lingvo.wikisort.org - LanguageTombonuwo (Tambonuo) is a Paitanic language spoken in the Pitas and Labuk-Sugut Districts of northwest Sabah.[2][3] Tombonuwo is apparently also the name
Austronesian language spoken in Sabah, Malaysia
Tombonuo |
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Native to | Malaysia |
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Region | Sabah |
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Ethnicity | Tambanuo |
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Native speakers | 10,000 (2000)[1] 3,000 Lingkabau (2003)[1] |
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Language family | |
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Dialects |
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ISO 639-3 | txa |
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Glottolog | tomb1244 |
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Phonology[4]
Consonants
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Labial |
Dental |
Alveolar |
Palatal |
Velar |
Uvular |
Glottal |
Plosive |
p b |
t |
d |
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g k |
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ʔ |
Fricative |
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s |
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Affricate |
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dʒ |
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Nasal |
m |
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n |
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ŋ |
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Lateral |
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l |
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Trill |
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r |
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Semi-vowel |
w |
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j |
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The phonemes /p, t, k, s, ʔ/ are voiceless. All other expressions are voiced.
Vowels
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Non-back |
Back |
High |
i |
u |
Non-high |
a |
o |
/o/ is often pronounced as unrounded [ʌ].
/a/ is neutralized to [ʌ] in a pre-stressed syllable.
Morphology
Focus
Sabahan languages are characterized by "focus" morphology, which marks a syntactic relationship between the predicate of a clause and the "focused" noun phrase of the clause[5] (see Austronesian alignment).
Tombonuwo has four focus categories, conventionally labelled "actor", "patient", "referent" and "theme".[6] Focus is marked by affixation on the verb.
- Actor: -um- / m(u)-
- Patient: -on (Present tense) / -∅ (Past tense)
- Referent: -an
- Theme: i-
Tense and aspect[6]
The only marked tense in Tombonuwo is past tense.
- Past tense: n- (-in-)
- Stative: o-
- Perfective: ko-
- Non-volitional past tense: n-o-
- Accomplishment: n-o-ko-
Demonstratives[6]
- Near the speaker: itu
- Far from the speaker: iri
- Medium distance from the speaker: ono
References
- Tombonuo at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
- King, Julie (1984). The Paitanic language family. Languages of Sabah: a survey report. Canberra: Australian National University. pp. 146. ISBN 0858832976.
- Lobel, Jason William (2013). Philippine and North Bornean languages: issues in description, subgrouping and reconstruction (PDF) (PHD dissertation). Manoa: University of Hawai'i. p. 370.
- King, John Wayne (1993). Tombonuwo phonemics. Phonological descriptions of Sabah languages. Kota Kinabalu: Sabah Museum. pp. 97–106. ISBN 9789839638059.
- Boutin, Michael (1988). Problems in analyzing focus in the languages of Sabah. Borneo language studies I: Sabah syntax papers. Dallas: SIL. p. 54. ISBN 0883122146.
- King, John Wayne; Levinsohn, Stephen (1991). Participant reference in Tombonuo. Thematic continuity and development in the languages of Sabah. Canberra: Australian National University. p. 76. ISBN 0-85883-406-5.
Languages of Malaysia |
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Main | |
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Significant minority | Chinese | |
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Indian | |
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Indonesian archipelago | |
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Philippine | |
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Families | |
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Creoles | |
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Natives & Indigenous | |
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Mixed & Others | |
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Immigrants |
- African
- Arab
- Bangladeshi
- Burmese
- Cambodian
- East Timorese
- Filipino
- Indonesian
- comparison with Malaysian
- Iranian
- Japanese
- Korean
- Laotian
- Nepalese
- Pakistani
- Sri Lankan
- Thai
- Vietnamese
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Signs | |
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- 1 Extinct languages
- 2 Nearly extinct languages
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- * indicates proposed status
- ? indicates classification dispute
- † indicates extinct status
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- * indicates proposed status
- ? indicates classification dispute
- † indicates extinct status
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