Vitu language

Vitu
Muduapa
Native to Papua New Guinea
Native speakers
(8,800 cited 1991)[1]
Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-3 wiv
Glottolog mudu1242[2]

Vitu (also spelled Witu or Vittu) or Muduapa is an Oceanic language spoken by about 7,000 people on the islands northwest of the coast of West New Britain in Papua New Guinea.

Classification

Vitu is so closely related to the neighbouring Bali language that the two are sometimes considered to be a single language, called Bali–Vitu.

Vitu and Bali appear to be members of a Meso-Melanesian cluster of the Oceanic languages.

Phonology

Vowels

Front Back
High i u
Mid e o
Low a

Consonants

Labial Coronal Velar
Nasal m n ŋ
Plosive voiceless p t k
prenasalized ᵐb ⁿd ᵑɡ
Fricative β ð ɣ
Sibilant (s)
Rhotic r
Lateral l

/t/ is realized as [tʃ] before /i/.

/s/ occurs only in loanwords from Tok Pisin, such as sikul "school".

Phonotactics

No consonant clusters or final consonants are allowed in native Vitu words: all syllables have a CV or V structure. Loanwords, however, may have different structures.

Writing system

Vitu is written in the Latin script. Only between 15% and 25% of speakers of Vitu are literate in the language, but many more are literate in Tok Pisin, the national language of Papua New Guinea.

A a B b D d E e G g H h I i K k L l M m
/a/ /ᵐb/ /ⁿd/ /e/ /ᵑɡ/ /ɣ/ /i/ /k/ /l/ /m/
N n Ng ng O o P p R r S s T t U u V v Z z
/n/ /ŋ/ /o/ /p/ /r/ /s/ /t/ /u/ /β/ /ð/

Grammar

Morphology

Complex voice systems so characteristic of Austronesian languages of Taiwan and the Philippines undergo significant reduction in most Austronesian languages of Eastern Indonesia and Oceania. Vitu is unusual in terms of morphology when compared to most other Oceanic languages spoken in Melanesia. It is one of very few Melanesian languages that have a passive voice-marking system.

Syntax

The usual word order of Vitu is SVO.

References

  1. Vitu at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  2. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin; Bank, Sebastian, eds. (2016). "Muduapa". Glottolog 2.7. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
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