Teiwa language

Last updated
Teiwa
Native to Indonesia
Region Pantar Island
Native speakers
4,000 (2010) [1]
Dialects
  • Teiwa
  • Sar
Language codes
ISO 639-3 twe
Glottolog teiw1236
ELP Teiwa
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Teiwa
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Teiwa
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Teiwa
Coordinates: 8°23′S124°10′E / 8.38°S 124.17°E / -8.38; 124.17

Teiwa (also referred to as Tewa) [2] is a Papuan language spoken on the Pantar island in eastern Indonesia. The island is the second largest in the Alor archipelago, lying just west of the largest island Alor.

Contents

Teiwa is a morphosyntactically simple language with little inflection and is as such described as an isolating language, also known as an analytic language. It is pronounced by a complex pronoun system.

Nomenclature

Teiwa is also known as Bahasa Teiwa (the Teiwa language) in Indonesia. Teiwa itself is a nominal compound and can be translated as tei wa, meaning "tree leaf". The term "Teiwa" derives from the name of the main clan that speaks it. Generally, when Teiwa speakers refer to their own language, especially to differentiate it from the national language Indonesian, they call it "pitarau" (our language).

Classification

Teiwa is often classified as part of the Trans-New Guinea language family, but this is disputed. One reason is little lexical proof as well as the large geographical distance from the main island of New Guinea. An alternative classification is as part of the Timor-Alor-Pantar language family, which is approximately 3000 years old. Within this language family, Teiwa is further categorized within the sub-family of the Alor-Pantar languages, which are 20 in number. This classification bases on the high number of cognates as well as very similar pronoun systems.

Background

Teiwa is spoken on the island of Pantar, which is part of the Alor Archipelago, located between Australia and Indonesia. The island is located approximately 1000 km from the main island of New Guinea. It stretches 50 km from north to south, and between 11 and 29 km from east to west. The island is split into two distinct geographic regions: the dry and less populated lowlands in the west, and the highlands in the east, which are mountainous, volcanic and densely populated.

There were 4000 documented native speakers of Teiwa in 2010. The speakers live primarily in the desas (administrative villages in Indonesia) Lebang, Boweli, Kalib, Nule, Kadir, and Madar, a village of 460 inhabitants (as of 2007). Lebang is the main village, where Teiwa was still spoken by most people, young and old. Nevertheless, the national language of Indonesian as well as the Chinese-influenced Alor-Malay tend to be spoken by the younger generations and used for teaching in schools. As a result of this dwindling number of native speakers, Teiwa is listed as an endangered language.

The Grammar of Teiwa by Marian Klamer is the only linguistic documentation besides a short word list from Stokhof (1975). Klamer gathered most of her data in the village of Madar.

Phonology

The following is a phonological description of Teiwa: [2]

Consonants

Teiwa has an inventory of 20 consonants, a high amount relative to other Papuan languages. In the table below, the orthographic representation of the sound is given in brackets to the right. The contrast between the pharyngeal and glottal fricative shows itself as exceptional within the languages of Eastern Indonesia, as is the existence of both liquids /l/ and /r/.

Bilabial Labiodental Alveolar Palatal Velar Uvular Pharyngeal Glottal
Nasal m n ŋ ng
Plosive p b t d k ɡ q ʔ '
Fricative ɸ f v s ħ x h
Semivowel w j y
Trill r
Lateral l

The allophones of /ɸ/ are [ ɸ ] and [ p ]. The allophones of /v/ are [ v ] and [ f ].

Vowels

Teiwa has an inventory of 5 cardinal vowels. The two high vowels occur as short (/i/, /u/) and long (/uː/, /iː/). As in the consonant table, the orthographic representations are given in the brackets to the right.

Front Back
High i
ii
u
uu
Mid ɛ e ɔ o
Low a aa ɑ a

The allophones of /a/ are the short [ a ] and the long [ ].

Grammar

The grammar of Teiwa is as follows: [2]

Grammatical relations

Grammatical relations are the relations between argument and predicate. In Teiwa, these are formally expressed through pronouns from the object and subject paradigms, as well as a strict constituent order.

The subject relation is the agent argument of a transitive verb, from hereon denoted with A, or the single argument of an intransitive predicate, from hereon denoted with S. Both are encoded similarly.

