Difference between revisions of "Kwalia language"

From CWS Planet
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (added more stuff)
Line 2: Line 2:
{{Infobox language
{{Infobox language
|name          = Tayam
|name          = Tayam
|altname      =  
|altname      = Teyam, Taiyam, Enaawata
|nativename    =  
|nativename    = ''táɨyám''
|pronunciation =  
|pronunciation = [táɨ̀jám]
|states =  
|states =  
|region        = Southern [[Awating]]
|region        = southern [[Awating]]
|latd  =  | latm  = | latNS  =  <!-- latitude degrees/minutes/direction -->
|latd  =  | latm  = | latNS  =  <!-- latitude degrees/minutes/direction -->
|longd =  | longm = | longEW =  <!-- longitude degrees/minutes/direction -->
|longd =  | longm = | longEW =  <!-- longitude degrees/minutes/direction -->
|ethnicity    = Tayam
|ethnicity    = Tayam
|speakers      = 590
|speakers      = Unknown: possibly extinct (2009)<br>about 590 speakers claimed
|date          = 2020
|date          = 2020
|familycolor  = isolate
|familycolor  = isolate
|family        = Language isolate
|family        = Language isolate (previously classified as [[Ngerupic languages|Ngerupic]])
|posteriori    =  
|posteriori    =  
|dia1          =  
|dia1          =  
Line 32: Line 32:
}}
}}


<!---------------------------------------------------------------------------------[    HEY YOU      YEAH YOU, PERSON WRITING THIS PAGE, READ THIS    ]------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
'''Tayam''' (autonym: ''táɨyám''), previously known as ''Taiyam'', ''Teyam'', or ''Enaawata'', is a language isolate spoken in southeastern [[Awating]].


This page should be an IN-UNIVERSE description of the language. It is also NOT the primary documentation site of your language. This is not your descriptive grammar, this is a wikipedia style page for (for the most part) non-linguists, which means I don't want pages of paradigm tables or hour long write ups of the intricacies of relativisation on demoted inverted objects in locational clauses.
==Discovery==


Start writing your page here, with a general introduction and basic facts about the language (when and where its spoken, by who and how many, a brief history)


-->
==Classification and number of speakers==
Tayam has been proven to be a language isolate, unrelated to any other languages. There have been numerous controversies about its classification, stemming from prior lack of reliable information about the language.


==Classification==
=== Debate on Tayam as a [[Ngerupic languages|Ngerupic]] language ===
<!-- what language family is the language in? why is it classified in that family? -->


== History ==
From when study of the language began in the early 1960s to about 2014, very little reliable data was available about the language, due to the relative inaccessibility and isolation of the Tayam-speaking area and small number of speakers. While the sparse data did suggest that it may have been an isolate, linguists at the time generally classified Tayam as a Ngerupic language, owing to shared areal features in common with the Ngerupic languages of Awating.


<!-- What is the history of the language?
=== Debate on Tayam as an [[Aga-Buod languages|Aga-Buod]] language ===
Where did it come from, who spoke it originally, how has it spread, what contact has it had with other languages ? -->


==Phonology==
A few linguists, primarily [[Amang Řąziya Ngunrą Zahang]], have posited that Tayam is related to the [[Ngigu language]] of southern coastal Awating, and therefore related to the [[Aga-Buod languages]] of Lahan via a Trans-Umo-Aga-Buod language macrofamily. This has not been accepted by mainstream academia and is regarded as a fringe theory.


<!-- What sounds does your language use?
=== Debate on Tayam as a constructed or artificial language ===
Example headings:


Phonemes
Some scholars have claimed that Tayam was invented by groups of rural bandits as a method of concealing information, citing its areally unusual phonology and grammar.
Allophony
Syllable structure
Stress


If necessary this can be split into its own article
==Phonology==
 
-->


===Phonemes===
===Phonemes===
Line 127: Line 119:
|}
|}
===Phonotactics===
===Phonotactics===
<!-- Explain the consonant clusters and vowel clusters that are permissible for use in the language. For example, "st" is an allowed consonant cluster in English while onset "ng" isn't. -->
 




==Morphology and syntax==
==Morphology and syntax==
<!--
For morphology consider how the words in your language look, how do you derive words from others, do you have cases, are verbs inflected, do nouns differ from adjectives, do adjectives differ from verbs? Etc. -->


<!-- Here are some example subcategories:


Nouns
==Vocabulary==
Verbs
Derivational morphology


For syntax consider things like word order and construction of clauses.
-->
==Vocabulary==


==Writing and literature==
==Further reading==
<!-- How is the language written? What literature is there written in the language? -->


==Further Reading==
{{Language families of Miraria}}
{{Language families of Miraria}}
{{Language families}}
{{Language families}}

Revision as of 02:40, 2 February 2021

Tayam
Teyam, Taiyam, Enaawata
táɨyám
Pronunciation[táɨ̀jám]
Regionsouthern Awating
EthnicityTayam
Native speakersUnknown: possibly extinct (2009)
about 590 speakers claimed  (2020)
Language family
Language isolate (previously classified as Ngerupic)
CWS codeytm

Tayam (autonym: táɨyám), previously known as Taiyam, Teyam, or Enaawata, is a language isolate spoken in southeastern Awating.

Discovery

Classification and number of speakers

Tayam has been proven to be a language isolate, unrelated to any other languages. There have been numerous controversies about its classification, stemming from prior lack of reliable information about the language.

Debate on Tayam as a Ngerupic language

From when study of the language began in the early 1960s to about 2014, very little reliable data was available about the language, due to the relative inaccessibility and isolation of the Tayam-speaking area and small number of speakers. While the sparse data did suggest that it may have been an isolate, linguists at the time generally classified Tayam as a Ngerupic language, owing to shared areal features in common with the Ngerupic languages of Awating.

Debate on Tayam as an Aga-Buod language

A few linguists, primarily Amang Řąziya Ngunrą Zahang, have posited that Tayam is related to the Ngigu language of southern coastal Awating, and therefore related to the Aga-Buod languages of Lahan via a Trans-Umo-Aga-Buod language macrofamily. This has not been accepted by mainstream academia and is regarded as a fringe theory.

Debate on Tayam as a constructed or artificial language

Some scholars have claimed that Tayam was invented by groups of rural bandits as a method of concealing information, citing its areally unusual phonology and grammar.

Phonology

Phonemes

Bilabial Dental Alveolar Velar Uvular Glottal
Nasal
Plosive
Fricative
Approximant
Front Central Back
Close
Mid
Open

Phonotactics

Morphology and syntax

Vocabulary

Further reading