Aneityum language

Anejom̃
Pronunciation[anetʃomʷ]
Native toVanuatu
RegionAneityum Island
Native speakers
900 (2001)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3aty
Glottologanei1239
ELPAnejom̃
Aneityum is not endangered according to the classification system of the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger

Anejom̃ or Aneityum (also spelled Anejom, and formerly Aneiteum, Aneityumese) is an Oceanic language spoken by 900 people (as of 2001)[1] on Aneityum Island, Vanuatu. It is the only indigenous language of Aneityum.[gr 1]

Classification

[edit]

Anejom̃ is part of the Austronesian language family, and is part of the large subgroup of Oceanic languages. Anejom̃ falls under the Southern Oceanic Languages subgroup, and more specifically Southern Vanuatuan Languages.[gr 1] It constitutes its own separate branch of Southern Vanuatuan languages. While Anejom̃ is now considered to be only one language, some historical reports have suggested that Anejom̃ might have consisted of two very distinct dialects.[2] Its closest relatives are preliminarily thought to be more closely related to the languages of Tanna (e.g. Kwamera, South-West Tanna, Lenakel) than Erromango languages.[gr 1]

Geography

[edit]
Map of Vanuatu (Formerly known as the New Hebrides)

The island of Aneityum is the southernmost inhabited island of the nation of Vanuatu. It is closest to the islands of Tanna and Futuna.[gr 1] The island's geographic location made Anejom̃ develop in isolation.[gr 1] The first speakers of the language are believed to have lived on hillsides near coasts in order to access resources. However, due to land degradation and population pressure, the speakers moved to the valleys.[2]

History

[edit]

Aneityum is thought to have been settled around 874 BCE +/- 60 years by people coming over from Tanna. Original settlers (and speakers of the language) are thought to have lived on hillsides near the coasts in order to access resources from the ocean and land.[gr 2] However, the combination of land degradation and population forced the Aneityumese to move onto valley flats instead.[gr 2]

The original political system was like much of Melanesia; it was composed of multiple chiefs (natimarid) ruling over many chiefdoms (neclau).[gr 1] According to oral tradition, the island had two chiefdoms but they split to then form seven chiefdoms each "further divided into a number of districts between fifty and sixty in number".[gr 1]

The first contact with Europeans was in 1830, when the brig Alpha landed in Aneityum with hopes of establishing a sandalwood trading business.[gr 1]

The population of the Aneityumese has greatly declined over the years (along with the number of speakers); however, the population has seen a bit of a resurgence in the present. Most of the population was decimated by two major epidemics in the 1830s and 1840s and never fully recovered as can be seen below:[gr 3]

Aneityum population
Pre-Contact 9,000-20,000 1905 435
1830 4,600-5,800 1917 320
1854 3,800 1926 220
1865 2,100 1936 193
1878 1,279 1947 191
1886 930 1957 244
1897 527 1967 313

Church Presence

[edit]

Like much of the rest of Melanesia, the church has played an important role in language ideology on Aneityum. The first missionaries to land on the island were Samoan Presbyterians who arrived in 1841. After them followed European Presbyterian missionaries who established themselves in 1848.[gr 1] With the large missionary presence on the island, many schools were founded to spread the message of Christianity. In these schools, the classroom was mainly conducted in Anejom̃, however numeracy was conducted in English.[3] The missionary presence on the island was so prevalent that the island was considered the "first successfully missionized island in Melanesia" and housed the headquarters of the Presbyterian Mission to the New Hebrides.[2]

The missions on Aneityum promoted the use of English.

Colonialization

[edit]

Vanuatu came under joint British and French rule in 1887, which then became formalized in 1906 where Vanuatu became known as the "Anglo-French Condominium". Colonialization along with the big mission presence on the island led to the languages of French and English to become prestige languages.[3] Other languages of Vanuatu also became prestigious (such as Nguna) because these language were chosen by missionaries to spread their teachings.[3] With prolonged contact with English speakers, another language also arose: Bislama. Bislama, a pidgin of English, is now an extremely widely used language and has had a huge role in language change within Anejom̃.

Phonology and Orthography

[edit]

Phonemes

[edit]

Anejom̃ has 5 vowels and 20 or 21 consonants.[4] The sound [ʔ] is sometimes counted as phoneme.[gr 1]

Anejom̃ Consonants
Labial-Velar Labial Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Plosive p t k (ʔ)
Affricate
Nasal m n ɲ ŋ
Fricative f v θ s ɣ h
Tap ɾ
Lateral l
Semivowel w j

Vowel and consonant length is contrastive in this language and is shown in orthography by writing the vowel or consonant twice.

