Oksapmin is a Trans–New Guinea language spoken in Oksapmin Rural LLG, Telefomin District, Sandaun, Papua New Guinea. The two principal dialects are distinct enough to cause some problems with mutual intelligibility.
Oksapmin | |
---|---|
Oksap | |
nuxule meŋ 'our language' | |
Native to | Papua New Guinea |
Region | Oksapmin Rural LLG, Telefomin District, Sandaun |
Native speakers | 12,000 (2005)[1] |
Trans–New Guinea
| |
Dialects |
|
Latin | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | opm |
Glottolog | oksa1245 |
ELP | Oksapmin |
Map: The Oksapmin language of New Guinea
The Oksapmin language
Other Trans–New Guinea languages
Other Papuan languages
Austronesian languages
Uninhabited | |
Oksapmin has dyadic kinship terms[2] and a body-part counting system that goes up to 27.[3] Notable ethnographic research by Geoffrey B. Saxe at UC Berkeley has documented the encounter between pre-contact uses of number and its cultural evolution under conditions of monetization and exposure to schooling and the formal economy among the Oksapmin.[4]
Classification
editOksapmin has been influenced by the Mountain Ok languages (the name "Oksapmin" is from Telefol), and the similarities with those languages were attributed to borrowing in the classifications of both Stephen Wurm (1975) and Malcolm Ross (2005), where Oksapmin was placed as an independent branch of Trans–New Guinea. Loughnane (2009)[5] and Loughnane and Fedden (2011)[6] conclude that it is related to the Ok languages, though those languages share innovative features not found in Oksapmin. Usher finds Oksapmin is not related to the Ok languages specifically, though it is related at some level to the southwestern branches of Trans–New Guinea.
Phonology
editVowels
editThere are six monophthongs, /i e ə a o u/, and one diphthong, /ai/.
Consonants
editBilabial | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
unrounded | rounded | |||||
Nasal | m | n | ŋ | |||
Stop | voiceless | t | k | kʷ | ||
prenasal | ᵐb | ⁿd | ᵑɡ | ᵑɡʷ | ||
Fricative | ɸ | s | x | xʷ | ||
Lateral | l | |||||
Semivowel | j | w |
Phoneme | Allophone |
---|---|
/t/ | [t], [tʰ] |
/k/ | [k], [kʰ] |
/ᵐb/ | [ᵐb], [m] |
/ⁿd/ | [ⁿd], [n] |
/ᵑɡ/ | [ᵑɡ], [ŋ] |
/ɸ/ | [ɸ], [β], [p], [pɸ~pʰ] |
/s/ | [s], [z] |
/x/ | [x], [ɣ], [ç], [ʝ] |
Tone
editOksapmin contrasts two tones: high and low.
References
edit- ^ Oksapmin at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022)
- ^ The Oksapmin Kinship System Archived 2009-09-20 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved May 21, 2009.
- ^ Saxe, Geoffrey B.; Moylan, Thomas (1982). "The development of measurement operations among the Oksapmin of Papua New Guinea". Child Development. 53 (5): 1242–1248. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8624.1982.tb04161.x. JSTOR 1129012..
- ^ Saxe, Geoffrey (2012). Cultural development of mathematical ideas: Papua New Guinea studies. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521761666.
- ^ Loughnane (2009)
- ^ Loughnane, Robyn; Fedden, Sebastian (2011). "Is Oksapmin Ok?—A Study of the Genetic Relationship between Oksapmin and the Ok Languages" (PDF). Australian Journal of Linguistics. 31 (1): 1–42. doi:10.1080/07268602.2011.533635. S2CID 58263200.
- Loughnane, Robyn (2009). A grammar of Oksapmin (PhD thesis). The University of Melbourne. hdl:11343/35153.
External links
edit- Timothy Usher, New Guinea World, Oksap