Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Waris language

Papuan language spoken in Southeast Asia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

Waris or Walsa is a Papuan language of northern New Guinea. There are about 2,500 native speakers. It uses the Latin writing system. The language features monophthong, diphthong, and triphthong vowels.

Quick Facts Region, Native speakers ...
Remove ads
Remove ads

Demography

Waris is spoken by about 2,500 people around Wasengla (3.294675°S 141.073027°E / -3.294675; 141.073027 (Wasengla Catholic Mission)), Doponendi ward, Walsa Rural LLG, Sandaun Province, Papua New Guinea, and also by about 1,500 across the border in Waris District, Keerom Regency in the Indonesian province of Papua.[1][2]

Phonology

Vowels

Monophthongs

More information Front, Central ...

Diphthongs and triphthongs

More information Vi, Vɛ ...

There are two triphthongs, /ɔɑi/ and /uɛu/.

Consonants

Remove ads

Classifiers

Summarize
Perspective

Classifier prefixes in Waris attach to verbs, and are determined via the physical properties of the object noun phrase being referred to. Many of them have parallels with independent verb roots, which may well be where they had originated from. Examples include:[3]

ex:

wonda

netbag

ka-m

1-DAT

mwan-vra-ho-o

CLF-get-BEN-IMP

wonda ka-m mwan-vra-ho-o

netbag 1-DAT CLF-get-BEN-IMP

‘Give me a netbag.’

ex:

nenas

pineapple

ka-m

1-DAT

li-ra-ho-o

CLF-get-BEN-IMP

nenas ka-m li-ra-ho-o

pineapple 1-DAT CLF-get-BEN-IMP

‘Give me a pineapple.’

ex:

nelus

greens

ka-m

1-DAT

ninge-ra-ho-o

CLF-get-BEN-IMP

nelus ka-m ninge-ra-ho-o

greens 1-DAT CLF-get-BEN-IMP

‘Give me some greens’

Many of these prefixes have lexical parallels with verb roots. The list of classifier prefixes is:[3]

More information classifier prefix, semantic category ...

References

Loading content...
Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads