Ledo Kaili language
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Ledo Kaili | |
---|---|
Native to | Indonesia |
Region | Sulawesi |
Native speakers | 350,000 (2000 census)[1] |
Austronesian
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Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | lew |
Glottolog | ledo1238 |
Glottopedia | Kaili [2] |
Ledo Kaili is the largest member of the Kaili languages, which are a dialect chain within the Kaili–Pamona language family. These languages are spoken in Central Sulawesi (Indonesia). Kaili with all of its dialects is one of the largest languages in Sulawesi. One third of the population of Sulawesi Tengah province were (1979) native speakers of a Kaili language. The object language of this article is the main dialect Ledo, which is spoken in the Donggala and Sigi districts (Kabupaten) in and around the provincial capital Palu.
Classification
[edit]Ledo has Kaili–Pamona morphological and grammatical features, while its lexicon is mainly of Wotu–Wolio origin.[3]
Phonology
[edit]Consonants
[edit]labial | alveolar | palatal | velar | glottal | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasals | m | n | ɲ | ŋ | |||
Plosives | plain | voiceless | p | t | tʃ | k | ʔ |
voiced | b | d | dʒ | g | |||
prenasal | voiceless | ᵐp | ⁿt | ||||
voiced | ᵐb | ⁿd | ⁿdʒ | ᵑɡ | |||
Fricatives | v | s | h | ||||
Vibrants | r | ||||||
Laterals | l | ||||||
Semivowels | w | j |
Vowels
[edit]front | central | back | |
---|---|---|---|
close | i | u | |
mid | ɛ ~ e | o | |
open | a |
Intonation
[edit]Kaili has word-level stress on the penultimate syllable, secondary stress alternates from there on.
Phonotactics
[edit]Unaffixed words have up to four (in most cases two) syllables with CV structure:
- each C = simple C or Nasal + C
- each V = simple V from series 1 resp. 2 or V from 1a/b + V from 1.
Writing and orthography
[edit]Kaili has a Latin alphabet without ⟨f⟩, ⟨q⟩ and ⟨x⟩ (which only occur in loan words) and without diacritics. The orthography follows the reformed (1975) rules for Indonesian:
/tʃ/ : ⟨c⟩, /dʒ/ : ⟨j⟩, /ɲ/ : ⟨ny⟩, /ŋ/ : ⟨ng⟩, /j/ : ⟨y⟩
/ʔ/ can be written ⟨’⟩ if necessary (e.g. between identical vowels)
In some grammars and papers long vowels are represented by doubling them (e.g. /aː/ : ⟨aa⟩), this seems not to be a standard, however. Kaili did not have a writing system and a written tradition before the introduction of the Latin script.
Morphology
[edit]Kaili is a typical Malayo-Polynesian language with a morphology that has isolating as well as a few agglutinative features. There are many affixes for derivation and verbal inflection. Nouns and adjectives do not have any inflection. There is no overt marking (and no category) of gender, number, and case. (Natural) gender and number (plurality) can be expressed by lexical means if necessary, semanto-syntactic roles are indicated by syntax and verbal inflection, but not morphologically on nouns/NPs.
Comparation and gradation of adjectives are partly morphologic, partly lexical. See section 4 for verbal morphology. Some vowels or nasals might undergo or set off (progressive and regressive) morphophonological processes (nasalization, labialization, and palatalization) at morpheme boundaries.
Unaffixed words out of context tend to be neutral with respect to word class and grammatical categories.
Verbal categories
[edit]The inflection of Kaili verbs (some authors prefer: predicatives) is dominated by the two categories of mood and voice, which are conjoined by fused affixes. Apart from voice in the stricter sense there are many other valency-related functions, e.g. causative and factitive. Only direct objects and undergoers of passive sentences are marked by cliticized personal markers.
Mood
[edit]Esser (1934) described this category as two distinct tenses comparable to nonfuture/future, even though temporal relations are mostly expressed by lexical rather than morphological means. It should therefore rather be regarded as a distinction between realis for (factual) actions in the present or past from irrealis which is used for future actions/events on the one hand and putative, imaginary, fictional (Van Den Berg: “contrafactual”) actions on the other hand.
