Efatese is an artificial mixed language or zonal auxiliary language of Efate Island in Vanuatu. There are half a dozen languages spoken on Efate, of which the languages of North Efate and South Efate are not particularly closely related, and when missionary activity began on the island, at Port Havannah in the northwest of the island, a mixture of the target languages was invented for evangelism and scripture, in preference to promoting one indigenous language over the others.
Efatese | |
---|---|
Fate | |
Created by | Daniel Macdonald |
Date | 19th century |
Setting and usage | evangelism on Efate Island, now in Vanuatu |
Purpose | |
Sources | the Oceanic languages of Efate |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | qef (local use). Also used for Katembri |
Glottolog | efat1235 |
IETF | art-x-efatese |
References
edit- Robert Henry Codrington (1885) "Fate, Sandwich Islands", in The Melanesian Languages, 471–476. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
- Daniel MacDonald (1889) "Grammar of the Efatese language", in Daniel MacDonald (ed.), Three New Hebrides Languages (Efatese, Eromangan, Santo), 1–58. Melbourne: Edgerton and Moore.