as the existence of long vowel phonemes. The two high vowels and are lowered slightly when followed by,, or.Front | Central | Back | |
Close | |||
Mid | |||
Open |
Vowels are subject to two rules: penultimate lengthening which means that external realisations may be long vowels while the underlying form is a short vowel and epenthesis which means the insertion of a vowel where the underlying form of the morpheme does not contain one. Epenthesis is regressive which means that epenthetic vowels take on the quality of the first vowel in the rest of the form. Vowel length is contrastive as can be seen in the following examples:
- long
- a type of ant
- domestic animal
- new shoot of a plant
- 3SG be heavy
- 3SG reads
Suprasegmentals
The placement of stress is predictable. In most words, primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable.Syllable Patterns
structure is generally V. VV can sometimes form a syllable in the case of a diphthong or long vowel and syllable structure can be analysed as CCV when or is analysed as a C.[Orthography]
As stated above, vowel length is contrastive. What would be written phonetically as a: is represented by aa. All long vowels are written this way. All alveolars are dental-alveolars. They are represented in the orthography by t, d, n and nd. The sound is represented by y. The complete orthography of Mbula is as follows:a | e | i | o | u | b | d | g | k | l | m | mb | n | nd | ŋ | ŋg | p | r | s | t | w | z | y |
A | E | I | O | U | B | D | G | K | L | M | Mb | N | Nd | Ŋ | Ŋg | P | R | S | T | W | Z | Y |
[Syntax] and Word Classes
In an ideal grammar each classificatory word type would belong only to one category and in Mbula that is mostly the case. However, in the following three areas, word-forms exist which are hard to nail down as one or the other:- verbs and prepositions
- verbs and adverbs
- verbs and instrumental nouns
Verbs and Prepositions
Prototypical verbs and prototypical prepositions exist along a cline with verbs at the start, prepositions at the end, and multicategoried word types in the middle:- forms inflected with the Subject prefixes which function syntactically only as predicates in sentences
- forms not inflected with the Subject prefixes which syntactically function only as predicates in sentences
- forms potentially exhibiting Subject agreement inflection which function syntactically as both predicates in sentences and in serial constructions
- forms never exhibiting inflection and which function syntactically only as prepositions
Verbs and Adverbs
- inflected verbs which never occur as modifiers within the predicate phrase and never occur in cosubordinate adverbial predications
- inflected verbs which never occur as modifiers within the predicate phrase, and can occur in either a preceding or following cosubordinate adverbial predication
- uninflected verbs which never occur as modifiers within the predicate phrase, but which can occur in either a preceding or following cosubordinate adverbial predication
- forms which can occur as modifiers in the predicate phrase after the object or occur as uninflected verbs in an adjacent cosubordinate adverbial predication
- forms which occur immediately after the object and never function as predicates in an adjacent cosubordinate adverbial construction
- forms which can occur immediately after the predicate and never function as a predicate in an adjacent cosubordinate adverbial construction
Verbs and Instrumental Nouns
didi - wall
-didi - to wall in
peeze - paddle
-peeze - to paddle
kor - implement for sweeping
-kor - to sweep up using this implement
ris - a line
-ris - to draw a line
Nouns
There is no syntactic distinction between nouns and adjectives in Mbula. Nouns are syntactically distinguished by the following three characteristics:- They may function 'in isolation' as arguments in a predication, a property that distinguishes them from non-inflecting stative verbs.
- When functioning as the heads of noun phrases, nouns occur phrase initially with all modifiers following.
- A subclass of nouns is morphologically distinguished by being obligatorily inflected with a set of genitive suffixes.
- human referent
- animate referent
- potent
- concrete
- temporal
- potentially consumable
- individuated/count
- inalienable genitive
[Pronouns]
- 1 singular
- 1 dual exclusive
- 1 dual inclusive
- 1 plural exclusive
- 1 plural inclusive
- 2 singular
- 2 dual
- 2 plural
- 3 singular
- 3 dual
- 3 plural
Verbs
The characteristic syntactic function of verbs is to act as the heads of predications in which they occur. They are defined by a number of properties:- They typically index the person and number of the subject of the sentence.
- They may contain transitivity-altering prefixes.
- They may not function as noun-phrase modifiers in certain frames.
