Gorum language


Gorum, or Parengi, is a nearly extinct minor Munda language of India.

Names

The name Gorum most likely comes from an animal/people prefix go- and root -rum meaning 'people', and is possibly related to the ethnonym Remo.
Parengi, or Parenga, is of obscure origin.

Status

Gorum is 60 percent endangered and may soon become extinct. Few people under the age of thirty years can understand the language, while those who do know it are likely to deny knowing it. This language seems to have been first researched in 1933.

Origins

Gorum is a member of the Munda family, as shown by the glottal consonants that are used in creaky voice. However, it has borrowed some elements from nearby Dravidian languages, such as doubly inflected AVC structures.

Distribution

Gorum speakers are located in the following areas of eastern India.
Gutob is spoken to the north of Gorum, and Gta to the west of Gorum.

Phonology

Consonants

In Gorum, palatal stops are completely replaced by fricatives /s/ and /z/. Stop aspiration and dental-retroflex distinction are also absent.

Vowels

Creaky voice in Gorum is part of the morphology, i.e. grammaticalized, to demonstrate the affectedness of the verb stems. Although it has been suggested that creaky voice is reconstructible in proto-Austroasiatic, Anderson raises possibilities of whether Gorum creaky voice is true archaicism or pseudo-archaism.

Word stress

Aze described that stress in generally found in word-final position in Gorum words produced in isolated utterances, while in nominal forms, stress falls in the penultimate syllable. In the case of verbal forms, the pattern may not be determined due to morpholexical complications.

Morphology

Nouns

Number

Gorum distinguishes two numbers on nominals: unmarked singular and plural -gi.

Person

Noun phrases are marked for possession. These possessive markers occur primarily with inalienable nouns, i.e. body parts, kin terms, and some lexical terms that are socioculturally determined to be inalienable like irrigated rice fields.
Possessive
-niŋ
-nɔm
-ɖɔy
-leŋ
-beŋ
-ɖɔy

Case

Gorum has two types of nominal marking to demonstrate clausal relation: objective/oblique/recipient marker e- and locative postposition etur. The conditions of variation in both cases and whether they carry any productive meaning or not remains unclear.

Gender

Gorum, like any other Munda languages, does not have a morphological concept of gender. Word pairs that show gender distinction are usually borrowed from Indo-Aryan and Dravidian. However, there is, at least, some kinds of word class distinction based on animacy exist, but the evidence is faint or frozen in Gorum.

Derivation

In Gorum, there are several word derivation methods: affixation, reduplication, and compounding, etc. Monosyllabic stems can take prefixes such as pi-, bu-/bo-/ɔ-, u-, a- ''k/gV-, su-/sV-, infixes -n-, -ʔ-, suffixes -om, -li, partial or full reduplicate, and pair with verbs or nouns to form new words. There are verb-noun compounds, i.e. noun incorporation. Eg. zɔɖaʔ, composed of zɔd and ɖaʔ''. Noun incorporation in Gorum is akin to the feature that also exists in Sora, Juray, Remo, Gutob, Kharia, Gtaʔ, and Kherwarian languages. Similar classificatory incorporation is found in Nicobarese and Khasic as well and may be an archaic feature of Austroasiatic morphosyntax.

Verb

Person indexation

Two third plural subject markers -ey and =gi may co-occur on the same predicate at the same time in some contexts without any clear motives.
Possessor of a logical argument in Sora-Gorum is marked by the object type.

Version

Version is a highly marked feature in Gorum verbal morphology and is distinctive from voice markers is that it does not occupy a slot in Gorum verb structure and nor an indication of relations between verbal actants marked in the verbal complex, but to encode their status of being affected in the discourse space. As mentioned above, Gorum version is represented by creaky voice vowels. It is used optionally to denote the notions of primary affectedness, discourse salience, and discourse deictic orientation.
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Syntax

Gorum follows regional South Asian word order of SOV, but the positions of demonstratives, possessives, numerals in the NPs and verbal indexation show support for the evidence that a different word order was historically used predominantly in earlier Gorum syntax.

Sample text

Gorum folklore: '''The Shrew that became a Tiger'''