====== Central Asmat ====== Timothy Usher, Santa Fe Institute ===== Situation ===== Central Asmat is spoken across a large a portion of New Guinea's southwest coastal and interior lowlands, from the Jac River in the northwest to the Casuarina Coast to the south (q.v. Voorhoeve 1980: viii.) Central Asmat, especially the Kawenak dialect, is the best-documented Asmat language, with Drabbe's (1959)  dictionary and grammar of Kawenak, (1963) survey of three dialects, Voorrhoeve's (1965) Kawenak grammar and dictionary and (1980) extensive survey involving 32 Central Asmat villages. ===== Dialects ===== Building upon Drabbe (1963: CITE,) Voorhoeve (1980: 6-14, 24-28) classifies Central Asmat dialects and subdialects as follows:\\ \\ Central Asmat Keenok Sokoni Keenakap Kawenak Simai Kainak Mismam Mecemup\\ \\ Divergence between dialects is illustrated by lexicostatistical percentages as follows (1980: 8-9, 12): |< - 60px 60px 60px 60px 60px 60px >| | | Keenok | Sokoni | Keenak | Simai | Mismam | |Keenok | --- | 86 | 85 | 87 | 86 | |Sokoni | 86 | --- | 87 | 84 | 85 | |Keenak.| 85 | 87 | --- | 89 | 90 | |Simai | 87 | 84 | 89 | --- | 98 | |Mismam | 86 | 85 | 90 | 98 | --- | ===== Sources ===== Feuilletau de Bruijn (1915) Kaja Kaja variety of Asmat (unobtained) Drabbe (1950) unpublished comparative vocabulary of Simai Kawenak (unobtained) Drabbe (1953: 96-104) 378 comparative terms for Simai Kawenak Drabbe (1954: 232-255) 100 comparative terms fo Simai Kawenak Drabbe (1959) grammar of Simai Kawenak (unobtained) Drabbe (1959) dictionary of Simai Kawenak (unobtained) Drabbe (1963) study of Asmat dialects and (pp. 212-233) 377 comparative terms for Kawenak, Keenok and Keenakap varieties Voorhoeve (1965) dictionary and grammar of Flamingo Bay variety of Kawenak Voorhoeve (1980) survey of Asmat dialects and (pp. 61-121) 455 reconstructed terms for Proto-Asmat with exemplars from 33 Central Asmat villages ===== Phonology ===== **[under construction]** ===== Pronouns ===== **[under construction]** ===== Verbal morphology ===== **[under construction]**\\ \\ Drabbe (1963: 36-66) provides an extensive description of verbal desinence morphology for Keenok, Keenakap and Kawenak.