Ramu languages explained

Ramu
Also Known As:Keram and Ramu Rivers
Region:Ramu and Keram watersheds, Western Madang Province and Eastern East Sepik Province, Northern Papua New Guinea
Familycolor:Papuan
Family:Ramu–Lower Sepik or a primary language family
Glotto:ramu1234
Glottoname:reduced
Glottorefname:Ramu
Child1:Middle Ramu
Child2:TamolanAtaitanPorapora
Child3:Lower Ramu
Child4:Keram
Child5:Banaro

The Ramu languages are a family of some thirty languages of Northern Papua New Guinea. They were identified as a family by John Z'graggen in 1971 and linked with the Sepik languages by Donald Laycock two years later. Malcolm Ross (2005) classifies them as one branch of a Ramu – Lower Sepik language family. Z'graggen had included the Yuat languages, but that now seems doubtful.

With no comprehensive grammar yet available for any of the Ramu languages, the Ramu group remains one of the most poorly documented language groups in the Sepik-Ramu basin.

Classification

The small families listed below in boldface are clearly valid units. The first five, sometimes classified together as Lower Ramu, are relatable through lexical data, so their relationship is widely accepted.[1]

Languages of the Ottilien family share plural morphology with Nor–Pondo.

Late 20th century

Laycock (1973) included the Arafundi family, apparently impressionistically, but Arafundi is poorly known. Ross (2005) retains it in Ramu without comment, but Foley (2005) and Usher reject inclusion. Laycock (1973) also includes the Piawi languages as a branch, but Ross (2005), Foley (2005) and Usher all reject their inclusion.

Usher (2024)

Usher breaks up the Grass/Keram family. His classification of Ramu (with both his own and traditional names) as of 2018 is as follows:[2]

Foley (2018)

Foley (2018) provides the following classification, with 5 main branches recognized.[3]

Tamolan languages and Tangu languages are sparsely documented, and are mostly attested by short word lists.[3]

Grass languages are lexically divergent, sharing very few cognates with the other Ramu languages, with Banaro and Ap Ma sharing almost none. Foley (2018: 205) leaves open the possibility of Grass being a third branch of the Lower Sepik-Ramu family, with Lower Sepik and Ramu being sister branches.

Pronouns

The pronouns reconstructed by Ross (2005) for Proto-Ramu are:

I
  • aŋko, *ni
we two
  • a-ŋk-a
we
  • ai, *nai, *a-ni, *na-ni
thou
  • un, *nu
you two
  • o-ŋk-oa, *no-ŋk-oa
you
  • ne, *u-ni, *nu-ni
s/he
  • man
they two
  • mani-ŋk ?
they
  • mə, *nda, *manda

However, Grass languages have the innovations *ɲi ‘’ and *re ‘’.[3]

Cognates

Proto-Ramu forms that are widespread across the family (except for the Grass languages) are:[3]

gloss proto-Ramu
‘bird’
  • ŋgwarak
‘name’
  • v/ɣi
‘ear’
  • kwar
‘tooth’
  • nda(r)
‘leaf’
  • rapar
‘bone’
  • (a)gar
‘eat’
  • am(b)
‘I’
  • (ŋ)go
‘you ’
  • nu
dative case marker’
  • mV

Foley also reconstructs 7 vowels for proto-Ramu:[3]

  • i
  • ɨ
  • u
  • e
  • ə
  • o
  • a

This 7-vowel system is also typical of Ndu languages.[3]

Further reading

References

  1. Web site: Famille des langues ramu-bas-sepik « Sorosoro. www.sorosoro.org. 9 February 2018.
  2. Web site: Ramu and Keram Rivers . Newguineaworld. 19 July 2024.
  3. Book: Foley, William A. . Palmer . Bill . 2018 . The Languages and Linguistics of the New Guinea Area: A Comprehensive Guide . The Languages of the Sepik-Ramu Basin and Environs . The World of Linguistics . 4 . Berlin . De Gruyter Mouton . 197–432 . 978-3-11-028642-7.

External links