Palauan (also spelled Belauan) is one of the two official languages of the Republic of Palau, the other being English. It is a member of the Austronesian family of languages, and is one of only two indigenous languages in Micronesia that is not part of the Oceanic branch of that family, the other being Chamorro.
Classification
Palauan is not a Micronesian or Polynesian language like most of its neighbors; rather, like Chamorro, it constitutes a possibly independent branch of the Malayo-Polynesian languages. Its origins are thus somewhat obscure.
Phonology
The phonemic inventory of Palauan consists of 10 consonants and 6 vowels.[3] Phonetic charts of the vowel and consonant phonemes are provided below, utilizing the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA).
Vowel Phonemes
|
Front |
Central |
Back
|
High
|
i |
|
u
|
Mid
|
ɛ |
ə |
o
|
Low
|
|
a |
|
|
Consonant Phonemes
|
Labial |
Alveolar |
Velar |
Glottal
|
Voiceless stops
|
|
t |
k |
ʔ
|
Voiced stops
|
b |
d |
|
|
Voiceless fricatives
|
|
s |
|
|
Nasals
|
m |
|
ŋ |
|
Liquids
|
|
l, ɾ |
|
|
|
While the phonemic inventory of Palauan is relatively small, comparatively, many phonemes contain at least two allophones that surface as the result of various phonological processes within the language. The full phonetic inventory of consonants is given below in IPA (the phonemic inventory of vowels, above, is complete).
Surface Consonants
|
Labial |
Interdental |
Alveolar |
Post-Alveolar |
Velar |
Glottal
|
Voiceless stops
|
p pʰ |
|
t tʰ |
|
k kʰ |
ʔ
|
Voiced stops
|
b |
|
d |
|
ɡ |
|
Voiceless fricatives
|
|
θ |
s |
|
|
|
Voiced fricatives
|
|
ð |
|
|
|
|
Nasals
|
m |
|
n |
|
ŋ |
|
Liquids
|
|
|
l, ɾ, r |
|
|
|
Approximants
|
w |
|
|
j |
|
|
|
Diphthongs
Palauan contains several diphthongs (sequences of vowels within a single syllable). A list of diphthongs and corresponding Palauan words containing them are given below, adapted from (Zuraw 2003).
Diphthongs
IPA |
Example |
English Translation
|
/iɛ/ |
babier |
"paper" (German loan)
|
/ɛi/ |
mei |
"come"
|
/iu/ |
chiukl |
"(singing) voice"
|
/ui/ |
tuich |
"torch"
|
/io/ |
kikiongel |
"dirty"
|
/oi/ |
tekoi |
"word"
|
/ia/ |
diall |
"ship"
|
/ai/ |
chais |
"news"
|
/ɛu/ |
teu |
"width"
|
/uɛ/ |
sueleb |
"afternoon"
|
/ɛo/ |
Oreor |
"Koror" (former capital of Palau)
|
/oɛ/ |
beroel |
"spear"
|
/ɛa/ |
beached |
"tin"
|
/aɛ/ |
baeb |
"pipe" (English loan)
|
/uo/ |
uos |
"horse"
|
/ou/ |
merous |
"distribute"
|
/ua/ |
tuangel |
"door"
|
/au/ |
mesaul |
"tired"
|
/oa/ |
omoachel |
"river"
|
/ao/ |
taod |
"fork"
|
|
The extent to which it is accurate to characterize each of these vowel sequences as diphthongs has been a matter of debate, as in (Wilson 1972), (Flora 1974), (Josephs 1975), (Zuraw 2003). Nevertheless, a number of the sequences above, such as /ui/, clearly behave as diphthongs given their interaction with other aspects of Palauan phonology like stress shift and vowel reduction. Others do not behave as clearly like monosyllabic diphthongs.
Writing system
In the early 1970s, the Palau Orthography Committee worked with linguists from the University of Hawaii to devise an alphabet based on the Latin script.[4] The resulting orthography was largely based on the "one phoneme/one symbol" notion, producing an alphabet of twelve native consonants, six consonants for use in loan words, and ten vowels. The 20 vowel sequences listed above under the heading Diphthongs are also all officially recognized in the orthography.
On May 10, 2007, the Josephs 1999). The bill also establishes an Orthography Commission to maintain the language as it develops as well as to oversee and regulate any additions or modifications to the current official orthography.
Native consonants
Palauan letter |
IPA |
Example word
|
b |
[b], [p], [pʰ] |
bai "community house"
|
ch |
[ʔ] |
charm "animal"
|
d |
[d], [t], [ð], [θ] |
diall "ship"
|
k |
[k], [ɡ], [kʰ] |
ker "question"
|
l |
[l] |
lius "coconut"
|
ll |
[lː] |
llel "leaf"
|
m |
[m] |
martiliong "hammer (Span. Martillo)"
|
ng |
[ŋ], [n] |
ngau "fire"
|
r |
[ɾ] |
rekas "mosquito"
|
rr |
[r] |
rrom "liquor"
|
s |
[s] |
sechelei "friend"
|
t |
[t], [tʰ] |
tuu "banana"
|
|
Foreign consonants
Palauan letter |
IPA |
Example word
|
f |
[f] |
fenda "fender (Eng.)"
