ISO 639-3 sax | Native speakers 2,500 (2001) | |
Language family AustronesianMalayo-PolynesianOceanicSouthern OceanicVanuatuNorthern VanuatuEast VanuatuSaa Dialects PonorwalLolatavolaNinebulo |
Sa or Saa language is an Austronesian language spoken in southern Pentecost Island, Vanuatu. It had an estimated 2,500 speakers in the year 2000.
Contents
Dialects and range
Sa has numerous dialects, with no well-established names or boundaries. At a meeting in 2008, speakers recognised four main dialects, with sub-dialectal variation and mixing of dialects in some areas.
The two central dialects are relatively similar to one another and are generally understood by all Sa speakers. Most writing and research in Sa has been in one of these dialects:
There are also two outlying dialects, which are highly distinctive and difficult for speakers of other dialects to understand:
The distinctive speech of villages such as Bunlap, Bay Barrier (Ranon) and Wanur appears to comprise mixtures of neighbouring dialects.
People in southern Pentecost remember the existence of additional dialects that are now extinct.
Phonology
The consonants of Sa include b, d, g, h, k, l, m, n, ng (as in English "singer"), p, r, s, t, and w. In most dialects there is also j (occasionally written "ts"), which is apparently an allophone of t found before the vowels i and u although speakers regard it separately. Most speakers also use labiovelar bw, mw and pw, although from some speakers of outlying dialects these are indistinguishable from normal b, m and p. In addition to these consonants, the northern dialect has a bilabial f. In this dialect s may be pronounced like English sh.
As a general rule, clusters of consonants do not occur within a syllable. Word roots may begin with a pair of consonants, but in speech the first of these consonants is usually either dropped or attached to the final syllable of the preceding word.
In addition to the five standard vowels (a, e, i, o and u), Sa is generally believed to have additional mid-high vowels ê (intermediate between e and i) and ô (intermediate between o and u). Not all authors have recognised these extra vowels, but they have been accepted by local teachers of vernacular literacy and are used in the Bible Society's recent Gospel translations. Vowels are distinguished for length, with long vowels (aa, ee, etc.) often occurring where a consonant has historically been lost. Vowels can occur alone or in various combinations.
Stress is normally on the penultimate syllable of a word. However, syllables that end with a consonant or a long vowel take stress in precedence to other syllables.
Grammar
Basic word order in Sa is subject–verb–object.
Pronouns
Personal pronouns are distinguished by person and number. They are not distinguished by gender. With one exception, subject and object pronouns are identical.
The singular and plural pronouns are as follows:
In addition, there are dual pronouns (referring to two people), which incorporate the particle kô, and paucal pronouns (referring to a small number of people), which incorporate the particle têl or pat.
Nouns
Nouns in Sa are not preceded by articles. Plurality is indicated by placing the pronoun êr ("them") or a number after the noun.
Nouns may be either free, or directly possessed. Directly possessed nouns are followed either by a suffix or a noun indicating whom an item belongs to. For example:
sêk = my namesêm = your namesên = his/her namesê temak = my father's nameThe possessive suffixes are as follows:
Possession may also be indicated by the use of the word na- "of" (or a- in the case of food items), followed either by a possessive suffix or the name of the possessor:
nak ôl = my coconut (belonging)nam ôl = your coconut (belonging)nan ôl = his/her coconut (belonging)ôl na selak = my brother's coconut (belonging)ak ôl = my coconut (to eat)am ôl = your coconut (to eat)an ôl = his/her coconut (to eat)ôl natê = coconut for it (association)A verb may be transformed into a noun by the addition of a nominalising suffix -an:
wêl = to dance (verb)wêlan = a dance (noun)Modifiers generally come after a noun:
ere = villageere lêp = big villageVerbs
Verbs in Sa are usually (though not always) preceded by verb markers indicating the tense, aspect and mood of the action.
In positive statements the marker is typically m-, ma-, mwa-, me- or a variant (depending on the dialect, the verb and the environment). Past and present tense are not explicitly distinguished:
nê mlos = I bathe / I bathednê marngo = I hear / I heardIn negative statements this marker is replaced with taa- or a variant:
nê taalos = I don't bathe / I didn't bathenê taarngo = I don't hear / I didn't hearThese markers may be combined with a future marker t or te:
nê met los = I will bathenê meterngo = I will hearnê taat los = I won't bathenê taaterngo = I won't hearIn the imperative, the future marker occurs without any other marker:
O tlos! = [You] bathe!O terngo! = [You] listen!Hypothetical statements include a particle po:
nê metpo los = I should batheCompleted actions are indicated using tê:
nê mlos tê = I bathed alreadyThe subject can be omitted from a sentence, as in the second example below:
i meterngo = he will hear itmeterngo = it will be heardTransitive and intransitive verb forms are distinguished, with transitive verbs often followed by nê:
êr rôs = they moveêr rôsnê at = they move the stoneVerbs in Sa can be linked together in a variety of serial verb constructions.