Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Kuot language

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Native to
  
Papua New Guinea

Native speakers
  
2,400 (2002)

Writing system
  
Latin

Region
  
New Ireland

Language family
  
Language isolate

ISO 639-3
  
kto

The Kuot language, or Panaras, is a language isolate, the only non-Austronesian language spoken on the island of New Ireland, Papua New Guinea. There are about 2,400 speakers, concentrated primarily on the northwest coast of the island. Perhaps due to the small speaker base, there are no significant dialects present within Kuot.

Contents

Status

Kuot is an endangered language with most if not all children growing up speaking Tok Pisin instead.

Vowels

The vowels /i/ and /u/ tend to become glide-vowels in occurrence with other vowels. The length of the vowels is not making differences for the meaning of words. The appearance of /i/ and /u/ with other vowels can not be seen as diphthong or a combination of vowel and glide-vowel. There are never more than three vowels per syllable. The combination of diphthong and vowel is also possible but they are pronounced in conditions of the syllable. Diphthongs are spoken like one sound.

't' to 'r' Alternation

The phoneme /t/ in certain possessive markers, such as "-tuaŋ", "-tuŋ" and "-tuo" becomes /r/ when it comes after a stem ending in a vowel. Compare:

  • ira-ruaŋ – my father
  • luguan-tuaŋ – my house
  • i'rama-ruo – my eye
  • nebam-tuaŋ – my feather
  • Vowel Shortening

    Where the third person singular masculine suffix "-oŋ" is used on a noun that ends with a vowel, this vowel is typically not pronounced. For instance, "amaŋa-oŋ" is pronounced [aˈmaŋɔŋ], not [aˈmaŋaɔŋ].

    Voicing Rule

    When vowel-initial suffixes are added to stems that end in voiceless consonants, those consonants become voiced. For example:

  • /obareit-oŋ/ [obaˈreidoŋ] he splits it
  • /taɸ-o/ [taˈβo] he drinks
  • /marik-oŋ/ [maˈriɡoŋ] he prays
  • The phoneme /p/ becomes [β], not [b].

  • /sip-oŋ/ [ˈsiβɔŋ] it comes out
  • /irap-a/ [iˈraβa] her eyes
  • Grammar

    The language uses a VSO word order, similar to Irish and Welsh. The morphology of the language is primarily agglutinative. There are two grammatical genders, male and female, and distinction is made in the first person between singular, dual, and plural, as well as between exclusive and inclusive.

    For instance, the sentence parak-oŋ ira-ruaŋ kamin literally means 'my father eats sweet potato'. Parak-oŋ is a continuous aspect of the verb meaning 'to eat', ira means 'father', -ruaŋ is a suffix used to indicate inalienable possession ('my father'), and kamin is a simple noun meaning 'sweet potato'.

    References

    Kuot language Wikipedia