Southeast Babar language
Southeast Babar is an Austronesian language spoken on Babar Island in South Maluku, Indonesia.
Phonology
Consonants
The following consonant inventory is provided by Steinhauer.- Sounds only occur in loanwords.
- is only attested in loanwords and also infrequently in roots.
- /b/ and /d/ are marginal and only occur in a few words.
Other consonants in Taber's wordlist
A wordlist collected in a 1993 article by Mark Taber records words with extra distinct sounds that are not recorded nor accorded phonemic status in Steinhauer's study.| Sound | Words with the sound | Comments |
| tʰ | "dog, banana" | Corresponds to word-final /tj/ clusters recorded by Steinhauer, e.g. Steinhauer records "dog" and "banana" as uty. |
| h | "this", "here", "there", "ear" | Should have been deleted by regular sound laws. Might correspond to /x/ in some cases |
| ʔ | "that" | Steinhauer records glottal stops as occurring non-phonemically at the starts of otherwise vowel-initial words. |
| d͡ʒ | "what?" |
Vowels
- are heard as more closed when occurring before glides.
Phonotactics
Due to extensive syncope of vowels in both prefixes and original final syllables, Southeast Babar admits a wide variety of consonant clusters both in the onsets and codas of syllables. One stark example of permitted consonant clusters is xweapk "we speak".Word-final clusters of a consonant followed by /j/ may be optionally subject to epenthesis, with a non-phonemic being inserted either between the two consonants or after them. Both schwa positions can be used by the same speaker in free variation.
Phonological history
Southeast Babar is notable for its drastic phonetic reshapings of inherited Austronesian vocabulary, with extensive consonant loss, unusual reflexes of surviving consonants, and syncope and apocope of vowels. Many of these changes are outlined and exemplified by Hein Steinhauer as follows:Changes to consonants
Consonant loss
Elision of consonants in all historical positions is extensive throughout Southeast Babar. Ancestral Proto-Malayo-Polynesian sounds like *p, *k, *q, *R, *h ''*j and *z were simply lost in Southeast Babar with some exceptions. Examples of consonant deletions include:*q- * Initially:
Chain shift of ''*s'', ''*t'', and ''*k''
The loss of *k led to a pull chain shift. Subsequently, *t shifted to k except if the *t was directly preceded by original *n; unshifted *t before *n is known from *punti > uty "banana". In turn, k produced from *t lenited to /x/ unless the *k was:- Word- or root-initial and followed by a vowel:
- * *tanaq > kal "soil", *ma-takut > mkak "afraid", *təlu > wo-kely "3"
- Word-final when protected by a consonant that now immediately precedes the k due to syncope:
- * *laŋit > lalk "sky, heavens", *ma-bəʀat > berk "heavy"
Afterwards, *s subsequently underwent fortition to t, with examples including:*sulu > tuly "torch"*susu > -tuty "milk"*asu > uty "dog".*panas > pant "warm"
Merger of ''*n'', ''*ŋ'' and ''*l''
The inherited Malayo-Polynesian nasal consonants *n and *ŋ merge with each other as *n, followed by a merger of that merged phoneme with *l, generally surfacing as /l/.*ta-kaən > *ka-an > kaːl "you and I eat"*teliŋa > xlil "ear"*nipən > *lipəl > *liəl > lil "tooth"*laŋit > lalk "sky, heavens".Post-merger /l/ subsequently underwent an inverse development to n when adjacent to t either originating from *s or borrowed from another language. This circular development leads to roots and inflectional affixes to synchronically contain alternations between l and n.
- English bottle > Indonesian botol > Southeast Babar potn*panas > *palt > pant "hot"
Due to *nipən "tooth" surfacing as lil and not **nin, Steinhauer suggests that the loss of *p occurred after the loss of *j and *k.
Other consonants
*b and *d generally become w and r, merging with original *w and *r.- Original *w and *r: *waiR > wey "water", *burak > wo-wor "white"
- Originally *b and *d: *batu > waxy "stone", *babuy > wawy "pig", *balik > -waly "to turn", *daləm > ralm "inside", *dua > ru "2"
- Irregularly unchanged *b: *ma-bəRat > berk "heavy"
Changes to vowels
Reduction and loss of final vowels
All word-final *ə and *a, whether inherited as word-final or secondarily word-final due to the loss of a following consonant, are deleted in Southeast Babar.- Originally word-final: *lima > lim "hand", *mata > mox "eye", *dua > wu-ru "2"
- Secondarily word-final: *tanaq > *kala > kal "land", *dəŋəR > rel "to hear"
- From *u: *batu > waxy "stone", *sulu > tuly "torch", *baqəRu > wa-way "new"
- From *i: *malip > -moly "to laugh", *balik > -waly "to turn", *waiR > wey "water"
- From *-ay: *matay > -moxy "to die"
Syncope of vowels between two consonants
Vowels often faced deletion in final syllables between two surviving consonants. Examples cited by Steinhauer include laŋit > lalk "heavens", *daləm > ralm "inside", *inum > *imun > -iml "to drink", *panas > pant "warm", and *matay > -moxy "to die".Reflexes of ''*a''
*a turns into u if it becomes the first phoneme of a word at any point in its evolution to Southeast Babar.- Original word-initial *a: *asu > uty "dog", *ama > um "father"
- Secondarily word-initial *a: *hapuy > uy "fire", *qabu > uwy "ash"
- Exceptions: *zalan > al "road"
If an *a is either not word-initial, not preceded by a nasal, or not subject to apocope or syncope, it will remain as a.
