Tobian language explained

Tobian
Nativename:Ramarih Hatohobei
States:Palau
Region:Hatohobei, Koror, Sonsorol
Pushpin Map:Southeast Asia
Coordinates:3°N 131.17°W
Speakers:150
Date:2017
Familycolor:Austronesian
Fam2:Malayo-Polynesian
Fam3:Oceanic
Fam4:Micronesian
Fam5:Micronesian Proper
Fam6:Nuclear Micronesian
Fam7:Chuukic–Pohnpeic
Fam8:Chuukic
Nation: Palau
Script:Latin script
Iso3:tox
Glotto:tobi1238
Glottorefname:Tobian
Pidgin Tobi
Speakers:none
Familycolor:Pidgin
Family:Tobi-based pidgin
Iso3:none
Glotto2:hora1238
Glottorefname2:Horace Holden's Pidgin Tobi

Tobian (ramarih Hatohobei, literally "the language of Tobi") is the language of Tobi, one of the Southwest Islands of Palau, and the main island of Hatohobei state. Tobian is a Micronesian language spoken by approximately 150 people, about 22 are native speakers. The speakers are located in either the island of Tobi or in Echang, a hamlet of Koror, the former capital of Palau. Tobian and Sonsorolese are very close, and appear to be gradually merging towards a new dialect called "Echangese".[1] [2] Earlier in the 20th century, about 1000 people lived on the island. Shortly before and during the First World War, those numbers dropped severely due to an abundance of disease.

Classification

Tobian and the dialects of Sonsorol, Merir, and Pulo Ana, the other inhabited Southwest Islands, are closely related to the languages spoken in the Federated States of Micronesia outer islands of Yap and Chuuk Lagoon. These include Ulithi and the Central Carolines. Altogether, these languages form a sub-group within the Micronesian languages. The names of these dialects are the terms that are commonly used in European terms. Below are the native names as compared to the common names:

Common Name Native Name
Sonsorol Doŋo′sa:ru
Pul, Pulo Ana Pu:r
MerirMe′lel
TobiTorovei

Tobi is the basis of a local pidgin.

Examples

Counting

This is only base counting. There are different numerals for a lot of different objects.[3]

Phonology

Vowels

! Front! Central! Back
Highpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/ pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Midpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Lowpronounced as /link/
pronounced as /link/

"œ" is used rarely and sounds similar to the French "eu" but the lips do not round out at the end of the sound and has critical meaning in words. There is a central low vowel that sounds like the "u" in "but", but it does not have semantic value and it has very rare occurrence.

Diphthongs

There are a lot of diphthongs in Tobian and according to Capell, "several of them are difficult for Europeans".

diphthong example
äe mäe breadfruit
äi fäivi woman
aḛ wa′ŋaḛt then
ai maik swordfish
a:i ma:il forehead decoration
ao̯ wao̯ top
au jau needle
a:u sa:u piece
ei lei agent of action
woʉ rather of house
øi røi coconut oil
øʉ Pannøʉ Palau

Homonyms and near homonyms

Like most other languages, Tobian has examples of homonyms but they are not as abundant. Meanings can vary solely on vowel length. Also small differences in sounds can produce major differences in meanings. For example, the difference between voiceless (f) and voiced (v) consonants are important but there are many exceptions where it does not affect the meaning.

ŋøŋa 1. to chew betelnut 2. a stick used in weaving
ʉl 1. a lobster 2. to pull, drag
taitai 1. to excel, precede 2. to shave

Some minimal pairs

mäk tattooingma kind of garnish
′pannʉ coconut leafPannøʉ Palau
i′te my namei′tøʉ? who?
teiføʉ thirstytaivøʉ new
ŋøs tiredpronounced as /ŋo̯s/ glans penis

Stress and prosody

Tobian utilizes both stress and pitch accents or tones. Compared to the other dialects, it uses less musical tone. It is not a tonal language because the tone does not change the meaning of the word. Although it is not tonal, the speech has a wide variety of tone variations that appear to be emotional rather than linguistic and either show emphasis or other semantic components. Stress accents are used but not as much as English or Russian. In the past, the stress marks would normally be placed on the last syllable of the words. In the present, the stress marks can be placed either on the last syllable or the second to last syllable.

  1. Stress on the penultimate (second to last)
  2. Stress on the final syllable
  3. Stress on the antepenultimate (third to last)
  4. Sentence stress
  5. Vowel harmony
  6. Vowel length
  7. Furtive vowels (Slightly heard or silent vowels)

Consonants

Consonants!!Bilabial!Labio-dental!Dental-alveolar !Palatal!Velar
Plosivesp, bt, dck, ɡ
Nasalsmnŋ
Fricativesf, vs (z), ʂ (ʐ)jx, ɣ
Lateral(l)(ɫ)
Rolledr
Continuantsw(w)

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: White & Kirkpatrick, Geoffrey & John. Person, Self, and Experience: Exploring Pacific Ethnopsychologies. The Regents of the University of California. 1985. 0-520-05280-3. Berkeley & Los Angeles, California. 266.
  2. Book: CAPELL, ARTHUR. Grammar & Vocabulary of the Language of Sonsorol - Tobi. Washington Pacific Science Office, National Research Council. 1951. Washington.
  3. Base Counting Words by Isauro Andrew http://tobi.gmu.edu/wordweek/vocabulary/countingbase.html Isauro Andrew