The object relation is the non-agent argument of a transitive verb, from hereon denoted with P.

Basic constituent order

Teiwa is syntactically head-final, with Object-Verb constituent order: preverbal subject and object, sentence final verbs, negations, and conjunctions.

With intransitive verbs, there is SV-order. With transitive verbs, there is APV-order.

S

[...ki uwaad nuk]

eagle big one

V

yaa

descend

A

ø

 

P

[bif ga'an]

child 3S

V

tu'u

knock

S V A P V

{[...ki uwaad nuk]} yaa ø {[bif ga'an]} tu'u

{eagle big one} descend {} {child 3S} knock

'...a big eagle came down [and] picked that child...'

The A of the second (transitive) verb tu'uk coreferences with (shares the same reference as) the S of the first (intransitive) verb yaa in the example above.

A

...qau ba a

good SEQ3S

P

[a-sepatu qas]

3S-shoe(IND) split

V

usan ga-luxun-luxun ta

lift 3S-REDUP-high TOP

S

a

3S

V

xer-an pati.

yell-REALPROG

A P V S V

{...qau ba a} {[a-sepatu qas]} {usan ga-luxun-luxun ta} a {xer-an pati.}

{good SEQ 3S} {3S-shoe(IND) split} {lift 3S-REDUP-high TOP} 3S {yell-REAL PROG}

'...so he lifts up one side of a shoe very high while he is yelling...'

In this example, the Subject (A) is the pronominal, and the object (P) is the lexical NP (noun phrase).

Personal pronouns

There are three pronoun paradigms in Teiwa: subject, object, and possessive. The 'theme vowel' for singular pronouns is a, and for plural pronouns it is i. The second syllable of the long pronoun is a copy of the theme vowel with the addition of an -n. [2]

There is a contrast of inclusive-exclusive first person plural, one of the most prominent features to diffuse from the Austronesian languages into the Papuan languages.

Subject pronouns

Subject pronouns appear before the object and verb.

Long subject pronounShort subject pronoun
1sna'anna
2sha'anha
3sa'ana
1p.exclusiveni'inni
1p.inclusivepi'inpi
2pyi'inyi
3pimani, a
3p.elsewherei'ini, a
distributiveta'anta

The long subject pronoun is used to set contrastive focus (me, not you), which can further be marked with la as the focus NP. They look nearly identical to the free object pronouns, save for the 3s and 3p.elsewhere pronouns.

Na'an

1S.long

hamar.

pray

Na'an hamar.

1S.long pray

'I pray [not you].'

Na'an

1S.long

la

FOC

hamar.

pray

Na'an la hamar.

1S.long FOC pray

'I am the one who prays.'

The short subject pronoun is a "reduced pronoun" which can stand alone in place of nominal constituents, and is separable from the verb. Its paradigm is nearly identical to that of the object prefixes, except for the 3s, 3p, and 3p.elsewhere pronouns.

Na

1S.short

hamar.

pray

Na hamar.

1S.short pray

'I pray.'

Na

1S.short

g-oqai

3S.child

ga-regan.

3S.ask

Na g-oqai ga-regan.

1S.short 3S.child 3S.ask

'I asked his child.'

Both the short and long object pronouns can express S and A.

Object pronouns

(free) Object pronounObject prefix
1sna'ann(a)-
2sha'anh(a)-
3sga'ang(a)-, gə-
1p.exclusiveni'inn(i)-
1p.inclusivepi'inp(i)-
2pyi'iny(i),
3pimang(i)-, ga-
3p.elsewheregi'ing(i)-
distributiveta'ant(a)-

The underlined pronouns are a reminder of the differences to the long subject pronoun and short subject pronoun paradigms, respectively.

The object prefix has a consonantal and syllabic (in parentheses) form: the consonantal form appears before a verb beginning with a vowel, and the syllabic form appears before a verb beginning with a consonant.

The object pronoun is for both animate and inanimate referents, whereas the object prefix is exclusively for animate referents.

With the 3p (third person plural) object prefix, the differentiation of number is lost. In this case, number is specified through use of the additional pronoun ga'an (singular), iman (plural), or the plural word non in the object NP.

The 3s (third person singular) object pronoun maintains a further purpose as a demonstrative pronoun to introduce new participants into the discourse.

