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Fataluku language

Papuan language of East Timor


Summary

Papuan language of East Timor

FieldValue
nameFataluku
regionEastern East Timor
speakers48,000
date2020
refe25
speakers2regional usage
familycolorPapuan
fam1Trans–New Guinea ?
fam2West Bomberai ?
fam3Timor–Alor–Pantar
fam4Eastern Timor
fam5Oirata–Fataluku
fam6Fataluku–Rusenu
minorityEast Timor
iso3ddg
glottofata1247
glottorefnameFataluku
mapFataluku.png
mapcaptionDistribution of Fataluku in East Timor
ethnicityFataluku people

Fataluku (also known as Dagaga, **Dagoda'''', **Dagada''') is a Papuan language spoken by approximately 37,000 people of Fataluku ethnicity in the eastern areas of East Timor, especially around Lospalos. It is a member of the Timor-Alor-Pantar language family, which includes languages spoken both in East Timor and nearby regions of Indonesia. Fataluku's closest relative is Oirata, spoken on Kisar island, in the Moluccas of Indonesia. Fataluku is given the status of a national language under the constitution. Speakers of Fataluku normally have a command of Tetum and/or Indonesian, those speakers who are educated under Portuguese rule or from younger generation educated under Portuguese-language educational system during independence speak Portuguese.

It has a considerable number of Austronesian loanwords, and it has borrowed elements of Sanskrit and Arabic vocabulary via Malay and elements of Portuguese.

The five main Fataluku dialects are identified as follows: East Fataluku, South Fataluku, Central Fataluku, North Fataluku and Northwest Fataluku. The differences that exist between these dialects, especially beyond phonology, are unclear and require more research. Dialects differ with respect to the phonetic realization of palatal obstruents, the presence of a glottal stop phoneme and a voicing distinction in stops, as well as aspects of the stress system.

Phonology

Vowels

FrontCentralBackCloseMidOpen
iu
eo
a

Consonants

BilabialLabiodentalCoronalPalatalVelarGlottalNasalsPlosiveAffricatesvoicelessvoicedFricativesvoicelessvoicedFlapLateralSemivowel
mn
ptk'
cc
j
fsh
vvz
vr
l
vy

Words and phrases

In the examples below, the letter 'c' and the letter combination 'tx' are pronounced as the 'ch' in the English word 'church'. Rau ana kapare? / e nicha rau rau / maice ana umpe? "how are you?" Rau "good" Kapare "not good" Hó "yes" Xaparau "thank you" Tali even xaparau "thank you very much" nitawane "you're welcome" Favoruni "please" itu nae tini "excuse me" Ó lai'i "hello" mua toto, ia toto,purupale " take care" Kois ta niat ali fanuhene "see you later"

Pronoun Possessive pronoun I : Aniri/Ana My: Ahani You : Eri (singular), Iri (plural) Your: Eheni(sing), Eheniere (plur) We : Iniri (excl), Afiri (inclusive) Our: Inihini (exc), Afihini: (incl) They : Tawari, Márafuri Their: Their Tavarhini, Marafurhini He/She : Tavai, marí, mármocoi His/Her: Tavahini, Marmokoihini It : Iví Its: Ivihini, Tavahini

Vaihoho Sung-Poems

Vaihoho is a sacred form of storytelling for the Fataluku people of Timor-Leste. Vaihoho or sung-stories has been the major form for continuing the Fataluku oral tradition. From 1999 to 2014, cultural leader Justino Valentim recorded a significant amount of Vaihoho material. Funded by the Modern Endangered Archives Program at the UCLA Library, a team from Many Hands International, led by in partnership with the University of Melbourne, digitized 17 field notebooks of sung-songs and five Fataluku language dictionaries collected by Valentim as well as notes, poems and photos involving the practice of Vaihoho. This collection is available digitally through the UCLA library.

Notes

References

References

  1. {{harvp. Heston. 2015
  2. Usher, Timothy. "Fataluku".
  3. {{harvp. Heston. 2015
  4. {{harvp. Heston. 2015
  5. Van Engelenhoven, Aone. (2009). "The linguistics of endangered languages: Contributions to morphology and morphosyntax". LOT.
  6. (2020). "The Papuan Languages of Timor, Alor and Pantar". De Gruyter Mouton.
  7. "Digitizing the Justino Valentim Collection of Vaihoho Sung-Poems, Lautem, Timor-Leste {{!}} Modern Endangered Archives Program".
  8. "MEAP Collection".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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