Tirax language
Tirax is an Oceanic language spoken in north east Malakula, Vanuatu.
Tirax homeland
The name Tirax refers to 'inland person'. The original homeland of the Tirax speakers is the mountainous interior of North Central Malakula, neighbouring Big Nambas. As the Tirax speakers embraced Christianity in the early twentieth century, they began to migrate towards the east coast, where they founded the villages of Mae, Rori and Bethel.Alternative names
Tirax speakers often refer to their own language as resan, "language, speech", or Resan Tirax. Tirax is called "Dirak" by the speakers of Northeast Malakula. Dirak is the name used to refer to Tirax in John Lynch and Terry Crowley's 2001, Languages of Vanuatu: A New Survey and Bibliography. Because it is the language of Mae village, the Tirax language is referred to as "Mae" in the Ethnologue listing, and also in Darrell Tryon's 1976, New Hebrides languages: An internal classification. See Mae language. Tirax speakers prefer not to use "Mae" as the language name, as it is also the language of Rori and Bethel.Typology
Tirax has many features in common with other North Vanuatu languages. It has no tense marking, but has "obligatory subject-mood markers distinguishing realis and irrealis mood". It has "inalienable and alienable possessive marking", with a range of "possessive classifiers for alienable possession" including specific markers for food, drink and paths. Also like other Malakula languages, numbers have verbal morphology. Tirax has "nuclear verb serialisation, and a range of strategies for paratactic linkage. Several morphosyntactic processes, such as object marking and plural marking, are sensitive to the animacy of the referent".Phonology
Voiced stops are prenasalized. and are alveolar, with the rest of the column being dental. It is possible that the cluster of and is actually the unit phoneme, a dental with a trill release.| Front | Back | |
| Close | i | u |
| Close-mid | e | o |
| Open-mid | ɛ | ɔ |
| Open | a |