Possessive pronouns
Long pronounShort pronounPrefix
1sna'annan(a)-
2sha'anhah(a)-
3sa'anag(a)-, a-
1p.exclusiveni'innin(i)-
1p.inclusivepi'inpip(i)-
2pyi'inyiy(i),
3piman-g(i)-, a-, ga-
3p.elsewheregi'in--
distributiveta'antat(a)-

The final two pronouns, elsewhere and distributive, are unique. The 3p.elsewhere pronoun is used in a situation where the speaker cannot see the referent, because the referent is somewhere else.

I'in

they.elsewhere

g-oqai

3S.child

ga-wei.

3S.bathe

I'in g-oqai ga-wei.

they.elsewhere 3S.child 3S.bathe

'They (elsewhere) bathe/have bathed his child.'

Contrast this with the standard, unmarked form (3p):

Iman

they

g-oqai

3S.child

ga-wei.

3S.bathe

Iman g-oqai ga-wei.

they 3S.child 3S.bathe

'They bathe/have bathed his child.'

The distributive possessive pronoun (ta'an, ta, or ta-) refers to a (non-collective) plural number of human referents, often in reciprocal contexts.

Ta'an

DISTR

tara'

be.in.a.row

mis!

sit

Ta'an tara' mis!

DISTR be.in.a.row sit

'Let's sit in a row!' (lit. 'Each (one) sits in a row!')

One more special possessive pronoun is li'in, which marks plurality of the possessor NP, and only as an adnominal modifier. [2]

Compare:

Uy

person

ga-yaf

3S.house

Uy ga-yaf

person 3S.house

'Someone's house, a person's house'

Uy

person

li'in

their

ga-yaf

3S.house

Uy li'in ga-yaf

person their 3S.house

'People's house(s)'

Nouns

In Teiwa, the noun typically appears as head of the NP. The noun, with a few exceptions, cannot be reduplicated, unlike verbs, adverbs, and adjectives. (See Reduplication below.)

There is no marking for number, gender, or case on nouns. Instead, person and number is marked via a possessor prefix on the noun.

Noun phrases

In possessed NP's, the possessor (the noun which possesses) precedes the possessee (the noun which is possessed), as in the examples below.

Rai

king

ga-yaf

3S-house

Rai ga-yaf

king 3S-house

'The king's house.'

Pi

1P.INCL

pi-krian

1P.INCL.work

i

PROX

er

make

a

3S

gula'

finish

sin.

first

Pi pi-krian i er a gula' sin.

1P.INCL 1P.INCL.work PROX make 3S finish first

'We first finish our work here.'

In non-possessed NP's, the noun comes first, followed by the modifying element, such as an adjective.

Xaf

fish

uwaad

big

Xaf uwaad

fish big

'A big fish.'

Uy

person

a

PROX

Uy a

person PROX

'This person.'

Noun classes

The Teiwa nouns can be divided into two main classes: Proper nouns and common nouns.

Proper nouns

Proper nouns are not modifiable. Examples are listed below. [2]

Male names: Edi, Goli, Lius, Mase, Nabas, Ribu
Female names: Bruang, Leti, Malai, Mani, Sam
Family names: Biri, Blegar, Bui, Lau, Qoli, Ribu, Unu
Clan names: Barawasi, Burilak, Loxoq, Perang Tubi, Qailipi
Common nouns

The common nouns can be further divided into subclasses:

Nouns with alienable possession

In this subclass the possessor prefix is optional. Focus can be placed with use of a long pronoun. Examples include: yaf 'house', kon 'shirt', qavif 'goat'.

Nouns with inalienable possession

Here the possessor prefix is obligatory, to the point that native speakers will not recognize the word without the prefix. Nouns with inalienable possession include body parts, and kinship terms (except for emaq 'wife' where the prefix is optional as with alienable possession).

Locational nouns

This last subclass of nouns denote location. Examples include: wanan 'side', fan 'front', siban 'behind', ragan 'outside', tag 'up(stairs); above speaker (relatively close)'.

Uy

people

ragan

outside

me

be.in

Uy ragan me

people outside be.in

'Some people are outside' / 'Someone is outside'

Nominalization

There is no dedicated morphology for nominalization in Teiwa. Instead the third person (3p) possessor prefix -ga has a secondary function of attaching to the root form of adjectives, locational nouns, adverbs, and question words. [2]

Verbs

Teiwa verbs carry no marking for case or gender. There is only one verbal suffix;

-(a)n for the marking of realis status. Only verbs take an object prefix. Inflected prefixes index person and number traits of animate objects on the verb. Subjects and inanimate objects are not indexed on the verb.

