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Yugambeh language

Australian Aboriginal language From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Yugambeh language
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Yugambeh (or Mibanah, from Mibanah gulgun, lit. 'language of men' or 'sound of eagles'),[3][4] also known as Tweed-Albert Bandjalang, is an Australian Aboriginal language spoken by the Yugambeh living in South-East Queensland between and within the Logan River basin and the Tweed River basin, bounded to the east by the Pacific Ocean (including South Stradbroke Island) and in the west by the Teviot Ranges and Teviot Brook basin.[5]

Quick Facts Region, Ethnicity ...
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Yugambeh speaker, Shaun Davies.

Yugambeh is adialect cluster of two mutually intelligible dialects, one of four such clusters of the Bandjalangic branch of the Pama–Nyungan language family.[6]

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Nomenclature

In the Yugambeh language, the word yugambeh means an emphatic 'no', 'never' i.e. 'very much no' and is a common exonym for the people and their language. Language speakers use the word miban which means 'man', 'human', 'wedge-tailed eagle' and is the preferred endonym for the people; they call their language Mibanah meaning 'of man', 'of human', 'of eagle' (the -Nah suffix forming the genitive of the word miban).[7][8][3][4][9][10]

Yugambeh may also be referred to as:

  • Yugambir, Yugambeh (Yugambal/Yugumbal was evidently a separate language located further west[11])
  • Yubumbee
  • Jugumbir, Jukamba[12]
  • Tweed-Albert language
  • Nganduwal[13]
  • Ngarangwal[7]
  • Manaldjali (a variant of Mununjali, the name of a Yugambeh-speaking clan)
  • Minjanbal (probably from Minjungbal, an alternate language term)[14]
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Geographic distribution

Yugambeh is spoken within the Logan, Albert, Coomera, Nerang, and Tweed River basins.[7]

Dialects

Linguists such as Margaret Sharpe, relying on the previous work of others like Terry Crowley, described the Yugambeh language as having potentially upwards of 7 dialects. Recent analysis has found errors in these original studies and when corrected for these errors, two mutually intelligible dialects can be found; a western (freshwater) variety and an eastern (saltwater) variety with minor vocabularic differences.[6]

Some differences noted by linguist Shaun Davies:

More information English, Eastern ...

Phonology

Vowels

Yugambeh has a vowel system of four vowels that also contrast in length, resulting in eight phonemic vowels in total. The letter "h" is used after the vowel to indicate a long vowel.

More information Front, Back ...

Allophones

The low central vowel /a/ is fronted and raised between palatal consonants and a lateral/rhotic consonant.

Consonants

Compared to other Pama-Nyungan languages, Yugambeh has a smaller inventory of consonants. There are four places of articulation, with the consonants consisting of four obstruents, four nasals, two liquids, and two semivowels.

More information Peripheral, Laminal ...

Obstruents

Obstruents do not have a voicing contrast, and can appear as fricative allophones. Obstruents are phonetically voiceless, except when following a homorganic consonant.[15]

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Grammar

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The grammar of the Yugambeh language is highly agglutinative, making use of over 50 suffixes on nouns, verbs, adjectives, and demonstratives.

Noun morphology

Nouns take a number of suffixes to decline for grammatical case.

Suffixes

Noun suffixes are placed into ten orders. A noun may not take more than one suffix from any order, and if more than one suffix is attached they must always be in the set order of the suffix orders, e.g., an order 7 suffix must always come after an order 5 suffix.

More information Orders ...

'X' stands for a homorganic obstruent.

'N' stands for a homorganic nasal.

#The comitative, purposive, desiderative, ablative, and aversive suffixes are preceded by -bah on animate nouns.[16]

  1. 1st order suffixes
    • -gali (typified by) – used to indicate an association or link
      • Examples:
        • Jinanggali 'shoe' lit. 'typified by foot'
        • Dubaygali 'womaniser' lit. 'typified by women'
  2. 2nd order suffixes
    • -gan (feminine) – used to form feminine nouns and some astrological terms
      • Examples:
        • Yarabilngingan 'female singer'
  3. 3rd order suffixes
    • -bur (diminutive) – used to form the diminutive of a noun, referring to a smaller version
      • Examples:
        • Baraganbur 'toy boomerang'
  4. 4th order suffixes
    • -Nah (possessive) – indicates current possession
      • Examples:
        • Ngalingah 'our'
        • Gibamah 'of the moon/moon's'
    • -Nahjil (past possessive) – indicates past possession

Verb morphology

Verbs are conjugated with suffixes. Yugambeh is an aspect-dominant language, as opposed to being tense-dominant like most Western languages. Suffixes mostly indicate aspect and mood.

Suffixes

Verb suffixes are placed in six orders. A verb may not take more than one suffix from a given order, and similar to nouns, suffixes are attached in a set order. Combinations of these suffixes express all possible conjugations of Yugambeh verbs, with only a small number of combinations possible. Yugambeh verb stems are commonly two syllables in length and always end in a vowel.[17]

Orders
1 2 3 4 5 6
-ba

'Causative'

-ndi

'Carry whilst...'

-li 'reflexive/passive' -ja

'Past tense'

-hn 'imperfective aspect' -du 'habitual aspect'
-wa

'Repetitive'

-hny 'potential mood' -i 'preconditional'
-ma

'Causative'

-h 'imperative' -de 'preconditional'
-hla 'continuous aspect'
-nah 'antechronous aspect'
-nyun 'synchronous aspect'
-luru 'historical past'
-yan
-yah 'purposive'
-jin 'synchronous aspect'
-n 'permissive'
-ni 'perfective'

Adjective morphology

Adjectives can be marked with a suffix to indicate the gender of the noun they qualify.[16]

Suffixes

More information Gender, Suffix ...

*N stands for a homorganic nasal.

Demonstratives

Yugambeh possesses a complicated set of demonstratives which make a three-way distinction among proximal, medial, and distal sets. There is a further distinguishing of demonstrative adjectives and location demonstratives. The adjective set can be additionally suffixed to create demonstrative pronouns. The adjective set has three forms for "things in sight", "things hidden or not in sight", and "things not there anymore", while the location set has forms to indicate the general area and definite area, whether in sight or not in sight, and past and present forms.[18]

Adjective set

More information Demonstratives, Proximal (this) ...

The above set can be suffixed with order 7 noun suffixes to form demonstrative pronouns that function like ordinary independent nouns. e.g. Yanindeh galini wungahbaia! 'Take this with you!'

The 'not in sight' and 'not here anymore' forms can take the order 2 noun suffix -gan to form time words. e.g. gunahgan 'recently'.

Location set

More information Demonstratives, Proximal (here) ...

Syntax

Syntax in the Yugambeh language is fairly free, with a tendency towards SOV (subject–object–verb). Within noun phrases, adjectives and demonstratives (e.g., that man, a red car) stay adjacent to the noun they qualify.[19]

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App

The Yugambeh Museum in Beenleigh currently maintains a free dictionary app for the Yugambeh language, available on Android,[20] iOS[21] and a desktop version.[22]

Place names

Modern place names with roots in the Yugambeh language include:[23]

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References

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Further reading

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