Five descriptions of languages of Vanuatu
Malcolm Ross
Malcolm.Ross at ANU.EDU.AU
Sat Nov 4 12:27:05 UTC 2006
PACIFIC LINGUISTICS is happy to announce the publication of five
descriptions of languages of Vanuatu:
By Terry Crowley (edited by John Lynch):
Naman: a vanishing language of Malakula ( Vanuatu)
Nese: a diminishing speech variety of Northwest Malakula ( Vanuatu )
Tape: a declining language of Malakula ( Vanuatu )
The Avava language of Central Malakula ( Vanuatu )
By Ying Shing Anthony Chung:
A descriptive grammar of Merei ( Vanuatu )
Prices are in Australian dollars (one Australian dollar is currently
equivalent to about US$ 0.75).
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Terry Crowley (edited by John Lynch)
Terry Crowley had been working on four monographs on Malakula
languages at the time of his sudden and untimely death in January
2005. He had been visiting the island of Malakula in Vanuatu since
the end of 1999, and had undertaken studies of four languages spoken
there: Naman, Tape and Nese, which are all moribund languages, and
Avava, still actively spoken. One monograph, Naman: a vanishing
language of Malakula ( Vanuatu), had been submitted to Pacific
Linguistics a couple of weeks before Terry's death. The other three
were in various stages of completion, and John Lynch was asked by the
Board of Pacific Linguistics to prepare all four for publication,
both as a memorial to Terry and because of the valuable data they
contain.
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Naman: a vanishing language of Malakula ( Vanuatu )
PL 576
Naman, the subject of this linguistic description, is a moribund
language that is spoken on the island of Malakula in the Republic of
Vanuatu . Vanuatu is located in the southwest Pacific to the west of
Fiji and to the east of northern Queensland (Map 1). Before it gained
its independence from joint colonial control by France and the United
Kingdom in 1980, it was known in English as the New Hebrides and in
French as les Nouvelles-Hébrides.
2006 ISBN 058835657
Prices: Australia AUD$64.90 (incl. GST) , Overseas AUD$59.00
_______________________________________________________________
Nese: a diminishing speech variety of Northwest Malakula ( Vanuatu )
PL 577
Nese (also meaning ‘what') is the name of the language variety that
was traditionally spoken along the northwestern coast of Malakula,
Vanuatu (see Map 1) in the area commonly referred to as Matanvat,
from the modern village of Lerrongrrong in the north to Tontarrasak
in the south, and inland for four or five kilometres. Its traditional
southerly neighbour is Najit, spoken in the area of Tanmial, while to
the northeast along the coast is the traditional area of the Naha
(‘what') speech community, a variety of which is now spoken in the
village of Vovo . A further variety—for which no name has yet been
recorded—is associated with the Alovas area further to the east along
the northern coast of Malakula. Finally, a variety known as Njav
originates from the area inland from Tanmial to the east and south of
Alovas, though its speakers have relocated to the small village of
Tanmaliliv in the Espiegles Bay area.
These five communalects exhibit substantially differing degrees of
linguistic viability. The Naha communalect of Vovo village is
actively spoken, and based on the 1989 census figures, it possibly
has around 170 speakers today. The communalect of Alovas reportedly
has only about 15 speakers left, with the population of this village
having shifted substantially to Naha , bringing the total population
of Naha speakers today to about 225. Njav is reportedly still the
daily language of the small village of Tanmaliliv . It had an
estimated 10 speakers in 1989. Najit is moribund, though in this case
the replacement language is the Espiegles Bay variety of what is
referred to in the literature as the Malua Bay language.
Finally, Nese—the subject of the present study—is also moribund,
being actively spoken only in the small hamlet known locally as
Matanvat SDA (Seventh Day Adventist) by a single extended family
consisting of two brothers and their wives, along with their children
and their parents. There are speakers of Nese also to be found in the
small villages of Lerrongrrong, Tontarr, Senbukhas and Tontarrasak,
though the dominant language of these communities is now Bislama.
