Numbami language

Numbami
Native to Papua New Guinea
Region coastal village in Morobe Province
Native speakers
200 (2007)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3 sij
Glottolog numb1247[2]

Numbami (also known as Siboma or Sipoma) is an Austronesian language spoken by about 200 people with ties to a single village in Morobe Province, Papua New Guinea. Numbami is a phonologically conservative isolate within the Huon Gulf languages, and is the last Austronesian language on the south coast of the Huon Gulf. Its nearest relatives along the coast to the southeast are 270 km away, Maisin and Arifama-Miniafia in Oro Province (Northern Province in the former colony of Papua).

The word order typology of Numbami and the Huon Gulf languages is subject–verb–object (SVO), which is typical of Austronesian languages; while that of Arifama-Miniafia and most of the Papuan Tip languages is subject–object–verb (SOV), which is typical of Papuan languages. Maisin has been characterized as a mixed language, with both Austronesian and Papuan features that obscure its primary heritage, and it is likely (but unprovable) that settlements of Austronesian speakers along the 270 km of coast were gradually absorbed into inland communities speaking Papuan languages.

Phonology

Numbami distinguishes 5 vowels and 18 consonants. Voiceless /s/ is a fricative, but its voiced and prenasalized equivalents are affricated, varying between more alveolar [(n)dz] and more palatalized [(n)dʒ]. The liquid /l/ is usually rendered as a flap [ɾ]. The labial approximant is slightly fricative, tending toward [β], when followed by front vowels.

Vowels (orthographic)

Front Central Back
High i u
Mid e o
Low a

Consonants (orthographic)

Bilabial Dental Alveopalatal Velar
Voiceless p t s k
Voiced b d z g
Prenasalized -mb- -nd- -nz- -ŋg-
Nasal m n ŋ
Liquid l
Approximant w y

Obstruent harmony

Prenasalized obstruents only occur in medial position, where the distinction between oral and prenasalized voiced obstruents is somewhat predictable. Medial voiced obstruents are statistically far more likely to be oral in words beginning with oral voiced obstruents, while they are far more likely to be prenasalized in words beginning with anything else. If denasalization of voiced obstruents is an ongoing change, one can track its progress through different lexical environments: it is 100% complete in word-initial position (as in bola 'pig' and buwa 'areca nut'), 80% complete in the middle of words beginning with voiced obstruents (as in bada 'market' and dabola 'head' vs. zanzami 'driftwood'), 35% complete in the middle of words beginning with approximants or vowels (as in ababa 'crosswise' vs. ambamba 'handdrum' and waŋga 'canoe'), not quite 20% complete in words beginning with voiceless obstruents (as in kaze 'left side' vs. kaimbombo 'butterfly' and pindipanda 'flea'), not quite 5% complete in words beginning with nasals (as in nomba 'thing' and -mande 'to die'), and not attested at all in words beginning with liquids (as in lenda 'nit' and lindami 'lime spatula'). (See Bradshaw 1978a.)

Morphology

Although Numbami is phonologically conservative, it retains very little productive morphology, most of it related to person and number marking.

Pronouns and person markers

Free pronouns

Free pronouns occur in the same positions as subject or object nouns. They distinguish three persons (with a clusivity distinction in the first person) and four numbers (Bradshaw 1982a).

Person Singular Plural Dual Paucal
1st person inclusive aita atuwa aito
1st person exclusive woya i ilu(wa) ito
2nd person aiya amu amula amuto
3rd person e ai alu(wa) aito

Genitive pronouns

Genitive pronouns also distinguish three persons (plus clusivity) and four numbers (Bradshaw 1982a).

Person Singular Plural Dual Paucal
1st person inclusive aita-ndi atuwa-ndi aito-tandi
1st person exclusive na-ŋgi i-na-mi ilu(wa)-mandi ito-mandi
2nd person a-na-mi amu-ndi amula-mundi amuto-mundi
3rd person e-na ai-ndi aluwa-ndi aito-ndi

Subject prefixes

Verbs are marked with subject prefixes that distinguish three persons (plus clusivity) and two tenses, Nonfuture and Future. (The latter distinction is often characterized as one between Realis and Irrealis mode; see Bradshaw 1993, 1999.)

Person Sing. Nonf. Plur. Nonf. Sing. Fut. Plur. Fut.
1st person inclusive ta- tana-
1st person exclusive wa- ma- na- mana-
2nd person u- mu- nu- muna-
3rd person i- ti- ni- ina-

In most cases, subject prefixes are easily segmentable from verb stems, but in a few very high frequency cases, prefix-final vowels merge with verb-initial vowels to yield irregularly inflected forms, as in the following paradigm: wani (< wa-ani) '1SG-eat', woni (< u-ani) '2SG-eat', weni (< i-ani) '3SG-eat', tani (< ta-ani) '1PLINCL-eat', mani (< ma-ani) '1PLEXCL-eat', moni (< mu-ani) '2PL-eat', teni (< ti-ani) '3PL-eat'.

