Buol language
Buol | |
---|---|
Bwo’ol | |
Native to | Indonesia |
Region | Central Sulawesi |
Native speakers | 96,000 (2000 census)[1] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 |
blf |
Glottolog |
buol1237 [2] |
Buol (Bual, Bwo’ol, Bwool, Dia) is a Philippine language spoken in North-eastern Sulawesi, Indonesia.
Phonology
Vowels are /a e i o u/. Stress falls on penultimate syllable, with sequence of like vowels counting as one syllable. Consonants are:
p | t̪ | k | (ʔ) | |
b | d | (dʒ) | ɡ | |
m | n̪ | ŋ | ||
β | (s) | (h) | ||
r | ʎ | |||
w | j |
/dʒ/ occurs in loans. /h/, /s/, /ʔ/ are found in loans and a small number of native words, such as /buahaŋa/ 'k.o. cricket', /sio/ 'nine', /naʔal/ 'bark slippers'.
/β/ only occurs before /u/, but there are near-minimal pairs such as /βuŋo/ 'fruit', /buŋol/ 'leaf'.
/ʎ/ is pronounced [l] after a front vowel, as in [dila] 'tongue'; [] if not, but preceded by a front vowel, as in [ae] 'chin'; and [ʎ] elsewhere. However, there is an exception with the sequences /ʎaʎa, ʎoʎa, ʎoʎo/, where the first /ʎ/ is pronounced [l], as in /ʎoʎo/ [loʎo] 'face'.
References
- ↑ Buol at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
- ↑ Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin; Bank, Sebastian, eds. (2016). "Buol". Glottolog 2.7. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
- "Buol" in K. Alexander Adelaar & Nikolaus Himmelmann, 2005, The Austronesian languages of Asia and Madagascar