Bislama has come to be the dominant language as a result of extensive
settlement of the Matanvat area by people from other parts of
Malakula. Of the entire Matanvat area population of about 400 today,
only five families represent the original population of the area, and
the total number of speakers of Nese is probably no more than 20.
Children are no longer learning this speech variety, and most adults
in the Matanvat area now seldom use it even when speaking with their
own relatives with whom they share a knowledge of Nese.
2006 ISBN 058835665
Prices: Australia AUD$29.70 (incl. GST) , Overseas AUD$27.00
_______________________________________________________________
Tape: a declining language of Malakula ( Vanuatu )
PL 575
The Tape language was traditionally bordered to the west by the
V'ënen Taut (or Big Nambas) language, which was spoken along the
coast from just west of Anuatakh. This language occupies a large
geographical area of northwestern Malakula, and in terms of the
number of speakers, it is currently the second largest language of
Malakula (Lynch & Crowley 2001:68). The neighbouring group to the
northeast of Tape territory spoke the Tirakh language. During the
colonial era, they moved down to the coast and their traditional
homeland is now unoccupied.
Tape is a relocated language that is now spoken by only a handful of
older people some distance away from their traditional homeland,
which has been abandoned as a place of residence. The traditional
territory of Tape speakers was an area of northwestern Malakula
extending inland between the Lowisinwei River valley and across to
the eastern bank of the Brenwei River to the south of a mountain
called Pwitarvere.
Although Tape traditional territory include a stretch of coast from
Anuatakh to Lowisinwei—which gave people living in this area access
to salt which they could trade with the Tirakh people—Tape speakers
oriented their lives primarily towards the bush. This is reflected in
this study in the fact that speakers today were unable to offer more
than an absolute minimum of terminology relating to sea life, even
though they have lived in the coastal village of Tautu for about
eighty years.
Tape was originally the name for the area shown on the map where the
language which is the subject of this description was originally
spoken. There was reportedly no distinct name for the language as
such, which was referred to simply as vengesien Tape ‘the language of
Tape'. However, speakers of the language today—and other people of
Tape descent who do not speak the language—have come to use Tape as
the name for the language as well.
2006 ISBN 058835673
Prices: Australia AUD$55.00 (incl. GST), Overseas AUD$50.00
_______________________________________________________________
The Avava language of Central Malakula (Vanuatu)
PL 574
Avava currently falls into the category described in Lynch and
Crowley (2001:14–19) as being among the most poorly documented of all
languages in Vanuatu . Published documentation of this language by a
linguist is restricted to two fairly short wordlists in Tryon (1976).
In addition to this recent data, there is also a very small amount of
published data on the Umbbuul variety of this language that can be
extracted from Deacon (1934:125), which derives from his
anthropological fieldwork in the area in 1926. This data, however, is
restricted to just a small number of kin terms for each variety, with
no other vocabulary having been recorded.
Avava is the primary language today of four villages in central
Malakula: Tisvel, Khatbol, Taremp and Tembimbi. In contrast to the
Naman and Tape languages of Malakula that I have worked on
previously, Avava is an actively spoken language which continues to
be passed on to present-day generations of children in all of these
villages.
2006 ISBN 058835649
Prices: Australia AUD$59.95 (incl. GST), Overseas AUD$54.50
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A descriptive grammar of Merei ( Vanuatu )
Ying Shing Anthony CHUNG
PL 573 (Shorter Grammars)
The Merei language is spoken by about four hundred people in the
villages of Angoru, Navele, Tombet and Vusvogo in the interior of
Espiritu Santo Island , Vanuatu . Merei, like most other languages
from the interior of Espiritu Santo , has not previously been
described. Merei is an SVO language with many typical Oceanic
features such as a split between alienable and inalienable possession
and frequent verb serialisation. Morphological structure is
relatively simple, but bi-morphemic nouns are common. The language is
rigidly head-marking and prepositional. This work is mainly based on
language data collected by the author in Navele village in Espiritu
Santo Island of Vanuatu, where he lived from May 1995 until March 1997.
2005 ISBN 0 5883 560 6 xi + 74 pp
Prices: Australia AUD$29.70 (incl. GST), Overseas AUD$27.00
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