Makassaric languages

The Makassaric languages are a group of languages spoken in the southern part of South Sulawesi province, Indonesia, and make up one of the branches of the South Sulawesi subgroup in the Austronesian language family.[2][3] The most prominent member of this group is Makassarese, with over two million speakers in the city of Makassar and neighboring areas.

Makassaric
Geographic
distribution
Sulawesi
Linguistic classificationAustronesian
Subdivisions
Glottologmaka1310[1]

The status of the Makassaric languages other than Makassarese as distinct languages is not universally accepted. In older classifications,[4] but also in recent studies by local linguists,[5] they are considered to be dialects of the Makassarese language.

Languages

Phonology

A characteristic feature of the Makassaric languages is the occurrence of echo vowels with stems ending in final /r/, /l/ or /s/. E.g. /botol/ "bottle" is realized as bótolo in Selayar and Coastal Konjo, and as bótoloʔ in Makassarese (the latter regularly adds a glottal stop to the echo vowel). This echo vowel is dropped if a suffix is added, but retained if followed by an enclitic.[6]

Makassar Selayar
base /rantas/
rántasaʔ
'dirty'
/lambus/
lámbusu
'straight'
with suffix /rantas/ + /-aŋ/
rantás-aŋ
'dirtier'
/lambus/ + /-aŋ/
lambús-aŋ
'straighter'
with enclitic /rantas/ + /=ak/
rántasak=aʔ
'I am dirty'
/lambus/ + /=a/
lámbusu=a
'I am straight'

References

  1. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Makassaric". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
  2. Grimes, C. E. and B. E. Grimes (1987). Languages of South Sulawesi. Canberra: Department of Linguistics, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University. doi:10.15144/PL-D78. ISBN 0858833522.
  3. Friberg, T. and T.V. Laskowske (1989). "South Sulawesi languages". In: J.N. Sneddon (ed.), Studies in Sulawesi linguistics part 1, pp. 1-17. Jakarta: Badan Penyelenggara Seri Nusa.
  4. Esser, S.J. (1938). "Talen". Atlas van Tropisch Nederland. Blad 9a. Batavia: Topografische Dienst.
  5. Ramlah Mappau (2017). "Konstituen Pengungkap Negasi Dalam Bahasa Makassar Dialek Lakiung dan Turatea" [Constituent of Negation Expression in Makassarese Language Dialect of Laking and Turatea]. Sawerigading (in Indonesian). 23 (1): 127–137.
  6. Basri, Hasan; Broselow, Ellen; Finer, Daniel (2012). "The end of the word in Makassar languages" (PDF). In Borowsky, Toni; Kawahara, Shigeto; Sugahara, Mariko; Shinya, Takahito (eds.). Prosody Matters: Essays in Honor of Elisabeth Selkirk. Advances in Optimality Theory. Sheffield & Bristol, Conn.: Equinox.
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