Teiwa has intransitive and transitive verbs. The transitive verbs are monotransitive, meaning they have a single grammatical object.

Verb classes

Transitive verbs

The transitive verbs in Teiwa can be divided into numerous sub classes, based on how they encode animate and inanimate objects differently. In this case, animate or inanimate refers explicitly to a third person referent, since first and second person referents are inherently animate.

Class (i)
Verbs with an object prefix, with an animate object ("sb-somebody")

This class expresses the object with an object-marking prefix on the verb. The prefix marks for person and number. The lexical NP is optional and may be used to clarify or disambiguate the referent.

Examples of verbs are: an ‘give sb’, ‘an ‘sell to sb’, ayas ‘throw at sb’, bun ‘answer sb’, fin ‘catch sb’, liin ‘invite sb’, regan ‘ask sb’, sas ‘feed sb’, walas ‘tell sb’, wei ‘bathe sb’

Examples of such verbs in sentence constructions:

A

3S

qavif

goat

ga-uyan

3S.search

gi

go

si...

SIM

A qavif ga-uyan gi si...

3S goat 3S.search go SIM

'He went searching for [a] goat...'

The prefix ga- on the verb -uyan marks for third person singular object, that is for qavif, 'goat'. Goat is an animate object.

A

3S

yivar

dog

ga-walas

3S.tell

a

3S

wa...

say

A yivar ga-walas a wa...

3S dog 3S.tell 3S say

'He told [his] dog...'

Here similarly, the prefix ga- on the verb -walas marks for third person singular object, that is for yivar, 'dog'. Dog is an animate object.

Class (ii)
Verbs without an object prefix, with inanimate object ("sth-something")

Here the verb encodes the object as a separate nominal constituent. In this class the encoding with a prefix is disallowed.

Examples of such verbs are: bali ‘see sth’, ol ‘buy sth’, paai ‘cut sth in many small pieces’, put ‘cut off (grass)’ An example in a sentence construction:

...i'in

they.elsewhere

i-xaf

3P.fish

uwaad

big

la

FOC

boqai

cut.up

dau-an

cook-REAL

na.

eat

...i'in i-xafuwaad la boqai dau-an na.

they.elsewhere 3P.fishbig FOC cut.up cook-REAL eat

'...they cut up their big fish, cooked and ate [it]'

The verbs in this sentence have no object prefix, and the object 'fish' is inanimate (because it is no longer living).

Class (iii)
Transitive verbs that take either animate or inanimate objects

iiia. Transitive verbs with prefixed animate object OR free (unfixed) inanimate object

With free inanimate object (object prefix not bound to verb).

Na

1S

ga'an

3S

mar.

take

Na ga'an mar.

1S 3S take

'I take/get it.'

With prefixed animate object

Na

1S

ga-mar.

3S-take

Na ga-mar.

1S 3S-take

'I follow him/her.'

Notice the important difference in meaning with the use a prefixed pronoun versus a free pronoun!

iiib. Verbs with an animate OR inanimate object, both as a prefix

Third person object prefixes marking animate or inanimate:

3sg inanimate object3sg animate object
ga-ga'-
ge-
g-

The contrasts are illustrated in the below translations:

wulul'speak, talk, tell'
ga'-wulul'talk with sb, tell sb'
ga-wulul'talk about sth, tells sth'

A glottal stop is used for animate objects. The canonical form is used for inanimate objects.

