Sulka is a language isolate of New Britain , Papua New Guinea . In 1991, there were 2,500 speakers in eastern Pomio District , East New Britain Province . Villages include Guma ( 5°16′33″S 152°05′32″E / 5.275769°S 152.092315°E / -5.275769; 152.092315 ( Guma Village ) ) in East Pomio Rural LLG . With such a low population of speakers, this language is considered to be endangered. Sulka speakers had originally migrated to East New Britain from New Ireland .
11-405: Sulka may mean: The Sulka language of Papua New Guinea Amos Sulka & Company, a defunct maker of men's wear. See also [ edit ] Sulca Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Sulka . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change
22-459: A typical Austronesian sentence structure, it follows the subject-verb-object word order whereas Papuan follows a subject-object-verb word order. Free pronouns mainly act as verbal or prepositional object. Instead of having the bilabial nasal found on the free pronouns, first and third person plural have an initial velar. Additionally, the basic verb phrase begins with a subject proclitic indicating both subject person/number and aspect/mood. This
33-494: Is followed by one or more verbs, a (pro)nominal object where necessary, and optional oblique constituents. Kua Ku-a 1SG - IPFV pater pat-er think- TR yen yen 2SG orom orom with o o PL Sulka Sulka Sulka nga nga 3SG . POSS re. re talk Kua pater yen orom o Sulka nga re. Ku-a pat-er yen orom o Sulka nga re 1SG-IPFV think-TR 2SG with PL Sulka 3SG.POSS talk "I am teaching you
44-482: Is not always clear. The mid front vowel may fluctuate somewhere between close-mid [e] and the more central-close vowel [ɪ], pronounced like English i in 'in'. The sounds [o] and [u] often fluctuate with each other as in the example of ' 1SG verbal pronoun' [ku] and [ko]. This pattern of fluctuation seems to commonly occur for high front vowels. When looking at the length of vowels, long vowels are often confused with diphthongs. The seven vowel sounds can be found in
55-625: The Oceanic branch of Austronesian (i.e. languages of the St. George linkage such as Mali ). Alternatively, it has been proposed as possibly related to Kol or Baining as part of the East Papuan proposal, but Palmer (2018) treats Sulka as a language isolate . Sulka has some influence from the Mengen language . Over 3,000 to 3,500 years ago, the linguistic ancestors of Sulka speakers arrived in
66-501: The Papua New Guinea area. Although the history of the language is not well known, it may display a mixture of Oceanic and Papuan language traits. These are languages Sulka came into contact with, when the peoples speaking these other languages populated the area in neighboring villages, around 3,200 years ago. The phonological system of Sulka comprises 28 contrasting segments, fourteen consonants , and seven vowels . On
77-698: The Southern coast of the Gazelle Peninsula , on the eastern side of New Britain Island , Papua New Guinea . Some estimate speakers to number as high as between 3,000 and 3,500. Reesink (2005) reports on some Sulka speakers who have intermingled in neighboring villages with speakers of other languages such as Mali, southeast of Kokopo . Sulka may be described as having ancient Papuan (non-Austronesian) roots, which additionally displays morphosyntactic constructions and some vocabulary items associated with
88-476: The Sulka language" According to Reesink (2005), the most common future form he recorded was the same one identified previously. He cites this work by Schneider (1942:323) where this form was named a separate modal particle er(a) . Ngiera Ngi=er=a 2SG . IRR - FUT - IPFV vokong vokong see Subject%E2%80%93verb%E2%80%93object word order Too Many Requests If you report this error to
99-485: The following words: The words below contain closed syllables which are the only attested words showing that syllable length is phonemic: A great majority of Sulka's lexicon is not Oceanic/Austronesian as stated by Schneider. However, there are a few words that are shared between both Papuan and Oceanic. Examples from Geelvink (2005): Selected Sulka nouns showing singular and plural forms (Tharp 1996: 161-163): Basic verb phrases are similar to Oceanic languages. For
110-421: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sulka&oldid=1089621445 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Sulka language Sulka is spoken along the coastal region of Wide Bay , on
121-435: The topic of consonants, there is no recent evidence to support contrast between [b] and [β], therefore they're assumed to be allophones and are represented in the table of consonants as [β] only. Sulka consonants are: For its vowels, Sulka has a contrast between three front vowels: high, mid, and low, [i], [e], and [ε], but there is no instance of the central high vowel [ɨ]. However, when it comes to vocalic contrasts, it
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