Anejom̃ Vowels
Front Central Back
short long short long short long
High ɪ ʊ
Mid ɛ ɔ
Low a

Orthography

[edit]

Anejom̃ was never a written language and so traditionally did not have an orthography. The first orthography was made by the missionary John Inglis in 1882.[5] It was considered to be a fairly good orthography of its time (having a one-to-one correspondence between letters and phonemes); however, it did contain several key problems.

  1. It did not distinguish between /pʷ/ and /p/ and /mʷ/ and /m/.[gr 4]
  2. The phoneme /ɲ/ was not always written as a separate letter from other nasal phonemes.[gr 4]
  3. The allophone of /e/, [ə], was written confusingly as "eu".[gr 4]
  4. Palatal off-glide before a palatal consonant was denoted as an "i".[gr 4]
  5. Vowel and consonant length were not represented consistently in the orthography.[gr 4]

A new orthography more accepted by Anejom̃ speakers now is shown below.

Phoneme Orthographic Representation
Short Long
p̃p̃
p p pp
t t tt
k k kk
j jj
f f ff
θ d dd
s s ss
h h hh
v v vv
ɣ c cc
m̃m̃
m m mm
n n nn
ɲ ñ ññ
ŋ g gg
l l ll
ɾ r rr
w w ww
j y yy
ɪ i ii
ɛ e ee
a a aa
ɔ o oo
ʊ u uu

Allophones

[edit]

Glottal Stop

[edit]

The moderately phonemic glottal stop is an allophone of /h/ when it occurs before a consonant.[gr 5] It also occurs as an allophone before vowels that occur in the word initial position.[gr 5]

Nasals

[edit]

The phoneme /ɲ/ becomes [j̃] after a high vowel.[gr 6]

Voicing

[edit]

Stops and affricates in Anejom̃ change in voicing depending on where they occur between segments as described and illustrated below.[gr 7]

  • Between vowels labial stops become voiced. Other stops (and affricates) are partially voiced.[gr 7]
  • Between voiced segments all stops are variably voiced. The affricate /tʃ/ is variably voiced between voiced segments too. However, when it occurs before a nasal segment it becomes [c].[gr 7]
  • When these stops occur word initially, they are always slightly aspirated. The affricate /tʃ/ on the other hand is not aspirated but often takes on variable voicing.[gr 7]
  • When these stops and affricates don't occur between vowels or voiced segments they stay as their underlying form. For example, /p/ becomes [p] and /k/ becomes [k].[gr 7]
  • When these stops occur in final position, the phonemes don't change. However, the affricate /tʃ/ becomes [c], but can also be heard as [tʃ] in free variation.[gr 7]

Liquids

[edit]
  • /ɾ/ can be heard as [r] in slower speech.[gr 6]

Vowels

[edit]
  • Vowel sounds are more tense when occurring as a long vowel.[gr 8]
  • Single vowel sounds /ɪ ʊ/ occur tense [i u] in word-final position.[gr 8]
  • /e o/ occur as [e̝ o̝] when preceding a high vowel /i u/ of the same frontness or roundness.[gr 9]
  • /i e/ occur as centralized [ɨ ə] before and after /ɣ/.[gr 10]
  • /a/ very often assimilates before a following high vowel, becoming [æ] or [ɛ] before /i/, and [ɒ] or [ɔ] before /u/.[gr 10]

Morphology

[edit]

Pronouns

[edit]

There are three types of pronouns in Anejom̃: personal, demonstrative, and interrogative pronouns.[gr 1]

Personal Pronouns

[edit]

Anejom̃ "personal pronouns distinguish:

  1. three persons, with a further distinction of inclusive and exclusive in first person non-singular
  2. four numbers (singular, dual, trial, and plural)
  3. three cases (focal, object, and possessive)"[gr 1][gr 11]
Focal Pronouns
[edit]
Focal Pronouns
Singular Dual Trial Plural
1st person inclusive --- akajau akataj akaja
exclusive añak ajamrau ajamtaj ajama
2nd person aek*, aak ajourau ajoutaj ajowa
3rd person aen*, aan aarau aattaj aara

*The focal pronouns aek and aen are only used in writing or when a speaker speaks slowly. Most of the time the pronouns aak and aan, respectively, are used instead (and are generally pronounced with short vowels instead of long vowels).[gr 11] Below is an example of a focal pronoun.[gr 12]

Et

3SG.AOR

amjeg

sleep

aan*

(s)he

Et amjeg aan*

3SG.AOR sleep (s)he

'He/she/it is sleeping.'

Object Pronouns
[edit]
Object Pronouns
Singular Dual Trial Plural
1st person inclusive --- cajau cataj caja
exclusive ñak camrau camtaj cama
2nd person yic**, -c courau coutaj cowa
3rd person yin**, -n rau ettaj ra

Object pronouns are free morphemes and occur after verbs and certain "case-marking prepositions" as seen below. [gr 12]

Arodei

whip

ra

them.PL

aak!

you.SG

Arodei ra aak!

whip them.PL you.SG

'Whip them!'

