Nominal morphology Where the morphology is concerned, the language is somewhere along the continuum between
agglutinative and
fusional.
Nominals have the following cases:
nominative,
accusative,
instrumental (subsumes
ergative),
dative (subsumes
allative,
purposive),
ablative (subsumes
elative,
avoidative), specific
locative, nonspecific
locative (subsumes
perlative and
comitative) and global
locative. Nominals also have the following derived forms:
privative,
similative,
resultative and
proprietive, which also forms the noun
nominative-accusative plural. All stems end in a vowel or a semi-vowel, except for a few monosyllables ending in
-r and
-l (which includes the very few reduplicated words, like
tharthar 'boiling, seething', as well as
ngipel 'you ' [a compound of
ngi 'you singular' and
-pal 'two']). For many nouns the surface nominative(-accusative) undergoes a final stem-vowel deletion rule; in the Kalaw Lagaw Ya dialect the rule results in final devoiced vowels accompanied by main vowel lengthening. There are three numbers,
singular,
dual and
plural. Singular and dual are the same form in all nominals except the personal pronouns. Furthermore, the plural is only distinguished in the nominative-accusative — except for the personal pronouns, where the difference in number is shown by the stem. There are two nominal classes, Common Nominals (
common nouns,
demonstratives, locative/temporal/etc.
adverbs) and Proper Nominals (
Proper names [personal names, boat names, emotive kinship terms],
pronouns). The major difference between the two classes are 1) semantic — Proper nominals have
pronominal characteristics, and, 2)
declensional, for example Proper Nominals have one locative case rather than the three of Common Nominals.
Common nominal declensions Note that the following are in the Kalau Kawau Ya dialect.
Irregular nouns There are few irregular nouns, the most common being: •
ai 'food',
ya 'speech, language, message, etc.',
li 'basket',
lu 'mound, bump, hump' (instrumental
aidu,
yadu,
lidu,
ludu; specific locative/proprietive-plural
aidai/aide,
yadai,
lidai,
ludai) • KKY
na, KLY
naawu, KulY/KY
nawu 'song'; KKY
yu 'drying rack, cooking rack' (other dialects
nuuwa,
nu); specific locative/proprietive-plural KKY
nathai, KLY/KY
nawul, KulY
nawlai; KKY
yuthai (other dialects
nuwanu,
nuwa;
nuwal, KulY
nuwalai)) •
za 'thing, object, matter, etc.' This word has a fuller stem form,
zapu-, which appears in certain forms: instrumental
zapun; genitive
zapu; proprietive-plural
zapul. In the locative forms both stems (
za- and
zapu-) appear: specific locative
zanu,
zapunu, etc. •
gœiga 'sun, day';
bireg/bereg 'shelf'. The stems of these words have different forms to the nominative-accusative:
gœiga — stem:
gœigœyi-,
gœigi-;
bireg/bereg — stem:
bœreigi-,
biregi- •
dœgam, KLK
dœgaamu 'side, direction, point of compass, aspect'. This word has two stem forms, in free variation:
dœgamu-,
daguma- Demonstratives The language has a closed class of demonstrative morphemes with special morphological characteristics: ;Prefixes •
pi-,
pe- 'there in the distance in a specific position' •
kai- 'there in the distance in a non-specific position' ;Stems •
ka-,
kawu-/kawa- (non-specific),
í- (specific) 'here, this' •
se-,
si-,
sewu-/sewa- 'there, that (not too far away)' •
-gu, KKY
-gui,
-mulu (KKY
-ngùl in combined forms) 'down there' •
-ka,
-karai/-kadai 'up there' (variant forms of the one underlying stem) •
-ngapa 'there beyond', 'there on the other side' •
-pai,
-pa,
-paipa 'ahead there, up close there' (variant forms of the one underlying stem
-pai), MY
-kupai, KY also
-kudhai •
-pun[i],
-puwa 'off from there, back from there, back over there, back there' (possibly variant forms of the one underlying stem) The Kauřařaigau Ya forms recorded are the same as in the modern dialects, with the exception of
ka-/
kařu- 'non-specific here, this',
se-/
si-/
seřu- 'there, that',
kařa- 'non-specific yonder', modern dialects
kai-, %
ka- and
-puwai 'ahead there', modern dialects
-pai/
-pa. These
demonstratives can take masculine, feminine and non-singular morphology (as such are pronominal) as well as case forms.
Í- 'here, this' and
se/si- 'there, that (not too far away)' take the gender/number morphemes as suffixes, and the other demonstratives take them as prefixes. Note that
ka- 'non-specifically here' and
kai- 'there in the distance in a non-specific position' cannot appear with the gender/number morphemes, these latter being specific.
