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Uab Meto language

Austronesian language spoken in West Timor From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Uab Meto language
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Uab Meto or Dawan is an Austronesian language spoken by Atoni people of West Timor. The language has a variant spoken in the East Timorese exclave of Oecussi-Ambeno, called Baikenu. Baikenu uses words derived from Portuguese, for example, obrigadu for 'thank you', instead of the Indonesian terima kasih.[3]

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Percentage of people using Baikeno as mother tongue in Timor-Leste, according census 2010
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Phonology

Dawan has the following consonants and vowels:[4]

More information Labial, Alveolar ...

Voiceless plosives [p t k] can have unreleased allophones [p̚ k̚] in word-final position. A phonemic /r/ can be heard in place of /l/ among dialects.[5]

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Vocabulary

A wordlist of 200 basic vocabulary items is available at the Austronesian Basic Vocabulary Database,[6] with data provided by Robert Blust and from Edwards (2016).[7]

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Numbers

More information English ...

See also

References

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Further reading

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