**The 2SG and 3SG object pronouns normally occur as yic and yin, however when a vowel precedes these pronouns then they change to the suffixes -c and -n respectively.[gr 12]

*Et

3SG.AOR

emtita-i

fear-TR

yic

you.SG.O

aan.

(s)he

Et

3SG.AOR

emitita-c

fear-2SG.O

aan.

(s)he

*Et emtita-i yic aan. → Et emitita-c aan.

3SG.AOR fear-TR you.SG.O (s)he 3SG.AOR fear-2SG.O (s)he

'He's frightened of you'

Possessive Pronouns
[edit]
Possessive Pronouns
Singular Dual Trial Plural
1st person inclusive --- -jau -jau -ja
exclusive -k -mrau -mrau -ma
2nd person -m̃ -mirau -mirau -mia
3rd person -n -rau -rau -ra

Possessive pronouns occur as suffixes and can be attached to "directly possessed nouns and possessive markers, some case-markers, and to members of one sub-class of verbs".[gr 13] See below.

Alum̃a-k

give.to.drink-my

ti

tea

aak

you.SG

Alum̃a-k ti aak

give.to.drink-my tea you.SG

'Give me some tea (to drink).'

Interrogative Pronouns

[edit]

There are two interrogative pronouns in Anejom̃: di ('who') and panid and its less widely used alternate, panida ('which').[gr 13]

Et

3SG.AOR

adel

fart

a

S

di?

who

Et adel a di?

3SG.AOR fart S who

'Who farted?'

However, 'di' is "inherently singular" and requires a coordinate phrase with im, as seen in the example here, to express plurality.[gr 13][gr 14]

Era

3PL.AOR

apam

come

di

who

im

and

di?

who

Era apam di im di?

3PL.AOR come who and who

'Who (PL) came?'

Panid and Panida can only be used to refer to inanimate objects.[gr 14]

'Le

take.SG

naifi

knife

enai

DEM2.SG

aak!'

you.SG

'Le naifi enai aak!'

take.SG knife DEM2.SG you.SG

'Get me that knife!'

'Panid?'

which.one

'Panid?'

which.one

'Which one?'

Demonstrative Pronouns

[edit]

Demonstrative Pronouns also have singular, dual, trial and plural forms like personal pronouns (see below).[gr 14]

Demonstrative Pronouns
Singular Dual Trial Plural
Proximate niñki
nii, niñ
rañki
raaki, raa
tijiraaki jiñki
jiijiñ, jii
Intermediate naanai
naa
rañka jeknaa
Distant naikou rañkou jeknaikou
Anaphoric yiiki
yii
raaki jiiki [recent]
jekeñ [distant]

In Anejom̃, demonstrative pronouns can also take the suffix -sak which denotes that the speaker is "pointing at or in some other way indicating the location of the thing referred to."[gr 15]

Alp̃a-i

give-TR

ñak

me

jeknaa-sak

this2.PL-INDIC

aak.

you.SG

Alp̃a-i ñak jeknaa-sak aak.

give-TR me this2.PL-INDIC you.SG

'Give me those ones there (that I'm pointing at).'

Nouns

[edit]

Anejom̃ has several categories for nouns: temporal, locative, personal, obligatorily possessed and optionally possessed nouns. The latter two categories (obligatorily possessed and optionally possessed nouns), are further distinguished based on animacy (as seen below).[gr 16]

Nouns Temporal
Locative
Personal
Obligatorily possessed Animate
Inanimate
Optionally possessed Animate
Inanimate

Temporal Nouns

[edit]

Examples of common temporal nouns can be seen below.[gr 17]

Temporal Noun (Anejom̃) English Definition
kou now
ituwu nuhup̃an
ipiñ today
imrañ tomorrow
iyenev yesterday
invid two days from today (past or future)
hovid three days from today (past or future)

Locative Nouns

[edit]

Locative nouns in Anejom̃ do not need the case marker "a" to occur in front of it as shown in the example below.[gr 18]

Et

3SG.AOR

m̃an

PERF

apan

go

aan

(s)he

Isia

Isia.

Et m̃an apan aan Isia

3SG.AOR PERF go (s)he Isia.

'He went to Isia.'

Locative nouns also include the following words:[gr 18]

Anejom̃ English
ijiñis above
ijhou outside
itohou far inland
itac behind
up̃os on land, in a clear place

Personal Nouns

[edit]

Personal Nouns include kinship terms as well as names of people.[gr 18]

Obligatorily Possessed Nouns

[edit]

These nouns must "be marked as being possessed by some other noun or pronoun", which tends to be marked by suffixation.[gr 19] Most of the obligatorily possessed nouns are kinship terms.[gr 19]

An example of direct suffixation can be seen in the examples below.[gr 19]

etma-n

father-his/her

etma-n

father-his/her

'his/her father'

etma-ra

father-their.PL

etma-ra

father-their.PL

'their father'

There are some nouns that do not take direct suffixation but rather use possessive markers such as the word for "child", "nephew", "niece", and "sister," to name a few.[gr 19]

Optionally Possessed Nouns

[edit]

Unlike obligatorily possessed nouns, these nouns do not, or do not have to, take possession markers.

