====== Mairasi ====== Timothy Usher, Santa Fe Institute ===== Situation ===== Mairasi is spoken by 2,500 people (1991) living in 26 villages along the coast and inland between Triton Bay and Wandamen Bay in the Bird's Neck region of Indonesia's West Papua province (Peckham 1982: 94, 1991: 111, 141.) ===== Sources ===== Galis (1955-1956) 30 comparative terms for Kaniran Anceaux (1956, 1958: 119-120) 10 comparative terms for Mairasi Anceaux (n.d.) comparative vocabularies of Mairasi and Faranjao Greenberg (n.d.) comparative vocabularies of Mairasi and Faranjao after Anceaux (n.d.) Voorhoeve (1975: 101) 40 comparative terms for Mairasi after Anceaux (n.d.) Peckham (1982) Mairasi verbal morphology Peckham (1991) phonology of Mairasi of Lobo village Peckham (1991: 173-180) 209 comparative terms for Mairasi Walker unpublished survey vocabulary of Sisir obtained in digitalized form from Paul Whitehouse via the Summer Institute of Linguistics Walker and Peckham unpublished survey vocabulary of Mairasi obtained in digitalized form from Paul Whitehouse via the Summer Institute of Linguistics ===== Phonology ===== Peckham (1991: 122-124, ibid.) gives 13 consonants and 5 vowels for Mairasi as follows: |< - 60px 60px 60px 60px 60px >| | m | n | | | | | | t | | | ʔ | | b | d | | g | | | ɸ | s | | | | | β | dʒ | | | | | w | ɾ | j | | | |< - 60px 60px 60px >| | i | | u | | | | o | | ɛ | | | | | a | | **[under construction]**\\ \\ Peckham stipulates that /n/ is realized as [ŋ] when followed by /g/. …\\ Vowels may occur in any sequence, including geminate long vowels. … ===== Pronouns ===== Peckham (1982: 75-76, 80-82, 1991 ibid.) gives Mairasi free pronouns and inalienable possessors as follows: |< - 100px 100px 100px >| | |nominative|inalienable| |1 sg.|omo |o- | |2 sg.|nɛmɛ |nɛ- | |3 sg.|nani |na- | |1 pl.|ɛ:mɛ |ɛ:- | |2 pl.|ʔɛmɛ |ʔɛ- | |3 pl.|naʔɛn |nɛ- | As is common throughout Trans New Guinea, the inalienable prefixes are also used to indicate indirect objects, as well as the subjects of some stative and experiential verbs. ===== Verbal morphology ===== **[under construction]**\\ \\ Peckham (1982: 75-80, 82-86) … |< - 100px 100px 100px 100px 100px >| | |intransitive|transitive|detransitive|necessitative| |1 sg.|-on |-omo |-oŋgai |-amu | |2 sg.|-ɛn |-ono |-onai |-nɛni | |3 sg.|-ɛn |-ɛmi |-ɛmai |-ami | |1 pl.|-ɛs |-osi |-osɛi |-asi | |2 pl.|-ɛi |-oi |-oiɛi |-oumu | |3 pl.|-ɛm |-ɛmi |-ɛŋgɛi |-ami | Transitive subjects may be followed by direct objects, which may in turn be followed by indirect objects. Only animate objects are overtly indicated, inanimate objects being accompanied by the detransitive subject (above): |< - 100px 100px 100px >| | |direct object|indirect object| |1 sg.|-oi |-ombi | |2 sg.|-ɛi |-nɛmbi | |3 sg.|-nai |-nambi | |1 pl.|-sɛm |-sɛmbim | |2 pl.|-ɛm |-ɛmbim | |3 pl.|-nɛβ |-nɛmbiβ | Third person singular direct objects are shown below with preceding transitive subjects, with deleted segments shown in parentheses (p. 94): |< - 100px 100px >| |1 sg. |-om(o)-nai | |2 sg. |-on(o)-nai | |3 sg. |-ɛm(i)-njai| |1 pl..|-os(i)-njai| |2 pl. |-o(i)-njai | |3 pl. |-ɛm(i)-njai| Imperatives occur only in the second person as follows: |< - 100px 100px 100px 100px >| | |intransitive|transitive|detransitive| |2 sg.|-nɛn |-nɛn |-oŋgai | |2 pl.|-ɛn |-oum |-oŋgɛi | The forms of the inalienable possessor (above) are used on verbs to indicate indirect objects, as well as the subjects of some stative and experiential verbs.