The allomorphs {na-}~{ne-}~{no-} stand for realis, the allomorphs {ma-}~{me-}~{mo-} for irrealis; the form of the allomorphs is constituting a kind of inflectional classes and is (synchronically at least) not conditioned by phonology. There are few exceptions where a stem can take two or all three of the allomorphs, yielding verbs with different meanings: e.g. kande 'eat'
- na-ngande / ma-ngande 'eat' (transitive)
- ne-kande / me-kande 'cut or bite into' (intransitive)
- no-kande-si / mo-kande-si 'eat up sth. from so.'
Diatheses
[edit]Kaili has two different verbal diatheses which can be described either as focus (agent focus vs. object focus) or voice (active vs. passive), the latter being more suitable if one follows Himmelmann’s (2002) definitions of focus and voice.
- active realis
Yaku
1SG
na-ngande
REA-eat
loka
banana
riavi.
yesterday
'I ate [the] banana(s) yesterday.'
- active irrealis
Ia
3SG
ma-ngande
IRR-eat
loka
banana
haitu.
DEM
'He will/would [probably] eat the banana(s).'
- passive realis
Ni-kande=ku
PASS.REA-eat=1SG
loka
banana
riavi.
yesterday
(1d)
'[The] Banana(s) was/were eaten by me yesterday.'
- passive irrealis
Ra-kande=na
PASS.IRR-eat=3SG
loka
banana
haitu.
DEM
'[The] Banana[s] will be/may have been eaten by him.'
Other valency-related mechanisms
[edit]Valency can be increased or realigned/shifted by transitivizations, factitives or causatives. Here a few of these mechanisms are demonstrated, which might be interesting from a typological perspective.
Transitivization
[edit]Intransitive verbs can be transitivized by {po-}, making the S of the intransitive verbs not the A but the O of the transitive verbs (hidden causative):
Mano
chicken
na-tuvu.
REA-live
'[The] chicken live.'
I
PM
Esa
Esa
nom-pa-tuvu
REA-TR-live
mano.
chicken
'Esa breeds chicken.'
Causative
[edit]If {po-} is added once more, the transitivized verb can be augmented by a causative. Historically, {popo-} is thus bimorphemic; there are, however, verbs that synchronically do not have a form with only one {po-} attached to them.
No-berei-mo
REA-spouse-COMPL
i
PM
Dula.
Dula
'Dula is already married'
I
PN
Dula
Dula
no-berei
REA-spouse
nte
with
i
PM
Ani.
Ani
'Dula married {with] Ani.'
Ia
3SG
nom-po-berei
REA-TR-spouse
i
PM
Ani.
Ani
'He married Ani.'
Totua-na
parent-3SG
ni-po-po-berei
PASS.REA-CAUS-TR-spouse
ia.
3SG
'His parents married him off.'
I
PN
Ni
Ni
no-tulisi
REA-write
sura.
letter
'Ni writes [a] letter[s].'
Yaku
1SG
nom-popo-tulisi
REA-CAUS-write
i
PN
Ni
Ni
sura.
letter
'I have Ni write [a] letter[s].'
I
PN
Ni
Ni
ni-popo-tulisi=ku
PASS.REA-CAUS-write=1SG
sura.
letter
'Ni is being caused to write [a] letter[s] by me.'
Sura
letter
ni-popo-tulisi=ku
PASS.REA-write=1SG
i
PN
Ni.
Ni
'This letter I had written by Ni.'
There is another causative construction (EVANS: requestive) using {peki-}/{meki-}/{neki-}, which adds a semantic role (causer), while syntactically reducing valency, since the causee can only be expressed in a PP (and is mostly omitted).
I
PM
Tira
Tira
no-dau
REA-sew
baju.
dress
'Tira sews [a] dress[es].'
Yaku
1SG
meki-dau
REQ.IRR-sew
baju.
dress
'I want to have a dress sewn.'