Animate and Inanimate Nouns
[edit]

Anejom̃ has a distinction between animate and inanimate nouns which is further divided into obligatorily possessed and optionally possessed nouns.[gr 20]

Animate nouns are usually marked by using the subject marker "a" for singular and the prefix "elpu-" for plural.[gr 20]

Et

3SG.AOR

alp̃as

big

a

S

pikad

pig

uñu-m̃.

POSS.G-your.SG

Et alp̃as a pikad uñu-m̃.

3SG.AOR big S pig POSS.G-your.SG

'Your pig is (getting) big.'

Pluralization of the word meaning 'man' to 'men' seen below.[gr 20]

natam̃añ → elpu-atam̃añ

Inanimate nouns are not marked in either the singular or plural.

Noun Prefixes

[edit]

Anejom̃ has several key prefixes that serve important roles:[gr 21]

Prefix Function Example
n- / in-

(-in is used before a consonant)

adding this prefix makes verbs into nouns omrag (be old) → n-omrag (old person)
also produces nominalized verbs

Nai

2SG.AOR

meret

want

aek

you.SG

n-apan

NMLZ-go

va-ñ

PURP-TR

Vila

Vila

ka

or

a'o?

no

Nai meret aek n-apan va-ñ Vila ka a'o?

2SG.AOR want you.SG NMLZ-go PURP-TR Vila or no

'Do you want to go to Vila?'

*inta- makes instrumental nouns from verbs ahrei (to sleep) → inta-ahrei (broom)
nupu- makes "human nouns from locative nouns or other locationally-oriented forms".[gr 21]

(Human nouns are nouns that mean 'a person from that place'.)

Samoa (Samoa) → nupu-Samoa (a Samoan)
elpu- plural form of nupu- (has the same function) Samoa (Samoa) → elpu-Samoa (Samoans)
nef(e)- signals importance or size natimi (person) → nef-atimi (an important person)
nev(e)- 'which?' nelcau (canoe) →nev-elcau (which canoe)

*Inta- is used sparingly compared to the other prefixes. Most of the time, instrumental nouns are compounds that include the word 'nitai', which is most likely where 'inta' comes from.[gr 21]

N-/in- Prefix

[edit]

The n-/in- prefix is a frequently used as well as frequently occurring underlying morpheme: it accounts for around 85% of Anejom̃ nouns.[gr 22] The other approximate 15% of nouns that don't use this prefix tend to be highly specific groups of nouns.[gr 22]

Collective Prefixes

[edit]

Anejom̃ also has a different set of prefixes that are referred to as collective prefixes as they refer to large groups of things:[gr 23]

Collective Prefix Meaning
niji- "general collective prefix used with a wide variety of nouns"[gr 23]
nupu-

(not the same nupu- prefix
in the previous table)

used for humans and higher animates
inlel- used for inanimates (most likely things that occur in nature)
inmal- used for inanimate (most likely artefacts)

Noun Suffixes

[edit]

Direct Possession

[edit]

In Anejom̃, the possessive form of personal pronouns are attached directly to the noun when "the possessor is a personal pronoun".[gr 24]

nijma-k

hand-my

nijma-k

hand-my

'my hand'

Indirect Possession

[edit]

For all other nouns that cannot be directly possessed, a "possessive or construct suffix is added to a possessive marker" as seen below. [gr 25]

intal

taro

inca-i

POSS.F-CS

di?

who

intal inca-i di?

taro POSS.F-CS who

'whose taro?'

Possessive Markers
inca- possession of food
lum̃a possession of drink
lida- possession of "something to suck the juice from"[gr 25]
um̃a- possession of a "customarily owned area of land or sea"[gr 25]
a, era- passive or subordinate possession
u, uwu- general possession

Verbs

[edit]

Verbs in Anejom̃ are words that can occur as the head of a verb phrase.[gr 26] In Anejom̃, verbs are distinguished by transitivity; there are transitive, intransitive and (the family small class of) ambi-transitive verbs. Examples of these verbs can be seen below.[gr 27]

Verb Meaning
Transitive ciñ, awod, alcajira-ñ, hag* 'eat', 'hit', 'tie up', 'eat' (TRANS)
Intransitive aco, epehtau, amjeg, ciñ* 'forage for shellfish', 'to stumble/trip', 'to sleep', to eat (INTR)
Ambi-Transitive atapanes, ataktai, asalgei 'shut, close' , 'think, think about', 'open'

*Many transitive verbs also have intransitive pairings as can be seen by the two verbs that mean 'to eat' in the table above.