Numerals

Traditional Numbami counting practices started with the digits of the left hand, then continued on the right hand and then the feet, to reach '20', which translates as 'one person'. Higher numbers are multiples of 'one person'. Nowadays, most counting above '5' is done in Tok Pisin. As in other Huon Gulf languages, the short form of the numeral 'one' functions as an indefinite article.

Numeral Term Gloss
1 sesemi / te 'one'
2 luwa 'two'
3 toli 'three'
4 wata 'four'
5 nima teula 'hands half/part'
6 nima teula ano sesemi 'hands half right one'
7 nima teula ano luwa 'hands half right two'
8 nima teula ano toli 'hands half right three'
9 nima teula ano wata 'hands half right four'
10 nima besuwa 'hands both/pair'
20 tamota te 'person one'

Names

Like many other Huon Gulf languages, Numbami has a system of birth-order names. The seventh son and sixth daughter are called "No Name": Ase Mou 'name none'.

Birth order Sons Daughters
1 Alisa Kale
2 Aliŋa Aga
3 Gae Aya
4 Alu Damiya
5 Sele Owiya
6 Dei Ase Mou
7 Ase Mou

Ideophones

Although many languages have a class of ideophones with distinctive phonology, Numbami is unusual in having a morphological marker for such a class. The suffix -a(n)dala is unique to ideophones but is clearly related to the word andalowa 'path, way, road' (POc *jalan). (See Bradshaw 2006.) In the following examples, acute accents show the placement of word stress.

Syntax

Word order

The basic word order in Numbami is SVO, with prepositions, preposed genitives, postposed adjectives and relative clauses. Relative clauses are marked at both ends, and so are some prepositional phrases. Negatives come at the ends of the clauses they negate. There is also a class of deverbal resultatives that follow the main verb (and its object, if any).

   aluti-lapabolauni
3DU3PLhitpigdead
'The two of them killed a pig.'
   naŋgigodei-loŋonibiŋaNumbamikote
GEN1SGcousin3SGheartalkNumbaminot
'My cross-cousin doesn't understand Numbami.'
   ma-kibanimanuma-yakinasuulaŋa
1PLEXCLputfoodwhich1PLEXCLpareRELintopot
'We (excl.) put the food we've pared into the pot.'

Possessive vs. attributive genitives

Two kinds of genitive modifiers precede their heads while one type follows its head noun (Bradshaw 1982a).

Whole-part genitives

Noun-noun phrases denoting wholes and parts occur in the order stated, with the latter serving as head of the phrase: wuwu lau 'betel pepper leaf', tina daba 'headwater', nima daba (lit. 'hand head') 'thumb', kapala lalo (lit. 'house inside') 'indoors', Buzina bubusu 'Buzina (Salamaua) point'.

Possessive genitives

Genitive possessor nouns precede their head nouns, with an intervening possessive marker that distinguishes singular (na) from plural (ndi) possessors: wuwu na lau 'the leaves of the (generic) betel pepper plant; particular betel pepper plant's leaf'; kapala na lalo 'the insides of (generic) houses; the inside of a particular house'; Siasi ndi gutu 'the Siassi Islands; islands belonging to a particular group of Siassi people'; bumewe ndi bani 'food typically eaten by whites; food belonging to a particular group of whites'.

Attributive genitives

Attributive genitives resemble possessive genitives except that (1) the modifiers follow their heads, and (2) the "possessors" are nonreferential except in a generic sense, that is, they "never refer to a particular subset of the set they name" (Bradshaw 1982a:128): wuwu weni na 'forest (wild) betel pepper', wuwu Buzina ndi 'type of betel pepper associated with the Buzina people at Salamaua', walabeŋa tamtamoŋa na 'fish poison, native means of stunning fish', walabeŋa bumewe na 'explosives, European means of stunning fish'.

Verb serialization

Verb serialization is very common in Numbami. Within a serial verb construction, all verbs must agree in tense. Subject choice in successive verbs is severely constrained. Noninitial subjects can only refer to preceding subjects, preceding objects, or preceding events or conditions, and only in that order (Bradshaw 1993). Negatives come at the ends of the clauses they negate.

   tako,ma-wotima-mama-ŋgewebani
enough1PLEXCLdescend1PLEXCLcome1PLEXCLcarryfood
'Okay, we come back down carrying food.'
   aiyanu-kolenu-ŋgobiŋadewoyakote
2SGFUT2SGturnFUT2SGsaywordto1SGnot
'Don't you turn around and talk to me.'
   ina-kidamuni-nzekakundu
FUT3PLputdry.frondFUT3SGlie.uponsago.starch
'They'll put dry fronds on top of the sago starch.'
   waaiyanu-kiyawini-soloŋa
and2SGFUT2SGputfireFUT3SGenter
'And you'll set it afire.'
   woyawa-yoŋgoaiyai-muŋga
1SG1SGsee2SG3SGprecede
'I saw you first.'
   takalamailuwama-yoŋgoatai-wete-makote
today1DUEXCL1PLEXCLseeself3SGcountADVnot
'Nowadays, we two don't see each other very regularly.'

References

  1. Numbami at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  2. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin; Bank, Sebastian, eds. (2016). "Numbami". Glottolog 2.7. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
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