Massep (Masep, Potafa, Wotaf) is a poorly documented Papuan language spoken by fewer than 50 people in the single village of Masep in West Pantai District, Sarmi Regency, Papua. Despite the small number of speakers, however, language use is vigorous. It is surrounded by the Kwerba languages Airoran and Samarokena.[3]
Massep | |
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Wotaf | |
Native to | Indonesia |
Region | Papua: Sarmi Regency, West Pantai District, north coast (Masep village); also west of Sarmi near Apauwer River |
Ethnicity | 85 (2000)[1][2] |
Native speakers | 25 (2000)[1] |
Language family | Foja Range
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Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | mvs |
Glottolog | mass1263 |
ELP | Masep |
![]() ![]() Massep ![]() ![]() Massep | |
Coordinates: 1.75°S 138.29°E / -1.75; 138.29 |
Clouse, Donohue, and Ma (2002) conclude that it definitely is not a Kwerba language,[4] as it had been classified by Wurm (1975). They did not notice connections to any other language family. However, Usher (2018) classifies it as Greater Kwerbic.[5]
Ethnologue, Glottolog, and Foley (2018)[3] list it as a language isolate,[1][6] but it has not been included in wider surveys, such as Ross (2005). The pronouns are not dissimilar from those of Trans–New Guinea languages, but Massep is geographically distant from that family.
Consonants:[3]
t | c | k | |
kʷ | |||
ᵑɡ | |||
ɸ | s | ʃ | |
β | ɣ | ||
m | n | ɲ | |
r | |||
w | j |
Some probable consonant leniting sound changes proposed by Foley (2018):
Vowels:[3]
i | u |
e | o |
a |
Pronouns are:[3]
sg | pl | |
---|---|---|
1 | ka | nyi |
2 | gu | je |
3 | evi | ive |
Massep case suffixes as quoted by Foley (2018) from Clouse (2002):[3][4]
suffix | case |
---|---|
-o ~ -u ~ -a | accusative |
-ɣoke | dative |
-aveno | instrumental |
-meno | associative |
-(a)vri | locative |
-ni | allative |
-a | temporal |
Massep sentences as quoted by Foley (2018) from Clouse (2002):[3]
ka
1SG
icin-o
stone-ACC
fartasi
throw
unu-ɣoke
dog-DAT
ka icin-o fartasi unu-ɣoke
1SG stone-ACC throw dog-DAT
‘I threw a stone at the dog.’
je
2PL
saremna
sit
yaf-avri
house-LOC
je saremna yaf-avri
2PL sit house-LOC
‘You (pl.) sat in the house.’
gu
2SG
ko-war-emon
1SG.OBJ-see-SG.TNS
gu ko-war-emon
2SG 1SG.OBJ-see-SG.TNS
‘You see me.’
Word order is SOV.
Papuan language families (Palmer 2018 classification) | |||||||||||
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Trans-New Guinea subgroups |
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Eastern Nusantara families and isolates |
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Bird's Head Peninsula families and isolates |
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Northern Western New Guinea families and isolates | |||||||||||
Central Western New Guinea families and isolates |
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Sepik-Ramu basin families and isolates |
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Gulf of Papua and southern New Guinea families and isolates | |||||||||||
Bismarck Archipelago and Solomon Islands families and isolates | |||||||||||
Rossel Island isolate |
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Proposed groupings |
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Proto-language |
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Primary language families | |||||
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Africa |
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Eurasia (Europe and Asia) |
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New Guinea and the Pacific |
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Australia |
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North America |
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Mesoamerica |
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South America |
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Sign languages |
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See also |
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