The Verbs 'yek' and 'isp̃a'

[edit]

Both of these verbs are unusual in that they do not follow the regular pattern.

'Yek': to be at, be present
[edit]

'Yek' is an existential verb that is different from the majority of Anejom̃ verbs in a number of ways.

  1. The root of 'yek' changes irregularly in the singular, dual and trial forms.[gr 28]
  2. The verb does not take subject-tense markers, though it does take certain aspect-mood markers.[gr 28]
  3. Pronoun subjects come after 'yek'[gr 28]
  4. Noun phrases normally come before 'yek' instead of after and don't take the subject marker 'a'.[gr 28]
  5. It has specific markers it can and cannot occur with.[gr 28]
Isp̃a
[edit]

This verb marks the reflexive or reciprocal and takes an agreeing possessive suffix as seen below.[gr 28]

Et

3SG.AOR

isp̃a-n

REFL-its

edel

grow

aan.

it

Et isp̃a-n edel aan.

3SG.AOR REFL-its grow it

'It grew by itself'.

Inflectional Prefixes

[edit]
Inflectional Prefixes Function
imy(i)- comitative
er(i)- mutual action/multiple subject
ec- multiplicative (is used to show the number of times an action is performed).

[gr 29] The vowel (i) is only added if it occurs before a consonant.[gr 30]

Reduplication

[edit]

Anejom̃ does have reduplication although it is not used very often. It most commonly occurs as complete reduplication as seen below.[gr 31]

Noun Definition Reduplication Definition
erop̃ 'slow' erop̃-erop̃ 'too/very slow'

Object Suffixes for Transitive Verbs

[edit]

Not including the verbs which take possessive suffixes, there are three main types of ways in which transitive verbs are marked. The types of verbs are: 1) unmarked verbs, 2) "verbs that take the transitive suffix "-i" with all objects", 3) verbs that only take "-i" with animate objects and "-ñ" with inanimate objects.[gr 32]

Type 1 Verb Type 2 Verb Type 3 Verb
Animate Object ----- -i -i
Inanimate Object ------ -i

Directional and Locational Verb Suffixes

[edit]

These suffixes attach to the end of the verb and will come after a transitive suffix if one occurs.[gr 30]

Direction/Locational Suffixes
Vertical Horizontal Distance
-jai up, south, east -pam hither, towards speaker/focus -ki near
-se(h) down, north, west -pan thither, away from speaker/focus -kou distant
-p̃ok seawards
-pahai landwards, inland

Distance suffixes have to combine with horizontal or vertical suffixes; they cannot be alone.[gr 30] The ordering of these suffixes are as follows: 1) VERTICAL, 2) HORIZONTAL, 3) DISTANCE.[gr 30]

Subject-Tense Marking

[edit]

In a verb phrase, a subject marking morpheme tends to occur first (except if it is an imperative, optionally conjoined, or subordinate clause).[gr 33] In Anejom̃, subject-tense-aspect marking is undergoing radical change.[gr 33]

19th Century Subject-Tense Markers (Capell)
Singular Dual Trial Plural
Aorist (present, recent past, habitual)
1 INC intau intaj inta
1 EXC ek ecrau ektaj, ektij ecra
2 na ekau ahtaj eka
3 et erau ehtaj era
Past
1 INC intis intijis imjis
1 EXC kis ecrus ektijis ecris
2 as akis ahtijis akis
3 is erus ehtijis eris
Inceptive (event about/likely to happen)
1 INC tu tiji ti
1 EXC inki, ki ecru tiji ecri
2 an eru tiji aki
3 inyi, yi eru tiji eri

There seems to be a lot of change in present day subject-tense marking, especially in the plural subject-tense marking category by younger speakers. Here are all the (competing) subject-tense markers used in modern Anejom̃.[gr 34]

Modern Anejom̃ Subject-Tense Markings
Singular Dual Trial Plural
Aorist
1 INC tau, ta, ekra, erau, era, rai- taj, ta, ekra, era, rai- ta, ekra, era, rai-
1 EXC ek, k- ekrau, ekra, erau, era, rai- ettaj, ekra, era, rai- ekra, era, rai-
2 na, nai, n- erau, ekra, erau, era, rai- ettaj, ekra, era, rai- eka, ekra, era, eri, rai-
3 et, t- erau, era, ekra, rai- ettaj, ekra, era, rai- era, eri, ekra, rai-
Past
1 INC tus, tu, kis, is, s- tijis, kis, is, s- eris, kis, is, s-
1 EXC kis, is, s- eris, is, s- eris, is, s- ekris, eris, is, s-
2 as, na, is, s- ekris, ekrus, arus, is, s- atijis, ekris, is, s- akis, ekris, is, s-
3 is, s- erus, eris, ekris, is, s- etijis, ekris, era, s- eris, ekris, is, s-
Inceptive
1 INC tu, ti, yi, ri tiji, ti, ri ti, ri
1 EXC ki ekru, ri etiji, ekri, ri ekri, ri
2 an, ni aru, ra, ri atiji, ra, ri aki, ra, ri
3 iñiyi, inyi, yi, y- eru, ru, ra, ri etiji, eri, ra, ri, yi eri, ra, ri