Í- and
se/si- also take an
article forming affix
-bi to become demonstrative articles (e.g. KLY
senuubi kaazi, KKY
senaubi kaz 'that boy', KLY
senaabi kaazi, KKY
senabi kaz 'that girl', KLY
sepalab kaazi, KKY
sepalbi kaz 'those two children',
sethabi kœzil 'those children');
kedha 'like this/that, thus' can also take this suffix (e.g.
kedhabi puy 'such a tree').
Pronouns The personal pronouns are three-way nominative-ergative-accusative in declension. Note that the third person pronouns are also used as definite articles, e.g.
Nuidh garkœzin nan yipkaz imadhin 'The man saw the woman'.
Dual pronouns The dual and plural pronouns are nominative-accusative, the accusative being the same in form as the genitive, except in KKY, where the accusative is unmarked.
Ngawal 'who ' is constructed from
nga 'who' plus the clitic
-wal 'both (dual conjunction)'.
Plural pronouns Ngaya 'who many' is constructed from
nga 'who' plus the clitic
-ya 'and others (plural conjunction)'.
Personal names and familiar kinship terms Familiar kinship terms are the equivalent of English kin terms such as Dad and Mum, while non-familiar terms are the equivalent of Father and Mother; these latter are treated as common nouns in the language. Kauřařaigau Ya nominal morphology The earliest grammatical records of the language are those of the mid-1800s Kauřařaigau Ya dialect. This dialect is identical to the modern dialects, apart from having more archaic forms of some endings and suffixes as well as stem forms.
Nominal suffixes and endings ;Common Nominals • Nominative-Accusative: unmarked • Ergative-Instrumental:
-n,-na,-nu,-Cu; demonstratives unmarked • Genitive: monosyllable stems:
-ngu, multisyllables
-u • Dative-Allative:
-pa ~ -pari • Ablative-Causative: nouns, pronouns
-nguzi, verbal nouns
-lai, adverbs/demonstratives
-zi • Specific Locative: monosyllabic stem nouns
-lai~-dai~-thai~-ai~-řai~-rai, multisyllabic stem nouns
-nulai~-nule~-nuli~-nul, adverbs
-lai~-l(a) , demonstratives
-ři • Non-Specific Locative:
-ya, adverbs/demonstratives
-ki~-kidha • Proprietive/Plural: monosyllabic stem nouns
-lai~-dai~-thai~-ai~-řai~-rai, multisyllabic stem nouns, adverbs
-lai (>
-le~-li),
-rai (>
-re~-ri),
-řai (>
-ře~-ři) • Privative:
-gi • Imitative-Similative:
-dha • Resultative:
-zi ;Proper Nominals No early writer recorded declined feminine forms, apart from the genitive. Ray (1907:20-21) implies (by default) that the OKY paradigm is basically the same as that of OKLY. • Nominative-Ergative-Instrumental: unmarked • Accusative-Genitive: masculine
-ni, feminine
-na-, dual-plural pronoun
-ni~-mùni • Dative-Allative: masculine
-nipa[ri] , feminine ?
-napa[ri], dual-plural pronoun
-nipa[ri]~-mùnipa(ri) • Ablative-Causative: masculine
-ninguzi ~-nunguzi, feminine ?
-nanguzi, dual-plural pronoun
-ninguzi~-nunguzi~-mùninguzi~-mùnunguzi • Locative: masculine
-niya, feminine ?
-naya, dual-plural pronoun
-niya~-mùniya • Imitative-Similative:
-dha, dual-plural pronoun
-dha~-mùdha Kauřařaigau Ya pronouns Brierly (B), MacGillivray (M) and Ray (R) recorded the following forms of the singular pronouns of OKY: ;Nominative • 1st — Brierly
gni, ngi; Macgillivray
ngai; Ray
ngai • 2nd — Macgillivray
ngi; Ray
ngi • 3rd masculine — Macgillivray
nue; Ray
nui • 3rd feminine — Macgillivray
