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Yil language

Torricelli language of Papua New Guinea From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Yil is a Torricelli language of Papua New Guinea spoken in twelve villages in Sundaun province.

Quick Facts Native to, Region ...

Phonology

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This section follows Martens and Tuominen (1977).[2] Yil has a small inventory of ten consonants:

More information Bilabial, Alveolar ...

And seven vowels:

More information Front, Central ...

In addition there are the diphthongs /ai̯ au̯ ay̯ ei̯/. /i u/ have non-syllabic allophones [j w~β] in onset or coda position. /ɣ/ is devoiced to [x] word-finally, e.g. /uəmaɣ/ [wəmax] 'hawk'.

Phonotactics

Maximum syllable structure is (C) (C) V (C) (C). Syllables with two-consonant codas only occur word-finally. Distribution of phonemes in different syllable types is shown in the table below.

More information Syllable type, Phoneme distribution ...

Stress usually falls on the first syllable, although it is contrastive in some verb forms, e.g. /əˈŋati/ "I bury a man" vs. /ˈəŋati/ "I hurry"

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References

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