Mood, Aspect, Tense Markers

[edit]

Anejom̃ has several markers (different from the subject-markers) which indicate a variety of mood, aspect and tense.[gr 35]

Mood, Aspect, Tense Markers
pu definite future
mu indefinite or polite future, hortative
p̃ar sequential action or subsequent action
m̃an perfective/completive
jim prohibitive

Compounding

[edit]

Compounding is a key historical and modern feature of Anejom̃; it has both compound nouns and compound verbs.[gr 36] Compound nouns generally consist of a noun followed by either a noun, verb, modifier or a possessive construction, and compound verbs tend to be a combination of two verbs, although sometimes a verb is followed by a noun. Compounding is so prevalent, that historical linguistics use modern (as well as fossilized compounds) to trace genealogical relationships between Oceanic languages. Another one of the key uses of compounding in Anejom̃, is it is used to form the instrumental case. Examples of compounding can be seen below.[gr 36]

Compound Type 1st word + 2nd Word Compound Meaning
Compound Nouns nepjed (citurs) + eromaga (Erromango) nepjed-eromaga 'mandarin orange'
nadiat (day) + atum̃ap (rest) nadiat atum̃ap 'Sunday'
Verb Compounds ama-i (chew TR) + alde-i (cut TR) amalde-i 'bite one's tongue'
Fossilized Compounds Presumed First word
ahvii (press with finger)
+ Presumed second word
am̃od (to break)
Now a word
ahvam̃od
'break by squeezing'

Syntax

[edit]

Anejom̃ word order is fairly strict and does not allow for much variation. The preferred word order in Anejom̃ is VOS (or verb, followed by object, then subject). This word order is extremely unusual within the languages of Vanuatu and makes Anejom̃ the "only non-Polynesian language in Vanuatu to have this preferred word order."[gr 37] Below are a couple of examples of intransitive and transitive sentences.[gr 37]

Intransitive Sentences

[Et

3SG.AOR

apam]

come

[a

S

di].

who

[Et apam] [a di].

3SG.AOR come S who

'Who's coming?'

[Jim

DONT

lav

make.noise

aak].

you.SG

[Jim lav aak].

DONT make.noise you.SG

'Don't (you sg.) make a noise!

Transitive Sentence

[Eris

3PL.PAST

lecse-i]

take.PL-TR

[isji-tal]

fruits-taro

[aarau].

they.DU

[Eris lecse-i] [isji-tal] [aarau].

3PL.PAST take.PL-TR fruits-taro they.DU

'The two of them took the taro corms.'

Departures from VOS

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While Anejom̃ has a fairly strict word order, there are times that the language departs from the standard VOS order.

  1. Although not very common, subjects and objects are moved to the beginning of the phrase when topicalized.[gr 37]
  2. When an object is a fairly long word, it is switched with the subject making the order VSO instead.[gr 37]
  3. Indefinite subjects tend to come before verbs, making the order SVO.[gr 37]
  4. With the verb 'yek', pronoun subjects follow the verb but noun phrases come before it.[gr 37]

Cases

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Anejom̃ has multiple cases that are denoted by several different case markers summed up below.[gr 38]

Formal Variation in Case Markers
Base Form a
(oblique)
ehele
(personal locative/directional)
inta
(dative/benefactive)
u
(locative)
va
(casual)
imi
(dative/benefactive)
With Pronouns
Form era- ehele- imta- See book §3.5.2.[gr 38] va- imi-
Pronoun POSS. POSS. POSS. OBJ. OBJ.
With Nouns
Personal era-i ehele-i imta-i u va-i imi
Sing. n- a ehele-i imta-i u va-i imi
Sing. in- a- ehele- imta- uwu va- imi
Sing. other era-i ehele-i imta-i u va-i imi
Plural era-i ehele-i imta-i u va-i imi
Anaphoric
Animate era-n ehele-n imta-n uwu-n va-n
Inanimate era-n ehele-n imta-n uwu-n va-ñ

Indicating Time and Place

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Temporal phrases can be marked with or without a case depending on the phrase.