na, nga; Ray
na • 'who' — Brierly
gua; Macgillivray
nga; Ray
nga • 'what' — Macgillivray
[]mi; Ray
mi- ;Accusative • 1st — Brierly
ana; Macgillivray
ana; Ray
ngana • 2nd — Brierly
gin; MacGillivray
ngi; Ray
nginö, ngin • 3rd masculine — Brierly
nooano; MacGillivray
nudu; Ray
nuinö, nuin • 3rd feminine — Ray
nanö, nan • 'who' — Ray
nganö, ngan • 'what' — not recorded ;Instrumental-Ergative • 1st — Brierly
nath, nut; Macgillivray
ngatu; Ray
ngata, ngatö, ngat • 2nd — Brierly
needtha, needthoo; Macgillivray
ngidu; Ray
ngida, ngidö, ngid • 3rd masculine — Brierly
nooide ; MacGillivray
nudu; Ray
nuida, nuidö, nuid • 3rd feminine — Macgillivray
nadu; Ray
nada, nadö, nad • 'who' — Macgillivray
ngadu; Ray
ngada, ngadö, ngad • 'what' — Brierly
meedan; Macgillivray
mida; Ray
mida, midö, mid ;Genitive • 1st — Brierly
ngau, gnau, ngow masculine,
udthu, oldzoo, udzoo feminine; Macgillivray
ngow masculine,
udzu, udz feminine; Ray
ngau masculine,
ngazu, nguzu feminine • 2nd — Brierly
gnee, ye noo, yeenow, niu, yenoo, meeno; MacGillivray
yinu; Ray
nginu • 3rd masculine — Brierly
noonoo; Ray
nungu • 3rd feminine — Macgillivray
nanue; Ray
nanu • 'who' — Ray
ngunu • 'what' — not recorded Based on the above forms and the modern dialects, the OKY pronouns are reconstructed as follows: The accusatives, the ablatives and imitatives underwent optional final vowel deletion, while the ergatives optionally transformed the final
u to
a or
œ, or deleted it, thus
ngathu >
ngatha >
ngathœ >
ngath. The recorded dual-plural forms are: ;Nominative-Ergative-Instrumental • 1st Dual Exclusive — MacGillivray
albei; Ray
ngalbai • 1st Dual Inclusive — MacGillivray
aba; Ray
ngaba • 2nd Dual — MacGillivray
ngipel; Ray
ngipel • 3rd Dual — MacGillivray
pale; Ray
palai • 'who' Dual — Ray
nga wal • 1st Plural Exclusive — Brierly
ari, churri; MacGillivray
arri, uri; Ray
ngöi • 1st Plural Inclusive — Brierly
alpa; MacGillivray
alpa; Ray
ngalpa • 2nd Plural — MacGillivray
ngi-tana; Ray
ngita • 3rd Plural — MacGillivray
tana; Ray
tana ;Accusative-Genitive • 1st Dual Exclusive — Brierly
abonnie, abuni, abani, aboni; MacGillivray N/A; Ray
ngalbaini • 1st Dual Inclusive — Brierly N/A; MacGillivray
abane, abeine; Ray
ngabani • 2nd Dual — Brierly N/A; MacGillivray
ngipeine; Ray
ngipeni • 3rd Dual — Brierly N/A; MacGillivray
palaman; Ray
palamuni • 1st Plural Exclusive — Brierly
areen; MacGillivray
arrien; Ray
ngöimunu • 1st Plural Inclusive — Ray
ngalpanu • 2nd Plural — MacGillivray
ngitanaman; Ray
ngitamunu • 3rd Plural — MacGillivray
tanaman; Ray
tanamunu ;Dative • 1st Dual Exclusive: MacGillivray
albi nipa; Ray
ngalbainipa • 1st Dual Inclusive: MacGillivray
albynape; Ray
ngabanipa • 2nd Dual: Ray
ngipenipa • 3rd Dual: MacGillivray
pale nipa; Ray
palamunipa • 1st Plural Exclusive: MacGillivray
arri nipa; Ray
ngöinipa, ngöimunipa • 1st Plural Inclusive: Ray
ngalpanipa, ngalpamunipa • 2nd Plural: Ray
ngitanipa, ngitamunipa • 3rd Plural: MacGillivray
tane nipa; Ray
tananipa, tanamunipa ;Ablative • recorded by Ray as
-[mu]nunguzi These can be reconstructed as: • 'Who' in the dual nominative-accusative (and optionally in the ergative-instrumental) had the forms
ngawal (dual) and
ngaya (plural). •
Mi- 'what, which' was used in much the same way as in the modern dialects.
