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Proto-Oceanic language
Reconstructed ancestor of the Oceanic languages From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Proto-Oceanic (abbreviated as POc) is a proto-language that historical linguists since Otto Dempwolff have reconstructed as the hypothetical common ancestor of the Oceanic subgroup of the Austronesian language family. Proto-Oceanic is a descendant of the Proto-Austronesian language (PAN), the common ancestor of the Austronesian languages.
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Proto-Oceanic was probably spoken around the late 2nd millennium BCE in the Bismarck Archipelago, east of Papua New Guinea.[1] Archaeologists and linguists currently agree that its community more or less coincides with the Lapita culture.
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Linguistic characteristics
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The methodology of comparative linguistics, together with the relative homogeneity of Oceanic languages, make it possible to reconstruct with reasonable certainty the principal linguistic properties of their common ancestor, Proto-Oceanic. Like all scientific hypotheses, these reconstructions must be understood as obviously reflecting the state of science at a particular moment in time; the detail of these reconstructions is still the object of much discussion among Oceanicist scholars.
Phonology
The phonology of POc can be reconstructed with reasonable certainty.[2] Proto-Oceanic had five vowels: *i, *e, *a, *o, *u, with no length contrast.
Twenty-three consonants are reconstructed. When the conventional transcription of a protophoneme differs from its value in the IPA, the latter is indicated:
Based on evidence from the Southern Oceanic and Micronesian languages, Lynch (2003) proposes that the bilabial series may have been phonetically realized as palatalized: /pʲ/ /ᵐbʲ/ /mʲ/.[4]
Basic word order
Many Oceanic languages of New Guinea, Vanuatu, the Solomon Islands, and Micronesia are SVO, or verb-medial, languages. SOV, or verb-final, word order is considered to be typologically unusual for Austronesian languages, and is only found in some Oceanic languages of New Guinea and to a more limited extent, the Solomon Islands. This is because SOV word order is very common in some non-Austronesian Papuan languages in contact with Oceanic languages. In turn, most Polynesian languages, and several languages of New Caledonia, have the VSO word order. Whether Proto-Oceanic had SVO or VSO is still debatable.
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Lexicon
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![]() | This article should specify the language of its non-English content, using {{langx}}, {{transliteration}} for transliterated languages, and {{IPA}} for phonetic transcriptions, with an appropriate ISO 639 code. Wikipedia's multilingual support templates may also be used. (June 2021) |
From the mid-1990s to 2023, reconstructing the lexicon of Proto-Oceanic was the object of the Oceanic Lexicon Project, run by scholars Andrew Pawley, Malcolm Ross and Meredith Osmond.[5] This encyclopedic project produced 6 volumes altogether, all available in open access.
In addition, Robert Blust also includes Proto-Oceanic in his Austronesian Comparative Dictionary (abbr. ACD).[6]
Animal names
Selected reconstructed Proto-Oceanic terms of various animals from Blust's ACD:
- Fishes
- Birds
- Other animals
Plant names
Pawley and Ross (2006)
Reconstructed Proto-Oceanic terms for horticulture and food plants (other than coconuts):[7]
- Tubers and their culture
- Other food plants
- Gardening practices
Ross (2008)
Reconstructed plant terms from Malcolm Ross (2008):[8]
- Proto-Oceanic plant terms inherited from Proto-Austronesian or Proto-Malayo-Polynesian (65 reconstructions)
- Proto-Oceanic plant terms inherited from Proto-Central-Eastern Malayo-Polynesian (11 reconstructions)
- Proto-Oceanic plant terms inherited from Proto-Eastern Malayo-Polynesian (4 reconstructions)
- Reconstructed terms with no external cognates
- Proto-Oceanic plant terms with no known non-Oceanic cognates (97 reconstructions)
- Proto-Western Oceanic plant terms with no known external cognates (22 reconstructions)
- Proto-Eastern Oceanic plant terms with no known external cognates (15 reconstructions)
- Proto-Remote Oceanic plant terms with no known external cognates (6 reconstructions)
Blust and Trussel (2020)
Selected reconstructed Proto-Oceanic terms of various plants from the Austronesian Comparative Dictionary:[6]
Pottery
There are several known reconstructed words evident of material pottery culture among the Lapita:[10]
- *kuroŋ – earthernware pot
- *kalala(ŋ) – water jar
- *palaŋa – frying pan (cf. Malay belanga)
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Example sentences
From Lynch, Ross, and Crowley (2002):
*I=kaRat-i=a
3SG=bite-TR=3SG
a
ART
tau
person
na
ART
ᵐboRok.
pig
'The pig bit a/the person.'
*A
ART
na=ᵑgu
CL=3SG
a
ART
Rumaq.
house
'The house is mine.'
From Ross (2004):
*Au=papa-i=a
1SG=carry-TR=3SG
natu-mu
child-2SG
i=ua
3SG=go
i
PREP
laur.
coast
'I brought your child (to you) to the beach.'
*Ra=sipo
3PL=go.down
ra=paqus-i=a
3PL=bind-TR=3SG
na
ART
waᵑga.
canoe
'They went down to bind up the canoe.'
See also
Notes
References
External links
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