Yaku
1SG
mom-peki-dau
IRR-REQ-sew
baju
dress
nte
with
Tira.
Tira
'I want to have a dress sewn by Tira.'
Ia
3SG
nom-paka-belo
REA-CAUS-well
dua=ra
sickness=3PL
'He cures their disease(s).'
Ira
3PL
nom-peki-paka-belo
REA-REQ-CAUS-well
dua=ra
sickness=3PL
'They asked him to cure their disease(s).'
Syntax
[edit]Kaili is a strict head-initial type language. Heads precede dependents in compounds, phrases, and sentences. Basic sentence order is SVO or VOS (that is: VO generally) with NGen, NAdj, NRel, PrepN, NegV, etc. There is no obligatory copula, the use of the facultative copula is marked for emphasis. In passives, the agent pronoun can be cliticized to the verb, the subject of the passive can stand on either side of the verb.
sakaya
boat
N
mbaso
big
Adj
'a/the big boat', also: 'the boat is big'
banua
house
N
geira
3PL
Gen
'their house'
Yaku
1SG
S
noriapu
REA:cook
V
uta.
vegetables
O
'I'm cooking vegetables.'
Kaluku
coconut_tree
N
hai
DEM
Dem
nalanga
REA:be_high
'This coconut tree is tall.'
Tuamaku
father:1SG
S
hau
[REA]go
V
ri
in
Prep
talua.
garden
N
'My father goes into the garden.'
Hau
[REA]go
V
ri
in
Prep
talua
garden
N
tuamaku
father:1SG
S
'My father goes into the garden.'
I
PM
mangge
uncle
S
nangali
buy
V
bengga.
buffalo
O
'(The) uncle buys (water) buffalo.'
Ningali
PASS.REA:buy
V
bengga.
buffalo
S
'Buffalo are sold / for sale.'
Bengga
buffalo
S
ningali
PASS.REA:buy
V
'Buffalo for sale / are sold.'
Tona
human
N
hai
DEM
Dem
ledo
NEG
Neg
nangande
REA:eat
V
kandea.
rice
'This person doesn’t eat rice.'
Langgai
man
N
haitu
DEM
Dem
no-boba
REA-beat
i
PM
Tira.
Tira
'That man beat[s] Tira.'
Yaku
1SG
nang-gita
REA-see
langgai
man
N
no-boba
REA-beat
Rel
i
PM
Tira.
Tira
'I see the man who beat[s] Tira.'
Sample text
[edit]Pa-nguli
PASS;NMLZ-say
nu
SRC
tesa
(hi)story
n-totua
SRC-parent
nggaulu,
former_times
na-ria
REA-be
vei
AFF
saito
one
madika
king
ni-pokono=na
PASS.REA-like=3SG
mpu
very
no-asu.
REA-hunt
Ane
When
ma-dota-mo
IRR-will-COMPL
rara-na
heart-POSS.3SG
hau-mo
go-COMPL
ia
3SG
no-asu
REA-hunt
ante
with
tadulako=na.
Leader=POSS;3SG
Bara
sometimes
sa-ntipa
one-week
sa-nggani,
once (one-time)
bara
sometimes
eo~eo.
day~all
Ane
When
nambela
get
tonji
bird
belo
good
norasi,
success/harvest/result
ane
when
nambela
get
tonji
bird
daa
bad
vai,
again
mau
even
valeana
track
ledo
NEG
naria
be
ni-kava.
PASS.REA-find
"According to a story from my parents, there was once a king who really liked to go hunting. Whenever he wanted to [lit.: it was the will of his heart], he went hunting with his leaders – Sometimes once a week, sometimes every day. When he was lucky [lit good bird], he was successful; when he was unlucky [lit. bad bird], not a single track was to be found."
Sociolinguistics
[edit]Dialects and numbers of speakers
[edit]There are 13 doculects in the Kaili languages' dialect continuum: Rao, Tajio (or Ajio), Kori, Doi, Unde (or Ndepu, Undepu), Ledo (or Palu), Da’a, Inde, Ija, Edo, Ado, Ava, Tara. Not all dialects are mutually intelligible. Generally they share between 60% and 90% of their vocabulary. (Other sources state 7 dialects which are then sharing 80-95%). Most dialect names simply are the negation words of the respective dialects (cf. ledo above).
