Meyah language should not be confused with Miyah language.
Meyah | |
Nativename: | Meyakh |
States: | Indonesia |
Region: | North Manokwari District, Manokwari Regency, West Papua |
Pushpin Map: | Indonesia_Western New Guinea#Southeast Asia |
Coordinates: | -0.767°N 133.881°W |
Date: | 2000 |
Ref: | e18 |
Familycolor: | Papuan |
Fam1: | West Papuan |
Fam2: | East Bird's Head |
Fam3: | Mantion–Meyah |
Iso3: | mej |
Glotto: | meya1236 |
Glottorefname: | Meyah |
Meyah (Meyakh) is a West Papuan language spoken in North Manokwari District, Manokwari Regency, West Papua, Indonesia. The Meyah language is agglutinative and head-marking and has no grammatical cases. It has subject-verb-object word order, which comes from nearby Austronesian languages.[1] [2]
Meax has 5 vowels and 13 consonants.
Close | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Mid | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | ||
Open | pronounced as /link/ |
Nasal | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Plosive | voiceless | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | |||
voiced | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ ⟨j⟩ | pronounced as /link/ | |||
Fricative | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | ||||
Trill | pronounced as /link/ | ||||||
Glide | (pronounced as /link/) | (pronounced as /link/) |
Like many other Papuan languages of the Bird's Head Peninsula, Meyah is a pitch-accent language with two phonemic pitch levels: rising high and falling high, which contrast.
Falling | ||
éj 'drink' | èj 'peel' | |
mós 'fish' | mòs 'toad' |
Some two- and three-syllable words also have pitch accent. For example, éfes contrasts with efés, and óboha contrasts with obóha and obohá .
Pronouns demonstrate three numbers: singular, dual, and plural. The first person dual and plural pronouns also demonstrate clusivity.
1st | exc. | didif | magif | memef |
---|---|---|---|---|
inc. | nagif | mimif | ||
2nd | bua | goga | iwa | |
3rd | ofa | rua |
1st | exc. | di- | ma- | me- |
---|---|---|---|---|
inc. | na- | mi- | ||
2nd | bi- | ge- | i- | |
3rd | ø- | ri- |
These prefixes are used for verbs, body parts and kinship terms.
Nouns in Meyah are divided into two types: alienable and inalienable, the latter of which includes terms for body parts and kinship relations, and are obligatorily marked for possessor. With alienable nouns, there is morphological complexity. The plural marker -ir can only be used with humans, pigs, and dogs. There is no other method of indicating plurality for other alienable nouns. For inanimate nouns, a plurality may be indicated by certain modifiers such as:
Kinship terms, as inalienable nouns, share the same possessor prefixes as body parts and verb stems, however, they differ in the singular possessive prefixes. Instead of the '
There are six classes of nouns, which are differentiated on the basis of their classifier when they are modified by a numeral. The first class is a class used exclusively for humans. Classes two and three relate to food, with the former being for food growing underground and the latter being for food growing on trees and vines. When this food is removed from trees or vines, it is classified according to whether it is 'round,' placed in the fourth class, and 'flat,' found in the fifth class. Class six consists of terms for animals and 'house.'