Salt-Yui language
| Salt | |
|---|---|
| Yui | |
| Native to | Papua New Guinea | 
| Region | Chimbu Province | 
| Native speakers | (6,500 cited 1981)[1] | 
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | sll | 
| Glottolog | salt1242 | 
Salt, or Yui, is a Trans–New Guinea language of Chimbu Province, Papua New Guinea.[2]
Basics
The following are some basic examples of phrases and nouns in Salt-Yui:[3][4]
| Salt-Yui | English translation or meaning | 
|---|---|
| yahuno | Basic greeting | 
| ere po | Basic farewell | 
| na hana ___ | my name is ___ | 
| na pimgi | i understand | 
| ni han dalo | tell me your name | 
| akio | don't touch this | 
| Salt-Yui | English translation or meaning | 
|---|---|
| gànbá | ground | 
| kuŕìá | magic | 
| há | language | 
| hóng | prayer | 
| daang | slope | 
| owó | yes | 
Pronunciation
Vowels
The following is how you pronounce certain vowels in Salt-Yui:[3]
- /a/ is pronounced as in father
- /e/ is pronounced as in peg
- /i/ is pronounced as in tin
- /o/ is pronounced as in more
- /u/ is pronounced as in put
Consonants
Most consonants are similar to English, except for the following:[3]
- r between vowels is flapped i.e. like 'd'. And if placed at the end of a word it is not voiced but trilled.
- l between vowels is flapped i.e. like 'd'. but if not, it has the same friction as the English 'l'.
- ng is normally pronounced as in 'sing', but if it is in the 2nd person it should be pronounced as a sequence of 'n+g'
Pronouns
Most nouns may show ownership this way:[3]
| 1st Person | 2nd Person | 3rd Person | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Singular | -na | -ni | -ng | 
| Plural | -na | -ni | -ng | 
Example:
| Noun | 1st Person | 2nd Person | 3rd Person | 
|---|---|---|---|
| wa (son) | wana (my son) | wani (your son) | wang (his/her son) | 
| Noun | 1st Person | 2nd Person | 3rd Person | 
|---|---|---|---|
| wa (son) | wana (our son) | wani (your son) | wang (their son) | 
Personal pronouns are shown like this:[3]
| 1st Person | 2nd Person | 3rd Person | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Singular | na (I) | ni (You) | yali (He/She/It) | 
| Plural | na (We) | ni (?) (You) | yali (?) (Them) | 
Verbs
The following is how to conjugate verbs with personal pronouns shown with an example:[3][5]
| 1st Person (Alone) | 1st Person | 2nd Person | 3rd Person | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Singular | digi (I alone say) | dimgi (I say) | dingi (you say) | dungwi (he/her/it says) | 
| Plural | X | dimgi (we say) | dingi (you all say) | dungwi (they say) | 
| 1st Person (Alone) | 1st Person | 2nd Person | 3rd Person | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Singular | diralgi (I alone shall say) | dinamgi (I shall say) | dinangi (you will say) | dinangwi (he/she/it will say) | 
| Plural | X | dinamgi (we shall say) | dinangi (you all will say) | dinangwi (they will say) | 
| 1st Person (Alone) | 1st Person | 2nd Person | 3rd Person | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Singular | dikigi (I alone didn't say) | dikimgi (I didn't say) | dikingi (you didn't say) | dikungw(i/o) (he/her/it didn't say) | 
| Plural | X | dikimgi (we didn't say) | dikingi (you all didn't say) | dikungw(i/o) (they didn't say) | 
| 1st Person (Alone) | 1st Person | 2nd Person | 3rd Person | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Singular | dilo (Did i alone say?) | dimno (Did i say?) | dino (Did you say?) | dimo (Did he/she/it say?) | 
| Plural | X | dimno (Did we say?) | dino (Did you all say?) | dimo (Did they say?) | 
As seen above, Salt-Yui has a special form for verbs with 'I alone'; why this is is still unknown.
Other example verbs:[3]
| Salt-Yui | English | 
|---|---|
| di/du | to be (inanimate) | 
| mol | to be (animate) | 
| ol | to do | 
| ke pai | to live | 
| ne/no | to eat/to drink | 
| te/to | to give | 
All of these verbs can follow the previous conjugations for verbs.
Adjectives
In Salt-Yui, adjectives usually follow the noun, here are some examples of adjectives in Salt-Yui:[3][4]
| Salt-Yui | English | 
|---|---|
| migiga | small | 
| obilga | small amount | 
| miki | many | 
| nol | red/pink | 
| mori | blue/green | 
| pege | white | 
Numerals
There are five cardinal numerals that have been written down, which are the following:[3][4]
| Salt-Yui | English | 
|---|---|
| taniga | one | 
| sutani | two | 
| suitai dire | three | 
| sui sui dire | four | 
| ana holulu | five | 
Locatives
The following are examples of known locatives in Salt-Yui:[3]
| Salt-Yui | English | 
|---|---|
| yolbi | down | 
| manala | under | 
| mibi | above | 
| ala | in | 
| mala | near | 
| bina | beside, edge | 
References
- ^ Salt at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
- ^ Yui | Ethnologue Free at Ethnologue
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Salt-yui language (sil.org) at SIL International (1962 to 1980) (Irwin, Barry S. and Irwin, Ruth)
- ^ a b c Salt-Yui Swadesh List : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive made by The Rosetta Project and The Long Now Foundation (16 Sep. 2010) (If source doesn't show up click on 'Text' at 'Download Options')
- ^ Irwin, Barry (1974). "Salt-Yui Grammar".
Further reading
- Glottolog 5.0 - Barry Irwin 1974 Salt-Yui Grammar by Barry Irwin. 1974, published by the Department of Linguistics, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University
- Salt-Yui New TestamentSalt-Yui New Testament. 1978, published by the Wycliffe Bible Translators
External links