Uninflected Verbs
- stative experiential verbs
- stative verbs encoding properties
- verbs of manner
- aspectual verbs
Adverbials
The reason this class is called adverbials and not adverbs is because Mbula contains a large collection of words which are defined as modifiers of constituents other than nouns. Semantically, such forms typically encode notions of time, aspect, manner and modality.Quantifiers">Quantifiers (linguistics)">Quantifiers
Quantifiers are uninflected forms which always occur in noun phrases following nouns, locative/alienable genitive pronouns, and attributive stative nouns, but before determiners, locative/alienable genitive prepositional phrases, relative clauses and demonstratives. The Mbula counting system is based upon the notions of five and twenty.Prepositions
Prepositions are generally uninflected forms which govern a single noun phrase complement and relate it to a head or predicate. Mbula employs five categories of prepositions:- the referent preposition -pa- used for oblique arguments
- the locative preposition -ki- used for animate goals towards which some entity moves, sites at which some entity is located and body parts which perceive something
- the preposition -kembei- used to express resemblance, similarity or approximate equality
- the comitative and manner prepositions -ramaki-/-raama- used for accompaniment and manner
- prepositional verbs discussed below
Prepositional Verbs
[Demonstratives]
Demonstratives in Mbula include determiners which occur in noun phrases and what one may call 'locative adverbial use' - those demonstratives which encode location in sentences. Because there is no morphological distinction between the two, they are considered to constitute a single class.[Complementizer]s
Complementisers are uninflected forms which only govern a following sentence. The combination of a complementiser and a following sentence becomes the constituent in a noun or predicate phrase. Mbula contains seven types of complementiser:- kokena - lest
- be ~ nothing - non-presupposition of factuality
- kembei - like
- nothing - asserted factuality
- ta ~ nothing - presupposed factuality
- tabe - presupposed non-factuality
- ki - habitual event
[Conjunctions]
[Interjections]
There are a number of interjections in Mbula, all of which play no role in the grammar of the language, but which function to convey the speaker's attitudes and intentions. They always occur sentence initially and include the following examples:a - I want to say something
ais - I want something
ha - I hear something, I don't know what it is
ii - I don't know
lak - I want to ask you something
som - I do not agree with you
yo - I say you did something good
ywe - I think you are bad
Morphology
in the Mbula language is not complex. There is little inflection of both nouns and verbs and few derivational processes. Most words in the Mbula language are mono-morphemic. Multi-morphemic words can be formed via the following processes:- indexing on verbs for the person and number of the Subject
- inflection of inalienable nouns for the person and number of their genitives
- reduplication
- derivation of predicates to increase or decrease their transitivity
- compounding
- nominalisation
Inflectional Morphology
The only types of inflectional processes in the language are on verbs for the person and number of the Subject, inflection of inalienable nouns for the person and number of their genitives as well as pronoun person/number distinctions.Verbal Inflection
Verbs typically index the person and number of the subject of the sentence with the following set of subject prefixes:1sg - ang
2sg - nothing ~ ku
3sg - i
1pl.inc - t
1pl.exc - am
2pl - k
3pl - ti
Inflection of Inalienable Nouns
Mbula contains a class of nouns which are obligatorily inflected with genitive suffixes. 'Inalienable' describes the semantic nature of the nouns. That is, they are semantically considered in speakers’ minds to be inalienable or inseparable from something. Examples include body parts and family members – concepts which exist in relation to something else, just the way an edge cannot exist without being the edge of something. Following is a list of the genitive suffixes:gen.1sg - ng
gen.2sg - m
gen.3sg - VnV
gen.1pl.inc - ndV
gen.1pl.inc - yam
gen.2pl - yom
gen.3pl - n
Pronoun Inflection
Pronouns in Mbula inflect for first, second and third person as well as singular, dual and plural, as well as inclusive and exclusive in the first person. They also change depending on whether they are in the nominative, accusative, referent or locative case. The following table details the paradigm:Nominative | Accusative | Referent | Locative | |
1SG | nio | yo | pio | tio |
2SG | nu ~ niwi | u | pu ~ piwi | ku ~ kiwi |
3SG | ni | i | pini | kini |
1DU.INC | ituru | |||
1DU.EXC | niamru | |||
2DU | niomru | |||
3DU | ziru | |||
1PL.INC | iti | ti | piti | kiti |
1PL.EXC | niam | yam | piam | tiam |
2PL | niom | yom | piom | tiom |
3PL | zin | zin | pizin | kizin |