Sound verbs

An interesting class of verbs constituting verbs for sounds made by animals or objects. [2]

aga-agasound to call a dog
ago-agosound to call a dog (remote)
sikasound to chase away a dog
sumaxsound to chase away a goat
buraxsound to chase away chickens
kuru-kurusound to call chickens
xo'to bark (dog)
oxto grunt (pig)
qauto scream (pig)
hongdog's sound ('woof')
kokokochicken's sound ('tock-tock')
quququ'cock-a-doodle-doo'
me'ehgoat's sound
paqsound of a rock that is crushing corn
qabunggatsplashing sound of rock in water
tadunggatdry sound of rock falling on land
saxa'flapping sound of something light falling (e.g. sandals on street)

Experiencer predicates

These are predicates formed with the bodypart noun -om 'inside' [2]

n-om

1S-inside

quun

be.sure

n-om quun

1S-inside be.sure

'I am smart/clever.'

n-om

1S-inside

qau

good

n-om qau

1S-inside good

'I am happy.'

n-om

1S-inside

siis

dry

n-om siis

1S-inside dry

'I am thirsty'

n-om

1S-inside

par

defeated

n-om par

1S-inside defeated

'I am annoyed (at s.b.)'

n-om

1S-inside

qalixil

itchy

n-om qalixil

1S-inside itchy

'I am angry'

n-om

1S-inside

mai

store/keep

n-om mai

1S-inside store/keep

'I am planning/I plan'

n-om

1S-inside

bangan

see

n-om bangan

1S-inside see

'I want/like'

n-om

1S-inside

ga-regan

3S-ask

n-om ga-regan

1S-inside 3S-ask

'I think/say to myself'

n-om

1S-inside

ga-i'

3S-sick

n-om ga-i'

1S-inside 3S-sick

'I feel pity for him'

Reduplication

Reduplication is a morphological process to express greater intensity or the repeated/ongoing nature of an event. In Teiwa, the entire root is copied; there exists no productive process for syllable reduplication. [2]

of verbs

tewar-tewar

REDUP-walk

tewar-tewar

REDUP-walk

'walk on and on'

tib-tib

REDUP-provide.for

tib-tib

REDUP-provide.for

'exactly enough'

haqax-haqax

REDUP-breathe

haqax-haqax

REDUP-breathe

'take a few rests'

of verbs with the realis suffix

Reduplication of the entire stem including the realis suffix takes place. Only verbs can be inflected for realis mood.

tii'in-tii'in

REDUP-[sleep-REAL]

tii'in-tii'in

REDUP-[sleep-REAL]

'being asleep', 'sleep on and on'

miran-mir-an

REDUP-[ascend-REAL]

miran-mir-an

REDUP-[ascend-REAL]

'climb on and on', 'continue to climb'

moxodan-moxod-an

REDUP-[drop-REAL]

moxodan-moxod-an

REDUP-[drop-REAL]

'let fall, drop down'

of adverbials

wek-wek

REDUP-behind

wek-wek

REDUP-behind

'behind'

bas-bas*

REDUP-tomorrow

bas-bas*

REDUP-tomorrow

'usually'

bes-bes

REDUP-morning

bes-bes

REDUP-morning

'good morning'

of adjectives

musaq-musaq

REDUP-shattered

musaq-musaq

REDUP-shattered

'very much shattered'

[qa'an-qa'an]'an*

[REDUP-black-]v-REAL

[qa'an-qa'an]'an*

[REDUP-black-]v-REAL

'be black-REAL' > 'something black'

*The adjectival base is first turned into a verb through reduplication, in order to allow the realis suffix to be reduplicated (only verbs can be reduplicated with a realis suffix).

of numerals

Iman

they

nuk-nuk

REDUP-one

/

 

raq-raq

REDUP-two

/

 

yerig-yerig

REDUP-three

aria-n.

arrive-REAL

Iman nuk-nuk / raq-raq / yerig-yerig aria-n.

they REDUP-one {} REDUP-two {} REDUP-three arrive-REAL

'They arrive one by one, two by two, three by three.'

of nouns

Reduplication of nouns is rarer, and does not serve to express plurality of distributivity.

mug-mug

REDUP-mountain.top

mug-mug

REDUP-mountain.top

'be hilly' (something attributiv)

war-war

REDUP-day

war-war

REDUP-day

'day after day' (something adverbial)

Kinship

The Teiwa live in exogamous, patrilineal clans: the children belong to the clan of the father. The term "Teiwa" refers to a group of (sub) clans with the same ancestors. The Teiwa branch into two moieties (halves), which are separate genealogical supergroups, each of which includes multiple clans.

Teiwa
I.II.
BaraqalaLambar
La BuilanKakalau
SalanggaluLau Wad
MaligiLoxog
HukungKaloman Goqar
Qailipi

Children are named with 1) clan name, 2) given name 3) father's family name, for example Teiwa Jance Wa'ng.

