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Kaure–Kosare languages
Language family From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Kaure–Kosare or Nawa River languages are a small family spoken along the Nawa River in West Papua, near the northern border with Papua New Guinea.[1] The languages are Kaure and Kosare.
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Classification
Kaure and Kosare (Kosadle) are clearly related. There is a history of classifying them with the Kapori–Sause languages. However, Kapori and Sause show no particular connection to the Kaure languages, and may be closer to Kwerba.[1]
Foley (2018) considers a connection with Trans-New Guinea to be promising, but tentatively leaves Kaure-Kosare out as an independent language family pending further evidence.[2]
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Proto-language
Phonemes
Usher (2020) reconstructs the consonant inventory as follows:[1]
*m *n *p *t *k *b *g *s *h *w *ɽ [*j]
Coda consonants are stop *C (or more precisely *P) and nasal *N.
*i *u *e *o *ɛ *ɔ *æ *a
Diphthongs are *ɛi, *ɛu, *ai *au.
Pronouns
Usher (2020) reconstructs the pronouns as:[1]
Basic vocabulary
Some lexical reconstructions by Usher (2020) are:[1]
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Vocabulary comparison
The following basic vocabulary words are from Voorhoeve (1971, 1975)[3][4] and other sources, as cited in the Trans-New Guinea database.[5]
The words cited constitute translation equivalents, whether they are cognate (e.g. poka, paka for “moon”) or not (e.g. goklu, huaglüt, kɔro for “ear”).
See also
References
External links
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