Unmarked Phrases

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Unmarked temporal phrases take a temporal noun and unmarked locative phrases take either a locative noun or a locative demonstrative.[gr 39] There are two types of local demonstratives: the first type is the one seen in the table below and the second is formed adding locative suffixes (see table earlier on page) to the root 'au'.[gr 39]

Locative Demonstratives
Singular Dual Trial Plural
Proximate inkahegka, inkaaki, inkahe inka
Indicated ap̃niñki, ap̃ni ap̃rañki ap̃jiñki
Intermediate inkapam, ankehan, añkou añki
Indicated ap̃nañkou, ap̃naa ap̃rañkou
Distant inkapan, aaki, ean eaaki
Indicated ap̃naikou, ap̃yi

Locative Demonstratives that are formed by adding the locative suffixes to the root au- must follow a specific order:[gr 39]

au- VERTICAL - DISTANCE
au- HORIZONTAL - DISTANCE
au - VERTICAL - HORIZONTAL - DISTANCE

Marked Phrases

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Marked temporal phrases and place phrases (that don't have a non-personal noun at the head), take the case marker 'a'.[gr 40] For non-personal place phrases, the case marker 'u' is used instead.[gr 40] When a place phrase uses a personal noun or pronoun, ehele- is used instead of either 'a' or 'u'.[gr 40]

Questions

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There are two types of questions: yes/no and content questions.

Yes/No Questions

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Yes/no questions can be asked in two ways. One way to indicate a question is by ending a phrase on a raised intonation. The second way is to add the word 'ka a'o' (which means 'or no') to the end of a sentence.[gr 41]

Content Questions
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Unlike yes/no questions, content questions use interrogative morphemes such as:[gr 41]

  • 'who': di
  • 'what': inhe
  • 'which/which one': panid/panida
  • 'when': nuhup̃an
  • 'which/which thing': nev(e)-
  • 'where': eda (acts like a locative noun)
  • 'how to': ehv(e)- (verbal prefix)

Combining Clauses

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There are several different ways to combine clauses together:[gr 42]

  1. "simple clause chaining"
  2. conjunctions
  3. using am̃ and p̃ar
  4. the "echo-subject proclitic m-
  5. verb serialization

Simple Clause Chaining

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In simple clause chaining, no conjunctions are markings are used to link two separate clauses together. Simple clause chaining can be used either for clauses of the same or different subject and for both verbal and verbless clauses.[gr 43]

[Ekrau

1EXC.DU.AOR

edou

roam

ajamrau],

we.EXCL.DU

[ek

1SG.AOR

ap̃ahni

go.everywhere

añak

I

era-i

LOC-CS

iji-teptag

COL-nakamal

asga].

all

[Ekrau edou ajamrau], [ek ap̃ahni añak era-i iji-teptag asga].

1EXC.DU.AOR roam we.EXCL.DU 1SG.AOR go.everywhere I LOC-CS COL-nakamal all

'We wandered around and I went to every single nakamal.'

Conjunctions

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There are three conjunctions that combine clauses in Anejom̃: 'ka', 'jai', and 'jam' which are the equivalents of 'or', 'but' and 'but' respectively.[gr 44]

'Ka'

[Et

3SG.AOR

m̃an

PERF

ecohos

appear

nagesga]

sun

ka

or

[a'o]?

no

[Et m̃an ecohos nagesga] ka [a'o]?

3SG.AOR PERF appear sun or no

'Has the sun risen (or not)?'

'Jai' and 'Jam' have the same meaning, however 'jai' is used when the subjects of the two combining clauses are different and 'jam' is used when the two combining subjects are the same.[gr 44] 'Jai' is also used when a subject-tense marker occurs at the beginning of the clause following it, regardless of the subject.[gr 44]

'Jai'[gr 44]

[Eris

3PL.AOR

akrou

share

m-alp̃a-i

ES-give-TR

cama],

us.EXCL.PL.O

jai

but

[is

3SG.PAST

p̃ar

SEQ

han]...

enough

[Eris akrou m-alp̃a-i cama], jai [is p̃ar han]...

3PL.AOR share ES-give-TR us.EXCL.PL.O but 3SG.PAST SEQ enough

'They shared it out to us, but there was enough...'

'Jam'[gr 44]

[Eris

3PL.PAST

ago

make

kava

kava

lum̃a-n

POSS.D-his

aara]

they.PL

jam

but.SS

[ago

make

is

3SG.PAST

erou].

two

[Eris ago kava lum̃a-n aara] jam [ago is erou].

3PL.PAST make kava POSS.D-his they.PL but.SS make 3SG.PAST two

'They made his kava, but they made two (bowls).'

Am̃ and p̃ar

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Am̃ and p̃ar are also conjunctions that respectively mean 'and' and 'and then, so'. However, they don't function like normal conjunctions but rather aspect markers as seen below.[gr 44]

[Ekris

3DU.PAST

lecse-i

take.PL-TR

u-rau

POSS-3DU

aarau],

they.DU

[is

3SG.PAST

am̃

and

atpu

hide

tah

one

aarau].

they.DU

[Ekris lecse-i u-rau aarau], [is am̃ atpu tah aarau].

