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Northern Adelbert languages
Family of Languages From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Northern Adelbert or Pihom–Isumrud languages are a family of twenty languages in the Madang stock of New Guinea. The occupy the coastal northern Adelbert Range of mountains directly opposite Karkar Island, as opposed to the Southern Adelbert languages, another branch of Madang.
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Malcolm Ross posited a "linkage" connecting the Northern Adelbert languages with the Mabuso languages, and named this group Croisilles /krɔɪˈsɪlz/,[1] as the two families bracket Cape Croisilles (Northern Adelbert to the north, Mabuso to the south). However, Ross never claimed Croisilles was an actual language family, and other researchers have rejected the connection.
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Languages
There are approximately 20 Northern Adelbert languages.
Below is a comparison of Northern Adelbert language names in Pick (2020)[2] and Z'graggen (1980).[3] A few alternate names from Capell (1952) are also given.[4]
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Classification
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Croisilles was first posited by Malcolm Ross (1995), not as an actual language family, but as a linkage. It was a merger of Wurm's Pihom-Isumrud-Mugil and Mabuso stocks, each of which contained 25–30 languages. Pick (2017, 2020) and Usher reject the merger, and provisionally the inclusion of Mugil (Bargam), though Pick retains the name. Usher disambiguates the (non-Mabuso) family as 'Adelbert Range'.
Usher (2020)
Timothy Usher classifies the languages as follows.[6]
- Adelbert Range – Isumrud Strait
- Kowan (Isumrud Strait): Waskia, Korak (Amako)
- (North) Adelbert Range
- Yamben
- Omosan (Omosa River): Pal (Abasakur), Kobol (Koguman)
- Gilagil River (old Isumrud proper)
- Northwest Adelbert Range (Mount Pihom)
- Kaukombar River: Mala (Pay), Miani (Maiani, Tani), Maia (Pila, Saki)
- Kumil–Timper
- Kumil River: Bepour, Mauwake (Ulingan), Moere
- Tiboran River (Timper River): Musar; Wanambre; Kowaki, Mawak, Pamosu (Hinihon)
- Mabulap–Numugen
- Amaimon (Mabulap) isolate
- Numugen River (see)
Pick (2020)
Below is Andrew Pick's (2020) classification of the Northern Adelbert languages.[2]: 14
- Northern Adelbert languages
Pick (2017)
A quite similar internal classification was worked out independently by Pick (2017).[1] Pick could not establish regular sound correspondences with Kobol–Pal (Omosan) or Amaimon (Mabulap), and thus leaves them out of the family.
Pick notes that Barem and Malas share pronominal markers on the verbs 'to teach' and 'to show' that are unique to those two verbs.
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Proto-language
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A phonological reconstruction of Proto-Northern Adelbert has been proposed by Pick (2020).[2]
Phonology
Pick (2020) reconstructs the phonemes of Proto-Northern Adelbert as:[2]
Four vowels are reconstructed by Pick (2020): *a, *e, *i, *u. Although Northern Adelbert languages usually have the five vowels /a e i o u/, Pick (2020) does not consider *o to be reconstructable.
Pronouns
The Proto-Northern Adelbert pronouns are:[2]: 471
Lexicon
Selected lexical reconstructions from Pick (2020) are listed below.
Comparisons
Below is a list of Proto-Northern Adelbert forms that are descended from Proto-Trans–New Guinea.[2]: 470
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References
Further reading
External links
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