Ledo is the main variety, having the highest prestige. It is spoken in and around the provincial capital Palu; furthermore, Ledo serves as a lingua franca in broader parts of central Sulawesi and in few scattered places around Tomini Bay.
Speakers (total): 334.000 (1978) / 290.000 (1983) / 228.500 (1996)
Media and culture
[edit]National newspapers and broadcasting stations almost exclusively use Indonesian, the national language. Some private local radio stations in Palu have a program in Ledo. Regional publishers incidentally have books in Kaili available, mostly folk tales and traditional style literature but no translations from other languages into Kaili. Local newspapers and non-oral literature are mostly in Ledo, the oral tradition is still strong and common to the generation older than 20. Some modern bands use Kaili for their lyrics. Bands participating in the annual Palu Rock festival are obliged to perform at least one song in Kaili.
Linguistic imbalance
[edit]Cities vs. rural areas
[edit]In the larger cities, the transmigrasi-policy of Soeharto had its effects, and there are many native speakers of regional languages from outside Sulawesi that have been moved there during the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. Communication with their migrants is almost always in Indonesian. Thus, many bi- or trilingual families came into being since then. In these families, usually Indonesian is the main vehicle of communication. In the more remote parts of the region, Kaili is still the main or only language for the generations born before the 1930s.
Generation gap
[edit]Older people (childhood before 1940s) in most cases grew up monolingual in Kaili. Those born and raised after Indonesia gained independence (1945), generally grew up bilingual (Kaili and Indonesian), using Kaili at home and Indonesian at school/work. The youngest generations (language acquisition since the 1970s) mostly had Indonesian as their first language at home as well and learned Kaili – if at all – only sporadically and tend to be semi-speakers or to have only passive knowledge.
Domains
[edit]School, work life and contact with authorities requires the use of Indonesian. Pupils use Indonesian among each other's even if all of them know Kaili. In semi-formal and familiar contexts (e.g. grocery shopping, family visits) Kaili is used if all people present know the language.
Prestige
[edit]In highly formal traditional contexts, a fair command of Kaili (especially a "good Ledo") is regarded important. Usually good knowledge of Indonesian is considered much more advantageous, since it is more relevant for school and career. Yet, Kaili is still an important cultural asset, but one that is worthless outside the region.
Endangerment
[edit]Having a six-figure number of speakers, Kaili does at first glance not appear to be heavily endangered. Yet, the trend of the last 60, especially the last 20 years,[as of?] shows that Kaili will not be able to withstand the pressure of Indonesian in the long run. Kaili itself, on the other hand, has been an important lingua franca in the area for centuries and thus exerted pressure on smaller local idioms itself. Its importance as a lingua franca is diminishing; Indonesian is taking over its place.
Bibliography
[edit]- ALWI, HASAN et al. (eds.): Tata Bahasa Baku Bahasa Indonesia. (3rd ed.). Jakarta: Pusat Pembinaan dan Pengembangan Bahasa (Departemen Pendidikian dan Kebudayaan) / Balai Pustaka: 2000.
- ESSER, S.J.: Handleiding voor de beoefening der Ledo-taal. Inleiding, Teksten met vertaling en aanteekeningen en woordenlijst. Bandung: A.C. Nix, 1934. (= Verhandelingen van het Koninklijk Bataviaasch Genootschap van Kunsten en Wetenschappen; Deel LXXII; eerste stuk).
- EVANS, DONNA: Causation in Kaili. In: STEINHAUER (ed.), p. 173-189.
- FRIBERG, BARBARA (ed.): Sulawesi Language Texts. Dallas: Summer Institute of Linguistics, 1990. (= Language Data; Asia-Pacific Series; 15).