3DU.PAST take.PL-TR POSS-3DU they.DU 3SG.PAST and hide one they.DU

'The two of them took theirs, and one of them hid.'

M-

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M- is attached "to the first word in the verb phrase of a non-initial clause which has the same subject as the preceding clause".[gr 45] It can also denote continuous aspect.[gr 45]

[Ekris

3DU.PAST

apan

go

aarau]

they.DU

[m-ago

ES-make

nup̃ut]

k.o.laplap

[m-ago

ES-make

ihnii].

finish

[Ekris apan aarau] [m-ago nup̃ut] [m-ago ihnii].

3DU.PAST go they.DU ES-make k.o.laplap ES-make finish

'They two went and made nup̃ut and finished making it.'

Verb Serialization

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While verb serialization does not occur much in Anejom̃ in comparison to other Western Oceanic Languages, it occurs more commonly than in its closest related languages.[gr 45] Most of the verb-serializations in Anejom̃ contain directional motion verbs in the non-initial clause as seen below:[gr 45]

[Is

PAST

m̃an

PERF

lep

again

rectidai

get.up

aataj]

they.TRI

[apan

go

a-nlii-i

LOC-inside-CS

niom̃]

house

[Is m̃an lep rectidai aataj] [apan a-nlii-i niom̃]

PAST PERF again get.up they.TRI go LOC-inside-CS house

'They three got up again and went inside the house.'

Relative Clauses

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Relative clauses in Anejom̃ do not have relative pronouns and they directly follow the noun phrase that it is modifying.[gr 46] For example:[gr 46]

[NP Inworen

place

enaa

DEM2.SG

[REL et

3SG.AOR

amen

stay

aan

he

im-le

ES-take.SG

injap̃

salt

era-n.]REL]NP...

LOC-its

{[NP Inworen} enaa {[REL et} amen aan im-le injap̃ era-n.]REL]NP...

place DEM2.SG 3SG.AOR stay he ES-take.SG salt LOC-its

'The place where he got salt from...'

Sample Texts

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  • http://paradisec.org.au/fieldnotes/image_viewer.htm?ANEIT309,3[6]
  • Geddie, John (1856). Nitasvitai uhup. ISBN 9780665160059. Retrieved 2012-08-28.

Notes

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l p. 2
  2. ^ a b p. 1
  3. ^ p. 3
  4. ^ a b c d e p. 27
  5. ^ a b p. 15
  6. ^ a b p. 16
  7. ^ a b c d e f p. 14
  8. ^ a b p. 17
  9. ^ p. 18
  10. ^ a b p. 19
  11. ^ a b p. 37
  12. ^ a b c p. 38
  13. ^ a b c p. 39
  14. ^ a b c p. 40
  15. ^ p. 41
  16. ^ p. 42
  17. ^ p. 42
  18. ^ a b c p. 43
  19. ^ a b c d p. 44
  20. ^ a b c pp. 45-46
  21. ^ a b c pp. 46-47
  22. ^ a b pp. 48-49
  23. ^ a b p. 51
  24. ^ pp. 57-58
  25. ^ a b c pp. 59-62
  26. ^ p. 65
  27. ^ pp. 67-69
  28. ^ a b c d e f pp. 73-76
  29. ^ pp. 80-82
  30. ^ a b c d pp. 85-87
  31. ^ p. 82
  32. ^ pp. 84-85
  33. ^ a b pp. 89-91
  34. ^ pp. 92-94
  35. ^ p. 97
  36. ^ a b pp. 105-111
  37. ^ a b c d e f pp. 114-115
  38. ^ a b p. 119
  39. ^ a b c pp. 120-122
  40. ^ a b c pp. 123-24
  41. ^ a b pp. 133-135
  42. ^ p. 140
  43. ^ pp. 141-143
  44. ^ a b c d e f pp. 143-147
  45. ^ a b c d pp. 150-151
  46. ^ a b p. 155
  • from other sources
  1. ^ a b Anejom̃ at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. ^ a b c Lynch, John (2001). The Linguistic History of Southern Vanuatu. Canberra, Australia: Pacific Linguistics. p. 5.
  3. ^ a b c Lynch, John Dominic. Church, State and Language in Melanesia: An Inaugural Lecture. Papua New Guinea: U of Papua New Guinea, 1979.
  4. ^ Lynch (2000).
  5. ^ Inglis, John (1882-01-01). A dictionary of the Aneityumese language. In two parts. I. Aneityumese and English. II. English and Aneityumese. Also outlines of Aneityumese grammar. And an introduction, containing notices of the missions to the native races, and illustrations of the principles and peculiarities of the Aneityumese language. London, Williams & Norgate.
  6. ^ Capell. "Arthur". PARADISEC.org. Retrieved 14 March 2016.

References

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