| North Marquesan (‘E‘o ‘Kenata) | | Spoken in: | Northern Marquesas Islands, Tahiti | | Total speakers: | ~6,000 | | Ranking: | not in top 100 | Genetic classification: | Austronesian Malayo-Polynesian Central Eastern Malayo-Polynesian Eastern Polynesian Oceanic Central-Eastern Oceanic Remote Oceanic Central Pacific East Fijian-Polynesian Polynesian Nuclear Polynesian Eastern Polynesian Central Eastern Polynesian Marquesic National motto: Mau‘u‘u ha‘e iti Official languages French, Tahitian Political status Dependent territory, administrative division of French Polynesia Capital Tai o Hae Largest City Tai o Hae Area 1,274 km² ( 492 sq. ...
Tahiti is the largest island in French Polynesia, located in the archipelago of Society Islands in the southern Pacific Ocean, at 17° 40 South, 149° 30 West. ...
This page attempts to present a list of languages by total native speakers. ...
Human Language Families Most languages are known to belong to language families (families hereforth). ...
Human Language Families Most languages are known to belong to language families (families hereforth). ...
The Austronesian languages are a family of languages widely dispersed throughout the islands of Southeast Asia and the Pacific, with a few members spoken on continental Asia. ...
The Malayo-Polynesian languages are a subgroup of the Austronesian languages. ...
The Oceanic languages are a subgroup of the Austronesian languages, conatining approximately 450 languages. ...
The Polynesian languages are a group of related languages spoken in the region known as Polynesia. ...
Nuclear Polynesian refers to those languages comprising the Samoic the Eastern Polynesian branches of the Polynesian group of Austronesian languages. ...
Marquesic Languages are a small but historically important subgroup of East Central Polynesian Languages, comprising the Marquesan languages of the Marquesas Islands in French Polynesia, Mangarevan, spoken in the Gambier Islands (also in French Polynesia), Hawaiian in its various forms, and Pukapukan, spoken in Puka-Puka and the Disappointment Islands...
North Marquesan | | Official status | | Official language of: | unofficial local use in the northern Marquesas Islands | | Regulated by: | - | | Language codes | | ISO 639-1 | - | | ISO 639-2 | - | | SIL | MRQ | North Marquesan is the Marquesic, East Central Polynesian language spoken in the northern Marquesas Islands. National motto: Mau‘u‘u ha‘e iti Official languages French, Tahitian Political status Dependent territory, administrative division of French Polynesia Capital Tai o Hae Largest City Tai o Hae Area 1,274 km² ( 492 sq. ...
ISO 639 is one of several international standards that lists short codes for language names. ...
SIL International is a non-profit, faith-based, scientific organization with the main purpose to study, develop and document lesser-known languages for the purpose of expanding linguistic knowledge, promoting world literacy and aiding minority language development. ...
Marquesic Languages are a small but historically important subgroup of East Central Polynesian Languages, comprising the Marquesan languages of the Marquesas Islands in French Polynesia, Mangarevan, spoken in the Gambier Islands (also in French Polynesia), Hawaiian in its various forms, and Pukapukan, spoken in Puka-Puka and the Disappointment Islands...
The Polynesian languages are a group of related languages spoken in the region known as Polynesia. ...
National motto: Mau‘u‘u ha‘e iti Official languages French, Tahitian Political status Dependent territory, administrative division of French Polynesia Capital Tai o Hae Largest City Tai o Hae Area 1,274 km² ( 492 sq. ...
The three most noticible differences between it and South Marquesan are its preference for /k/ in some cases where South Marquesan uses /n/ and / ʔ/ (glottal stop) and its complete replacement of the /f/ of South Marquesan with /h/. This difference can be seen in such pairs as - North Marquesan <==> South Marquesan
- haka <==> fana (bay)
- ha`e <==> fa`e (house)
- koe <==> `oe (you (singular))
North Marquesan exhibits some particularly interesting characteristics. It alone seems to have taken "the other path" in the simplification of Proto-Polynesian nasalized consonants. Where most Polynesian languages simplified *mb to /m/, North Marquesan has /p/, and where most simplified *nd to /n/, North Marquesan has /t/. While some Polynesian languages maintained the velar nasal /ng/, many have lost the distinction between the nasal /ng/ and /n/, merging both into /n/. North Marquesan, however, prefers /k/. Another interesting feature of North Marquesan is that from it, it appears that Proto-Polynesian had a consonant cluster *kt, or perhaps a palatal stop (as is the case with all comparative and reconstructive linguistics, this is the subject of some debate)... Whatever that cluster or stop might have been, it is realized in every modern Polynesian language as /t/...with the exception of North Marquesan, which uses /k/. Another feature is that, while almost every Polynesian language has dropped /k/ in many positions, replacing it with / ʔ/, North Marquesan has retained it. (Tahitian and Samoan have no /k/ whatsoever, and the /k/ in modern Hawaiian is actually a "new" way of pronouncing what, to this day, is /t/ on Niihau.) Broadly conceived, linguistics is the study of human language, and a linguist is someone who engages in this study. ...
Tahitian, a Tahitic language, is the official language of French Polynesia and is spoken throughout Oceania. ...
Ni‘ihau, at 70 sq. ...
The dialects fall roughly into four groups: - Tai Pi, spoken in the eastern third of Nuku Hiva, and according to some linguists, a separate language, Tai Pi Marquesan
- Tei`i, spoken in western Nuku Hiva
- Eastern Ua Pu
- Western Ua Pu
Nuku Hiva is the largest of the Marquesas Islands in French Polynesia. ...
Nuku Hiva is the largest of the Marquesas Islands in French Polynesia. ...
Resources
Marquesan Legends (ISBN: B0006W3MXY) |