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Ata language
Papuan language spoken on New Britain island From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Ata language, also known as Pele-Ata after its two dialects, or Wasi, is a Papuan language spoken on New Britain island, Papua New Guinea. It appears to be related to neighboring Anêm, and possibly also to Yélî Dnye in a proposed Yele-West New Britain family. There are about 2000 speakers.
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Ata is spoken in West Pomio-Mamusi Rural LLG, East New Britain Province, and in Talasea District, West New Britain Province.[2]
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Dialects
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Perspective
According to Yanagida (2004), there are two dialects of Ata, a Lower dialect spoken in the lowlands and an Upper dialect spoken in the mountains.[3] The Lower dialect is spoken in Bialla Rural LLG, West New Britain Province, while the Upper dialect is spoken mostly in West Pomio-Mamusi Rural LLG, East New Britain Province:[4]
Lower dialect (in Bialla Rural LLG, West New Britain Province):
- Kiava (Old Kiava) (5.43047°S 151.047°E)
- Korovasi
- Malasi (5.46557°S 150.978°E)
- Milikina (Elobe) (5.56842°S 150.892°E)
- Mulusi
- Ole
- Sale (Gogosi) (5.52855°S 150.963°E)
- Sege (5.52977°S 150.923°E)
- Silanga [settlement] (5.55438°S 150.849°E)
Upper dialect (in West Pomio-Mamusi Rural LLG, East New Britain Province, unless noted otherwise):
- Sipa (Bauka), West New Britain (5.59544°S 150.887°E)
- Uasilau [settlement], West New Britain (5.58284°S 150.884°E)
- Kaikou (5.652238°S 150.992254°E)
- Lavugi (5.641182°S 150.967552°E)
- Luge, West New Britain (5.56239°S 150.851°E)
- Ti (5.644822°S 151.000275°E)
- Yauyau (5.627284°S 150.959744°E)
- Kukulu (5.644822°S 151.000275°E)
Both the lower and upper dialects are spoken in the settlement of Silanga.
There are some lexical differences between the dialects. Some examples are listed below.[3]: 71
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Phonology
Phonology of the Ata language:[5]
/s/ is pronounced as alveolo-palatal [ɕ] before /i/, /x/ is voiced as [ɣ] when occurring intervocalically.
A word-initial /i/ is realized as a [j], and a word-initial /u/ becomes a [w] when preceding /o/ or /ɑ/.
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Noun classes
Ata makes use of noun classes, some of which are:[6]: 792
- Class 1 nouns: stationary and function in a state of relative stagnancy
- Class 2 nouns: portable and function in a state of relative motion
- Class 3 nouns: relating to the body’s internal needs
Below are some Ata noun class paradigms, using the noun roots lavo’o ‘stone’ and lexe ‘song’ as examples:[6]: 792
Vocabulary
Selected basic vocabulary items in Ata:[7]
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See also
References
Further reading
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