Engan languages
The Engan languages, or more precisely Enga–Kewa–Huli or Enga – Southern Highland, are a small family of Papuan languages of the highlands of Papua New Guinea. The two branches of the family are rather distantly related, but were connected by Franklin and Voorhoeve.
Name
The name "Engan" is often restricted to the northern branch of the family, to those languages transparently related to Enga, but also sometimes to the family as a whole.Languages
The languages fall into three quite distinct branches: Engan proper, Huli, and Southern Highlands:- North Engan : Enga–Kyaka–Lembena, Ipili, Bisorio
- South Engan
- *Huli
- *Southern Highlands: Angal, Kewa; Samberigi
Classification
Usher links the Engan and Chimbu languages in a Central New Guinea Highlands family.
There are a considerable number of resemblances with Wiru. Borrowing has not been ruled out as the reason for this, though the pronouns are similar as well.
Proto-language
Phonemes
Usher reconstructs the consonant inventory as follows:Vowels are *i *e *a *o *u.
Pronouns
Pronouns are easy to reconstruct for the northern and southern branches, but much more difficult for Engan as a whole. Ross has the following for the singular, Wiru has been added for comparison:Usher has not yet published reconstruction of Engan as a whole, but has done Engan proper:
Vocabulary
Some lexical reconstructions of Proto-Trans Enga by Usher are:Modern reflexes
The Enga-Kewa-Huli reflexes of proto-Trans-New Guinea etyma, if Engan languages are indeed members of the Trans-New Guinea family, are:Enga:
- mona ‘heart’ < *
- yaka ‘bird’ < *
- lyaŋa ‘ashes’ < *
- ŋaŋa ‘baby < *ŋaŋ
- ‘mother’ < *
- kuri ‘bone’ < *
- kare ‘ear’ < *
- ne- ‘eat’ < *na
- ‘father’ < *apa
- iti ‘hair’ < *
- endo ‘fire’ < *
- lema ‘louse’ < *niman
- kana ‘moon’ < *
- mana ‘instructions’ < *mana
- kitama ‘morning’ < *
- kumi- ‘die’ < *kumV-
- re- ‘speak’ < *nde-
- maa ‘taro’ < *mV
- ita ‘tree’ < *inda
- ega ‘bird’ < *
- na- ‘eat’ < *na-
- aba ‘father’ < *apa
- iri ‘hair’ < *
- ira ‘tree’ < *inda
- ma ‘taro’ < *mV
- ama ‘mother’ < *
- ibi ‘name’ < *imbi
- iri ‘hair’ < *
- uni ‘bone’ < *kwanjaC
- apu ‘tail’ < *
- lema ‘louse’ < *
- oma ‘die’ < *kumV-
- reka- ‘stand’ < *
- la- ‘talk’ < *nde-
- maa ‘taro’ < *mV
- yaa ‘bird’ < *
- am ‘mother’ < *
- ap ‘father’ < *apa
- mbi ‘name’ < *imbi
- ome- ‘die’ < *kumV-
Basic vocabulary