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Austronesian language spoken in Indonesia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Nias language is an Austronesian language spoken on Nias Island and the Batu Islands off the west coast of Sumatra in Indonesia. It is known as Li Niha by its native speakers. It belongs to the Northwest Sumatra–Barrier Islands subgroup which also includes Mentawai and the Batak languages.[1] It had about 770,000 speakers in 2000.[1] There are three main dialects: northern, central and southern.[2] It is an open-syllable language, which means there are no syllable-final consonants.
Nias | |
---|---|
Li Niha | |
Native to | Indonesia |
Region | Nias and Batu Islands, North Sumatra |
Ethnicity | Nias people |
Native speakers | (770,000 cited 2000 census)[1] |
Austronesian
| |
Latin | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-2 | nia |
ISO 639-3 | nia |
Glottolog | nias1242 |
Distribution of Nias language speakers in the Nias and Batu islands (nia) | |
Nias is typically considered to have three dialects.[3][4]
Cognate percentage among the dialects of Nias is about 80%.[5]
The northern variant is considered the prestige dialect. The only complete Bible translation is written in the northern dialect and is used by speakers of all dialects.[6]
Nias has the following phonemes (sounds only found in the northern dialect are given in green, southern-only sounds are in red):[7][8]
Phonetic descriptions of the sounds traditionally written as ⟨mb⟩ and ⟨ndr⟩ greatly vary. Sundermann (1913) and Halawa et al. (1983) describe them as prenasalized stop [ᵐb] and prenasalized trilled stop [ⁿdʳ] for the northern dialect,[9][10] while Brown (2005) records them as trill [ʙ] and trilled stop [dʳ] for the southern dialect.[8] In an acoustic study of Nias dialects from three locations, Yoder (2010) shows a complex pattern of four phonetic realizations of ⟨mb⟩ and ⟨ndr⟩: plain stop, prenasalized stop, stop with trilled release, stop with fricated release.[11][a]
The status of initial [ʔ] is not determined; there are no phonetic vowel-initial words in Nias.
The contrast between [v] and [ʋ] (both written ⟨w⟩ in common spelling) is only observed in the southern dialect. Here, the fricative [v] only occurs in initial position in the mutated form (see §Noun case marking (mutation)) of nouns beginning with f, e.g. fakhe ~ wakhe [vaxe]. The approximant [ʋ] can appear in initial and medial position, and is in free variation with [v] for many speakers of the southern dialect.[12] For the northern dialect, only fricative approximant [ʋ] is reported, corresponding to both sounds of southern Nias.[13] The semivowel [w] is a distinct phoneme and is written ⟨ŵ⟩ in common spelling.[14]
Nias has an ergative–absolutive alignment.[15] It is the only known ergative–absolutive language in the world that has a "marked absolutive", which means that absolutive case is marked, whereas ergative case is unmarked.[16][17]
There are no adjectives in Nias; words with that function are taken by verbs.[18]
The following table lists the free and bound pronouns of Nias (green = only used in the northern dialect, red = only used in the southern dialect):[19][20][21]
independent | absolutive | genitive | ergative realis |
S = A irrealis | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1.sg. | ya'o / ya'odo / ya'oto | ndra'o(do) / ‑do / ndrao(to) | -gu | u- | gu- |
2.sg. | ya'ugö | ndra'ugö / ‑ö / ndraugö | -u / ‑mö | ö- | gö- |
3.sg. | ya'ia | ia / ya | -nia | i- | ya- |
1.pl.incl. | ya'ita | ita | -da | ta- | da- |
1.pl.excl. | ya'aga | ndra'aga / ‑ga | -ma | ma- | ga- |
2.pl. | ya'ami | ami / -mi | -mi | mi- | gi- |
3.pl. | ya'ira | ira | -ra | la- | ndra- |
Independent pronouns are used:
Andrehe'e
DIST
nasu
dog:MUT
si-usu
REL-bite
ya'o
1SG.IND
(southern dialect)[23]
'That's the dog that bit me.'
Absolutive pronouns are used:
Genitive pronouns are used:
La-faigi
3PL.ERG-see
vamaoso-ra
NR:MUT:IPF:raise-3PL.GEN
(southern dialect)[28]
'They watched them raise [it].'
U-fake
1SG.ERG-use
zekhula
coconut:MUT
ni-rökhi-nia
PASS-grate-3SG.GEN
(southern dialect)[29]
'I used the coconut which she grated.'
Ergative (realis) pronouns are used:
Irrealis pronouns are used in the southern dialect:
Gu-möi
1SG.IRR-go
ba
LOC
fasa
market
mahemolu
tomorrow
(southern dialect)[31]
'I want to go to the market tomorrow.'
Gu-moturagö
1SG.IRR-IRR:tell.about
ndraugö
2SG.ABS
khö-ra
DAT-3PL.GEN
(southern dialect)[32]
'I'm going to tell them about you.'
In the northern dialect, the irrealis pronouns are restricted to third person, and are employed in what Sundermann (1913) calls "jussive" mood.
Case marking of nouns is indicated in Nias by mutation of the initial consonant. Several consonants are subject to mutation as shown in the table below. Where a word begins in a vowel, either n or g is added before the vowel; the choice of n or g is lexically conditioned. (For example, öri ~ nöri is 'village federation', öri ~ göri is 'bracelet'.)[34]
Unmutated form | Mutated form |
---|---|
f | v |
t | d |
s | z |
c | |
k | g |
b | mb |
d | ndr |
vowel | n + vowel g + vowel |
Other consonants do not change.
The unmutated case form is used in citation. It further appears in all functions described above for independent pronouns:
Additionally, A arguments in independent transitive clauses appear in unmutated case, cross-referenced by the corresponding ergative or irrealis pronoun.
The mutated case form of the noun corresponds in function to both the absolutive and the genitive pronouns:
Mate
die
zibaya-nia
uncle:MUT-3SG.GEN
meneßi
yesterday
(southern dialect; unmutated: sibaya)[36]
'His uncle died yesterday.'
I-rino
3SG.ERG
vakhe
rice:MUT
ina-gu
mother-1SG.GEN
(southern dialect; unmutated: fakhe)[35]
'My mother cooked rice.'
omo
house
ga'a-gu
older.sibling:MUT-1SG.GEN
(southern dialect; unmutated: ka'a)[37]
'my brother's house'
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