Verb morphology Verbs can have over 100 different
aspect,
tense,
voice,
mood and
number forms. Verb agreement is with the object (i.e. 'ergative') in transitive clauses, and with the subject in intransitive clauses. Imperatives, on the other hand, agree with both subject and object in transitive clauses. There are three aspects ('perfective', 'imperfective', 'habitual'), two telicity forms ('active', which focuses on the verb activity and subsumes many intransitives, many antipassives and some transitives, and 'attainative', which subsumes many transitives, some antipassives and some intransitives), two moods ('non-imperative' and 'imperative' [which resembles a subjunctive in some uses]), 6 tenses ('remote future', 'today/near future', 'present', 'today past', 'recent past', 'remote past' — KLY has developed a 7th tense, a 'last night' tense) and four numbers ('singular', 'dual', 'specific plural', 'animate active plural' — in form the animate active plural is the same as the singular, and is only found on certain verbs). In most descriptions of the language the active and attainative forms have been mistermed transitive and intransitive respectively. Transitive, intransitive, passive, antipassive and 'antipassive passive' in the language are syntactic categories, and are formed by the interplay of nominal and verbal morphology, clause/sentence-level characteristics such as word-order, and semantic considerations. Verb morphology consists of prefixes (aspect, positioning, etc.), suffixes (telicity, number, and two fossilised multiplicative/causative suffixes) and endings (tense, aspect and mood, and a very limited extent number and telicity). The structural matrix of the verb is as follows. Note that the two fossilised suffixes are mutually exclusive; if a suffix is in the A slot, a suffix cannot appear in the B slot, and vice versa:
(prefix) + (prefix) + stem (+FOSSILISED SUFFIX A) + (TELICITY) (+FOSSILISED SUFFIX B) + (number) + ending (+ending) Examples: •
pabalkabuthamadhin 'two were laid down across something' [which would be clear in the context] •
pabalkabuthemadhin 'two lay down (laid themselves down) across something' [which would be clear in the context] :: prefix:
pa- 'telic prefix' :: prefix:
bal- 'positional — across' :: stem:
kabutha- 'place, lay' :: telicity suffix:
-Ø 'attainative',
-i 'active' :: number suffix:
-ma 'dual' (absolutive agreement) :: tense-aspect-mood ending:
-dhin 'remote past perfective' •
garwœidhamemanu 'two met each other earlier today' :: prefix:
gar- 'collective' :: stem:
wœidha- 'place, put' :: Fossilised suffix:
ma 'intensive' :: telicity suffix:
i 'active' :: number suffix:
ma 'dual' :: tense-aspect-mood ending:
dhin 'remote past perfective'
Sample verb declension The verb here is
íma- 'see, observe, supervise, examine, try, test'
Kauřařaigau Ya verbal morphology Prefixes These were the same as in the modern dialects.
Suffixes The only suffix differences with the modern dialects were in the form of the plural and verbal noun suffixes. In OKY these were
maři and
ři respectively. The dual was
ngauma on
ma- 'take, give, move etc.' and otherwise
uma. Class 1:
wœidha- 'put, place, cook' •
wœidhamařinu attainative perfective present plural object •
wœidhaumanu attainative perfective present dual object •
wœidhemařinu active perfective present plural subject •
wœidheumanu active perfective present dual subject •
wœidhàři verbal noun Class 2:
ni-,
niya- 'sit, stay' •
niyamařipa[ri] imperfective present plural •
niyaumapa[ri] imperfective present dual •
niyàři,
niyài verbal noun
Verb endings On the whole, the OKY verb seems to have been declined like the Kalau Lagau Ya verb. This includes the loss of the suffix
ma in the intransitive imperfective present/perfective today future singular. This loss, however, appears to have been optional in the today past equivalent: • OKY
daneipa (
danaipa) 'rise (sun)' (MacGillivray): KLY
danaika, KKY
danamipa 'rise (sun, etc.), load (self) up' present imperfective • OKY
dadeipa (
dhœidhaipa) 'die' (MacGillivray): KLY
dhœidhaika (base
dhœidhama-) 'be dizzy, dead drunk' present imperfective • OKY
usimema, usima (
usimima,
usima) 'douse' (MacGillivray): KLY
usima, KKY
wœsimima 'douse' today past perfective Vowel/diphthong deletion and reduction in class 1b verbs was optional in OKY where it is now optional or obligatory: • OKY
uzareuma-: KLY
uzareuma-, KKY
uzarma- 'go dual' • OKY
delupeipa (
dœdupaipa) 'drown, sink': KLY
dudupaka, KKY
dœdupapa The irregular verb
yœwi- /
iya- /
yœuna- 'lie/slant/lean over/down' was recorded in the form
iipa (
eepah), indicating the stem
ii- (the remote past form
iir is found in modern KY, though not recorded in OKY). Otherwise, only
yœuna- was recorded for OKY.
Miscellaneous paradigms Three paradigms that have irregular morphology are: •
Si[ ]kai 'perhaps, maybe, possibly' (all dialects except Kalau Kawau Ya). This word modifies for singular gender : masculine
sinukai/senukai; feminine
sinakai/senakai; general (singular, dual, plural)
sikai. In KKY, the word is invariable
sike,
sikedh (
sikedh is more emphatic.) •
yawa 'goodbye, farewell, take care' (cf.
yawar 'journey, travel';
yawaya- 'watch over, watch out for, etc.'). This word is only used when speaking to a single person. For two or more people, the form is
yawal. • masculine
kame ~
kamedh, feminine
kake ~
kakedh, non-singular
kole ~
koledh 'hey!' (word used to attract someone's attention; in
kamedh,
kakedh and
koledh (the
-dh final in all these, like in
sikedh above, is only found in more emphatic use.) ==Sign language==