Kinship system

The kinship system of the Teiwa is based on cross-cousins. This means that the children of same-sex siblings are considered to be siblings (brother, sister), and therefore not fit for marriage with one another. Children of non-same sex siblings of the parents are seen as cross-cousins and are the perfect candidates for marriage with each other. These children are also in a different clan than the children of the same-sex siblings of the parents.

Kinship terms

The main kinship terms are listed here:

emaqwife
misihusband
bifchild, 'younger sibling'
biar (kriman)children
na-gas qaimy sister
n-ian qaimy brother
n-ian(female) cousin of ego, in other clan
na-dias(male) cousin of ego, in other clan
na-rat (emaq)daughter of ego's brother, in other clan (potential daughter-in-law)
na'iison of ego's brother, in other clan (potential son-in-law)
na-rata'my grandfather/mother
na-rat qaimy grandchild

From the point of view of female ego:

The "classificatory siblings" refer to the actual siblings, as well as the children of the mother's sister and the father's brother. As it is considered rude to call family members by their given name, these siblings are addressed as matu' when older and bif when younger, and ka'au when the same sex as the speaker.

The "classificatory parents" are the father's brother (n-oma 'my father'), as well as the mother's sister (na-xala 'my mother'). Each person therefore has two sets of parents.

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Paamese, or Paama, is the language of the island of Paama in Northern Vanuatu. There is no indigenous term for the language; however linguists have adopted the term Paamese to refer to it. Both a grammar and a dictionary of Paamese have been produced by Terry Crowley.

Adang is a Papuan language spoken on the island of Alor in Indonesia. The language is agglutinative. The Hamap dialect is sometimes treated as a separate language; on the other hand, Kabola, which is sociolinguistically distinct, is sometimes included. Adang, Hamap, and Kabola are considered a dialect chain. Adang is endangered as fewer speakers raise their children in Adang, instead opting for Indonesian.

Munsee is an endangered language of the Eastern Algonquian subgroup of the Algonquian language family, itself a branch of the Algic language family.

Warndarrang (waɳʈaraŋ), also spelt Warndarang, Wanderang, Wandaran, and other variants is an extinct Aboriginal Australian language in the Arnhem family, formerly spoken by the Warndarrang people in southern Arnhem Land, along the Gulf of Carpentaria. The last speaker was Isaac Joshua, who died in 1974, while working with the linguist Jeffrey Heath.

Maia is a Papuan language spoken in the Madang Province of Papua New Guinea, and is a member of the Trans-New Guinea language family. It has a language endangerment status of 6a, which means that it is a vigorous and sustainable language spoken by all generations. According to a 2000 census, there are approximately 4,500 living speakers of the language, who are split between twenty-two villages in the Almani district of the Bogia sub-district.

Aramba (Arammba), also known as Serki or Serkisetavi, is a Papuan language of Papua New Guinea. It is spoken to the south of Western Province in the Trans Fly region. Aramba belongs to the Tonda Sub-Family, which is next to the Nambu Sub-Family region and the Suki language. Alternative names for the language include Upper Morehead, Rouku, Kamindjo and Tjokwasi.

Mekéns (Mekem), or Amniapé, is a nearly extinct Tupian language of the state of Rondônia, in the Amazon region of Brazil.

Neve’ei, also known as Vinmavis, is an Oceanic language of central Malekula, Vanuatu. There are around 500 primary speakers of Neve’ei and about 750 speakers in total.

Hote (Ho’tei), also known as Malê, is an Oceanic language in Morobe Province, Papua New Guinea.

Longgu (Logu) is a Southeast Solomonic language of Guadalcanal, but originally from Malaita.

Neverver (Nevwervwer), also known as Lingarak, is an Oceanic language. Neverver is spoken in Malampa Province, in central Malekula, Vanuatu. The names of the villages on Malekula Island where Neverver is spoken are Lingarakh and Limap.

Swahili is a Bantu language which is native to or mainly spoken in the East African region. It has a grammatical structure that is typical for Bantu languages, bearing all the hallmarks of this language family. These include agglutinativity, a rich array of noun classes, extensive inflection for person, tense, aspect and mood, and generally a subject–verb–object word order.

References

  1. Teiwa at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Klamer 2010 , pp. 166

Further reading