- Not word initial nor following a nasal: *daləm > ralm "inside", *babuy > wawy "pig"
- Not syncopated nor apocopated: *panas > pant "warm"
Reflexes of other vowels
*u remained as u unless before a syllable containing a non-high vowel, which lowered it to o. The difference in reflexes can be starkly contrasted with *buaq "fruit", which became the numeral prefix wu- or wo- depending on the vowel of the following numeral.- With no lowering: wu-ru "2", wu-lim "5"
- With lowering: wo-kely "3", wo-ax "4", wo-lem "6"
*ə is often deleted in various places in trisyllabic words. However, if an *ə survives these deletions, it is reflected as e.
- Deleted: *təliŋa > xlil "ear", *baqəRu > wa-way "new"
- Surfaces as e: *dəŋəR > -rel "to hear", *ənəm > -lem "6", *təlu > -kely "3"
Morphology
Morphophonological processes
Some conditioned sound changes have led to phonetic mutations of morphemes when subject to morphological processes, including affixation and reduplication.Change of ''l'' to ''n'' before ''t''
Southeast Babar morphemes ending in l generally change the l to n whenever it precedes a t.l- + -tol "to see" + tel > nton tel "he has seen"lewal "language" + toːl "our " > lewan toːl "our language"-tol "ill" > -tontol "very ill"Glide metathesis and insertion
On verbs whose roots end in the glide -y, the glide and the first consonant of the following morpheme undergo metathesis. For instance, l-moxy "he dies" becomes lmox tyel "he has died", with the y from the verb root and the t of the particle tel switching places.The metathesis process also occurs when a morpheme ending in -y is reduplicated, such as -kary "to work" reduplicating to -karkyary "to be working".
The 1st-person singular, 2nd-person singular, and 2nd-person plural also trigger the insertion of a glide after the first consonant of the following verb stem; the presence of glide insertion is governed by the same restrictions as the application of glide metathesis.
Glide metathesis and insertion have some restrictions on their application.
- The morpheme the glide might move to or be inserted at cannot have a high vowel after its first consonant.
- The initial consonant of the next morpheme cannot be w.
If an original Malayo-Polynesian *a was rounded to o after a nasal in a base morpheme, the vowel is reverted to a if the nasal is subject to the glide metathesis or insertion process. The conjugation of -moly "to laugh" demonstrates this:
- Unreduplicated l-moly "he laughs" and i-myaly "I laugh"
- Reduplicated l-molmyaly "he keeps laughing" and i-myalmyaly "I keep laughing"
Verb conjugation
Southeast Babar verbs are conjugated for three grammatical persons and two grammatical numbers. First-person plural conjugation also distinguishes clusivity, with exclusive 1st-person plural excluding the addressee but the inclusive 1st-person plural including them. In addition, verbs can additionally inflect for at least three known grammatical aspects, namely perfect, progressive aspect, and inchoative aspect.Person-number prefixes
Southeast Babar conjugates verbs for person and number via a series of prefixes attached to verb stems, either to an unmarked stem or the progressive stem.There are two basic classes of person-number prefixes in the language. One class has the person-number prefixes all contain a vowel, and the other class where most of the prefixes do not. The prefixes for each class are as follows:
| Person and number | Vocalic prefixes | Consonantal prefixes | Proto-forms |
| 1st sg. | o- | i- | *ku- |
| 2nd sg. | mo- | m- | *mu- |
| 3rd sg. | le- | l- | *na- |
| 1st pl. inclusive | ke- | x- | *ta- |
| 1st pl. exclusive | me- | m- | *ma- |
| 2nd pl. | mi- | m- | *mi- |
| 3rd pl. | te- | t- | *sida- |
Verbal aspect marking
A particle tel follows the conjugated verb to mark the perfect aspect. Another postverbal particle kay marks the inchoative aspect. The two particles can stack together to form an "inchoative perfect", so to speak. Steinbauer demonstrates the two particles with the following examples.lmoxy "he dies"lmox tyel "he has died"lmok kyay tyel "he has already died"Progressive aspect is expressed by a special verbal stem for each verb formed via reduplication of the verb root.lkary "he works" > lkarkyary "he is working"lmoly "he laughs" > lmolmyaly "he keeps laughing".
- Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *kaən > reduplicated *kakan > -kkol "is eating"
Pronouns
The basic personal pronouns in Southeast Babar are:Possessive markers
There are also at least two series of possessive markers, one series ending in u and another one ending in oːl. They all are stressed when attached to a possessed noun. Possessive markers documented by Steinhauer are first-person singular u and oːl, second-person singular mu and moːl, and first-person inclusive plural toːl.Possessive markers follow the noun that is possessed. Examples of this behaviour include:u-series: ox u "my head", ox mu "your head"oːl-series: lim oːl "my hand", lim moːl "your hand", lewan toːl "our language"
Numerals
Cardinal numerals from 2 to 9 have an obligatory prefix wu-/''wo- that is derived from *buaq "fruit", which on the way to Southeast Babar evolved into a classifier and then a prefix.The cardinals from 2-7 are given by Steinhauer as wu-ru "2", wo-kely "3", wo-ax "4", wu-lim "5", wo-lem "6", and wo-exy "7". Other numerals are only recorded in Taber's wordlist, including metl "1", wo-ka "8", wu-si "9", and wu-ki'' "10".