- HIMMELMANN, NIKOLAUS P. (1996): Person marking and grammatical relations in Sulawesi. In: STEINHAUER (ed.), p. 115-136.
- HIMMELMANN, NIKOLAUS P. (2002): Voice in Western Austronesian: An Update. In: WOUK, FAY / ROSS, MALCOLM (eds.): The history and typology of western Austronesian voice systems. Canberra: Department of Linguistics, Research School of Pacific Studies, The Australian National University, 2002. (= Pacific Linguistics; 518). p. 7-15.
- HIMMELMANN, NIKOLAUS P. (forthc.): Language endangerment scenarios in northern Central Sulawesi. In: COLLINS, JAMES T. / STEINHAUER, HEIN (eds.): Endangered Languages and Literatures in South-East Asia. Leiden: KITLV Press. [Prereleased PDF: https://web.archive.org/web/20040730160714/http://www.linguistics.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/~himmelmann/LG_ENDANGERment_centralsulawesi.pdf ].
- KASENG, SYAHRUDDIN et al.: Bahasa-Bahasa di Sulawesi Tenggah. Jakarta: Pusat Pembinaan dan Pengembangan Bahasa / Departemen Pendidikian dan Kebudayaan, 1979. (= Pusat Pembinaan dan Pengembangan Bahasa; Seri Bb 13).
- MCGLYNN, JOHN H. et al. (eds.): Indonesian Heritage: Language and Literature. Reprint. Singapore: Archipelago Press, 1999. (= Indonesian Heritage Series; 10).
- RAHIM, ABDILLAH A. & BASRI, H. HASAN & EFENDY, ALI. 1998. Tata bahasa Kaili. Pusat Pembinaan dan Pengembangan Bahasa, Departemen Pendidikan dan Kebudayaan.
- SARO, AHMAD et al.: Struktur Sastra Lisan Kaili. Jakarta: Departemen Pendidikian dan Kebudayaan, 1991.
- SNEDDON, J[AMES] N[EIL]: Northern Sulawesi. In: Wurm (ed.), Map 43.
- SOFYAN, ANGHUONG ALIAS et al.: Morfologi dan Sintaksis Bahasa Kaili. Jakarta: Pusat Pembinaan dan Pengembangan Bahasa / Departemen Pendidikian dan Kebudayaan, 1979. (= Pusat Pembinaan dan Pengembangan Bahasa; Seri Bb 21).
- STEINHAUER, HEIN (ed.): Papers in Austronesian Linguistics No. 3. Canberra: Department of Linguistics, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, The Australian National University, 1996. (= Pacific Linguistics; A; 84).
- VAN DEN BERG, RENÉ: The demise of focus and the spread of conjugated verbs in Sulawesi. In: STEINHAUER (ed.), p. 89-114.
- WURM, STEPHEN A. (ed.): Language atlas of the Pacific area. Part 2. Japan area, Taiwan (Formosa), Philippines, Mainland and insular South-East Asia. Canberra: Australian Academy of the Humanities, 1983. Maps 25-47 (= Pacific linguistics; C; 67)
- Internet
- http://www.bps.go.id/
- The World Factbook
- https://web.archive.org/web/20070611164807/http://www.linguistics.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/~himmelmann/publications.html
Additional source: Interviews with three (bilingual) speakers of Ledo; in Jakarta (March/April 2001) and via icq chat (April through August 2001).
Notes
[edit]In general, the abbreviations and conventions suggested by the Leipzig Rules for Interlinear Morpheme-by-Morpheme Glosses were used.[4] In addition to that, the following abbreviations were used:
References
[edit]- ^ Ledo Kaili at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
- ^ Glottopedia article on Ledo Kaili language.
- ^ Zobel, Erik (2020). "The Kaili–Wolio Branch of the Celebic Languages". Oceanic Linguistics. 59 (1/2). University of Hawai'i Press: 297–346. doi:10.1353/ol.2020.0014. S2CID 235064564.
- ^ "Dept. of Linguistics | Resources | Glossing Rules". 2011-05-14. Archived from the original on 2011-05-14. Retrieved 2021-07-06.