Waimoa language

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Waimoa
RegionNortheast East Timor
Native speakers
21,200 (2015 census)[1]
5,670 L2 speakers (2015 census)
Language codes
ISO 639-3wmh
Glottologwaim1252
ELP
Distribution of Waimaha mother-tongue speakers in East Timor
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Waimoa or Waimaʼa is a language spoken by about 27,000 (2015 census)[1] people in northeast East Timor. Waimoa proper is reported to be mutually intelligible with neighboring Kairui and Midiki, which together have about 5,000 speakers.

The classification of Waimoa is unclear. Structurally, it is Malayo-Polynesian. However, its vocabulary is largely Papuan, similar to that of Makasae. Although generally classified as Austronesian languages or dialects that have been largely relexified under the influence of a language related to Makasae, it is possible that Waimoa, Kairui, and Midiki are instead Papuan languages related to Makasae which have been influenced by Austronesian.

Phonology[edit]

Similarly to other Austronesian languages of the region,[2] Waimoa has aspirated/voiceless and glottalized/ejective consonants, which are distributed like /hC/ and /ʔC/ consonant clusters (or perhaps /Ch/ and /Cʔ/) but are often pronounced as single segments.[3]

Waimoa plosives
Bilabial Coronal Velar Glottal
Voiceless unaspirated t k ʔ
Voiceless aspirated
Voiceless ejective pʼ ~ pˀ tʼ ~ tˀ kʼ ~ kˀ
Voiced plain b d ɡ

Similarly there are voiceless and glottalized /m n l r s w/.

There is also vowel harmony.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Waimoa at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022) Closed access icon
  2. ^ Naueti, Midiki, Meto, Helong, etc.
  3. ^ Kirsten Culhane (2021) Waimaʼa consonants: phonology and typological position in Greater Timor. 15th International Conference on Austronesian Linguistics.