Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Tutong language
Austronesian language spoken in Brunei From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
The Tutong language, also known as Basa Tutong, is a language spoken by approximately 17,000 people in Brunei. It is the main language of the Tutong people, the majority ethnic group in the Tutong District of Brunei.
Remove ads
Classification
Tutong is an Austronesian language and belongs to the Rejang–Baram group of languages spoken in Brunei as well as Kalimantan, Indonesia, and Sarawak, Malaysia.[2] Tutong is related to the Belait language with roughly 54% of basic vocabulary being cognate.[3]
Language use
Today, many speakers of Tutong are shifting away from the traditional language and code-mix or code-shift with Brunei Malay, Standard Malay and English.[4] The language has been given a vitality rating of 2.5 based on a scale of 0–6 that uses the measures of the rate of transmission to future generations, the level of official support, and the geographical concentration of speakers.[2][5] This means it is considered endangered.
Nonetheless, there is interest in revitalising the language. Since 2012, a module has been taught in Tutong at Universiti Brunei Darussalam.[6] Similarly, the Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka (Brunei's language agency) published a Tutong–Malay, Malay–Tutong dictionary in 1991 and a word list of several Brunei languages in 2011.[2][6]
Remove ads
Phonology
Vowels
- Vowels /i, ɛ, a, u/ are heard as [e, ə, ʌ, o] in lax positions.
- /ɛ, a/ can also be freely heard as [ə, ʌ] in syllable-initial positions.
Consonants
- Sounds /p, k, m/ may also be geminated as [pː, kː, mː].
- Other sounds /z, ʃ, x, h/ may occur from loanwords.[7]
References
Resources
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads