Pouye language
Pouye is a language spoken in Sandaun Province, Papua New Guinea, by a thousand people, and growing. It is spoken in the seven villages of Bulawa, Kiliauto, Komtin, Maurom, Wokien, Wulme, and Yukilau, which are mostly located within East Wapei Rural LLG.
A grammar of the Pouye language is published here:
https://www.sil.org/resources/archives/62023
Phonology
This description follows Dede & Reuter.Phonemic inventory
Pouye has 12 consonants, of which three have constrastive secondary articulations.A fairly large nine-vowel inventory is also seen:
| Front | Central | Back | |
| Close | |||
| Near-close | |||
| Close-mid | |||
| Open-mid | |||
| Open |
In addition there are seven diphthongs /au̯ əu̯ ou̯ ai̯ əi̯ ei̯ ɪi̯/ which act as discrete vowel units.
The trial orthography is as in the IPA except for /tʷ tʲ kʷ j/ which are tw ty kw y and the vowels /ɨ ɪ ɛ ə/ which are i i e a. This causes ambiguity between /i ɨ ɪ/, /e ɛ/ or /a ə/ although the functional load on these contrasts is low.
Phonotactics
Pouye allows maximally two consonants in a syllable onset and one consonant in the coda. The nucleus may be a single vowel or diphthong, but although CVVC and CCVC syllables are permitted, CCVVC syllables are unattested. Complex onsets may be maximally a plosive plus a trill or approximant, or the sequence /kt/, for instance in /kin.kti/ "small".Stress is generally placed on the penultimate syllable, although exceptions do occur and if the penult is /wɨ/ or /wo/ the stress is pushed leftwards.
Morphophonology
Several morphophonemic alternations occur in Pouye, both within phonological words and across word boundaries.Trill-deletion
The nominal object marker -rɨ loses its initial consonant following /r/ or /l/ or a monosyllable ending in /n/:/jar-rɨ/ → who-OBJ "whom"Compare /wəlou̯k-rɨ/ → snake-OBJ. Similarly, the locative marker -ru is realised as in fast speech following any plain alveolar consonant.
/pol-rɨ/ → Paul-OBJ "Paul"
/wan-rɨ/ → 1SG-OBJ "me"
/tɨlpan-ru/ → palm.floor-LOC "on the floor"Compare /ləu̯-ru/ → house-LOC "to the house/village".
/tau̯ wai̯l-ru/ → tree tree.keel-LOC "on the tree keel"
/jɪprar-ru/ → chicken-LOC "on the chicken"
/pɨrɨt-ru/ → ground-LOC "on the ground"
Vowel epenthesis
When concatenation of morphemes would produce a sequence of two identical plosives, /ɨ/ is inserted between them epenthetically./t-tɪnri-ke-nɨn-a/ →Likewise /ɨ/ is inserted to prevent the formation of non-permissible consonant sequences, i.e. sequences of three consonants where the last two do not form a valid onset as described above, or two such consonants word-initially.
R-revenge-PRF-PAS-awhile
"Had had revenge"
/wilau̯k-mta/ → good-INT "great"Compare for instance /nam-ki/ → 1P-ACP "with us", where the sequence /mk/ appears intervocalically and can be syllabified to two distinct syllables without requiring epenthesis.
/n-kɨ/ → IMP-get "get it!"
Consonant coalescence
Two identical nasals, trills or laterals degeminate when brought together./t-ətɨn-nɨn/ → R-sew-PAS "has sewn"With the imperative prefix n-, epenthesis occurs prior to this rule, meaning that imperatives remain distinct.
/t-ɪl-lai̯/ → R-weave-CONT "weaving"
/n-nək/ → IMP-hold "hold!" *
Approximant epenthesis
Between two vowels at morpheme boundaries, a non-lateral approximant is inserted. Following /i ɨ ɪ e ɛ/, /j/ is inserted, and following /u o ə a/, /w/ is inserted./t-ake-ɨr/ → R-see-around "look round"In exception to this rule, the hortative prefix pa- inserts /l/ before a vowel.
/ra-lə-atʲɨ/ → REP-down-come "come down again"
/pa-i-nɨm/ → HRT-go-P "let's go" *Note also the exception described below.
Vowel deletion
The low vowel /a/ is deleted before /e/ or /ɛ/ over morpheme boundaries./t-ja-ɛj-ɨr-wɨt/ →
R-up-COM-with-stand
"Come up and stand with"
Labial-velar approximant deletion
The suffix -wo "only" is reduced to -o in penultimate position, i.e. when followed by another single monosyllabic suffix. This prevents stress shifting leftwards./wan-wo-kʷɨ/ → 1S-only-POS "my/mine only"Compare /wan-wo/ → 1SG-only "I only" or /kʷ-atu-wo-ke-nɨn/ → QCK-hang.up-up-PRF-PAS "quickly hung up and left", in which cases wo would not be stressed normally anyway.
Dissimilation
When the prefixes na- or ya- precede the realis prefix t-, and this sequence precedes a morpheme beginning with a plosive, the realis prefix becomes r- via dissimilation of manner with the following plosive./ya-t-patɨ-tamu/ →
NEG-R-twist-break
"Didn‘t break"
Vowel harmony
With compound words, vowel harmony causes the open vowel /a/ in the first element to raise to /ə/ in the second element./mau̯-ləu̯/ → bush-house "bush-house"
Alveolar plosive epenthesis
The alveolar plosive /t/ is inserted at the end of a word when the following word begins with /m/. If the first word already ends in /t/, then additional epenthesis of /ɨ/ occurs./pa-ki me/ → FCS-TMP say "then said"This and the following rule occur over word boundaries, as opposed to the previous rules which are all word-internal processes.
/lot mei̯pɨr-ke/ → Lot laugh-PRF "Lot laughed"
Secondary trill deletion
The trill /r/ is also deleted in fast speech in the word riyɨ "now" when the previous word ends in /n/./ja-t-i-nɨn rijɨ/ → NEG-R-go-PAS now "still has not gone"
Loan word phonology
Pouye has borrowed a number of words from the lingua franca Tok Pisin. In these words the phonemes /b d ɡ v s/ can be retained, e.g. /sevenpela/ "seven". Morphophonemic rules generally apply to these words, and the trill deletion rule described above extends its environment to following /s/ as well:/barnabas-rɨ/ → Barnabas-OBJ "Barnabas"Note the loan phonemes /b/ and /s/.