|
h |
[h] |
haibio "tuberculosis (Jpn. haibyoo 肺病)"
|
n |
[n] |
sensei "teacher (Jpn. sensei 先生)"
|
p |
[p] |
Papa "the Pope (Span. Papa)"
|
ts |
[ts] |
tsuingam "chewing gum (Eng.)"
|
z |
[z] |
miuzium "museum (Eng.)"
|
|
Vowels
Palauan letter |
IPA |
Example word
|
a |
[a] |
chad "person"
|
e |
[ɛ], [ə] |
sers "garden"
|
ę |
[ə] |
ngalęk "child"
|
ee |
[ɛː] |
kmeed "near"
|
i |
[i] |
sils "sun"
|
ii |
[iː], [ji], [ij] |
iis "nose"
|
o |
[o] |
ngor "mouth"
|
oo |
[oː] |
sekool "playful"
|
u |
[u] |
bung "flower"
|
uu |
[uː], [wu], [uw] |
ngduul "mangrove clam"
|
|
Syntax
Word order
The word order of Palauan is usually thought to be verb–object–subject (VOS), but this has been a matter of some debate in the linguistic literature.[5] Those who accept the VOS analysis of Palauan word order generally treat Palauan as a pro-drop language with preverbal subject agreement morphemes, final pronominal subjects are deleted (or null).
Example 1: Ak milenga er a ringngo pro. (means: "I ate the apple.")
In the preceding example, the null pronoun pro is the subject "I," while the clause-initial ak is the first person singular subject agreement morpheme.
On the other hand, those who have analyzed Palauan as SVO necessarily reject the pro-drop analysis, instead analyzing the subject agreement morphemes as subject pronouns. In the preceding example, SVO-advocates assume that there is no pro and that the morpheme ak is simply an overt subject pronoun meaning "I." One potential problem with this analysis is that it fails to explain why overt (3rd person) subjects occur clause-finally in the presence of a co-referring 3rd person "subject pronoun" --- treating the subject pronouns as agreement morphemes circumvents this weakness. Consider the following example.
Example 2: Ng milenga er a ringngo a Olilai. (means: "Olilai ate the apple.")
Proponents of the SVO analysis must assume a shifting of the subject a Alan "Alan" from clause-initial to clause-final position, a movement operation that has not received acceptance cross-linguistically, but see (Josephs 1975) for discussion.
Palauan phrases
Some common and useful words and phrases in Palauan are listed below, with their English translations.[6]
Palauan
|
English
|
|
Palauan
|
English
|
Alii! |
Hello!
|
|
Ak mlechell ęr a ___. |
I was born in ___.
|
Ungil tutau. |
Good morning.
|
|
Ng tela rekim? |
How old are you?
|
Ungil sueleb. |
Good afternoon.
|
|
Ng ___ a rekik. |
I am ___ years old.
|
Ungil kebesengei. |
Good evening.
|
|
Ng tela a dengua ęr kau? |
What's your phone number?
|
A ngklek a ___. |
My name is ___.
|
|
A dengua ęr ngak a ___. |
My phone number is ___.
|
Ng techa ngklem? |
What's your name?
|
|
Kę kiei ęr kęr? |
Where do you live?
|
Kę ua ngerang? |
How are you?
|
|
Ak kiei er a ___. |
I live ___.
|
Ak mesisiich. |
I'm fine.
|
|
Chochoi. |
Yes
|
Ak chad ęr a ___. |
I'm from ___.
|
|
Ng diak. |
No
|
Belau |
Palau
|
|
Adang. |
Please.
|
Merikel |
U.S.A.
|
|
Sulang. |
Thank you.
|
Ingklis |
England
|
|
Kę mo ęr kęr? |
Where are you going?
|
Siabal |
Japan
|
|
Mechikung. |
Goodbye.
|
Sina |
China
|
|
Meral ma sulang! |
Thank you very much!
|
Kę chad ęr kęr ęl beluu? |
Where are you from?
|
|
Ungilbung |
pretty flower.
|
Kę mlechell ęr kęr ęl beluu? |
Where were you born?
|
|
Palauan numerals
1 through 10
- Tang
- erung
- edei
- euang
- eim
- elolm
- euid
- eai
- etiu
- tacher
Palauans have different numbers for different reasons. For example, to count people it is: Chimong, Teblong, kldei, kleuang, kleim.
Palauan Dictionary
References
External links
-
-
-
-
-
- Online Palauan-English Dictionary Database
This article was sourced from Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. World Heritage Encyclopedia content is assembled from numerous content providers, Open Access Publishing, and in compliance with The Fair Access to Science and Technology Research Act (FASTR), Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., Public Library of Science, The Encyclopedia of Life, Open Book Publishers (OBP), PubMed, U.S. National Library of Medicine, National Center for Biotechnology Information, U.S. National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health (NIH), U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, and USA.gov, which sources content from all federal, state, local, tribal, and territorial government publication portals (.gov, .mil, .edu). Funding for USA.gov and content contributors is made possible from the U.S. Congress, E-Government Act of 2002.
Crowd sourced content that is contributed to World Heritage Encyclopedia is peer reviewed and edited by our editorial staff to ensure quality scholarly research articles.
By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. World Heritage Encyclopedia™ is a registered trademark of the World Public Library Association, a non-profit organization.