Tifal language
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Tifal is an Ok language spoken in
Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea (abbreviated PNG; , ; tpi, Papua Niugini; ho, Papua Niu Gini), officially the Independent State of Papua New Guinea ( tpi, Independen Stet bilong Papua Niugini; ho, Independen Stet bilong Papua Niu Gini), is a country i ...
. Dialects are (1) Tifal (Tifalmin) and Urap (Urapmin) and (2) Atbal (Atbalmin).


Geography

The Tifal language is bounded by Papuan and Irian Jaya speakers to the south and west, the
Telefomin valley Telefomin is a station town on the border of Sandaun and Western Provinces in Papua New Guinea. The town started during the Second World War after Mick Leahy was assigned to engineer an air-strip in 1944 for the United States for use against the ...
in the east, and the
Sepik river The Sepik () is the longest river on the island of New Guinea, and the second largest in Oceania by discharge volume after the Fly River. The majority of the river flows through the Papua New Guinea (PNG) provinces of Sandaun (formerly West Se ...
to the north.


Orthography


Phonology


Consonants

: is realized as word finally, as in syllable-coda position before a consonant, and elsewhere. : is realized as in syllable coda before a consonant and elsewhere. : is realized as intervocalically, e.g. : 'water container'. : is intervocalically, in syllable coda before consonants, and elsewhere. : is realized as before . : is alveolar adjacent to back vowels and alveodental elsewhere. One dialect realizes as intervocalically.


Vowels

and rarely contrast.


Phonotactics

Syllable structure is (C)V()(C). The expression ''kwiin takan'' 'oh my!' may be an exception. only occurs word-initially. only occurs syllable-initially. is always syllable-final. Initial only occurs in some dialects. Initial occurs in two dialects, and may usually be interpreted as C+V. and occur syllable-initially. Only one dialect allows syllable-coda .


Stress

In inflected words stress lies on the last syllable of the verb stem. Otherwise, if there are long vowels stress falls on the first in the word. If all vowels are short, stress falls on the last syllable if it is closed and the first syllable otherwise.


Grammar


Nouns

Nouns are not inflected but may mark possession. Body parts and kinship terms are obligatorily possessed, and some kinship terms require affixing. On other nouns possession is optional, except for proper names which are never possessed.


Pronouns


Verbs

Tifal has a rich aspectual system. Verbs may be separated into four groups based on how they transform from continuative to punctiliar aspect. Some only have vowel and/or simple stem changes, some have suppletive stems, some change compound-final stems, and some which have allomorphs which add -(a)laa-min (or rarely -daa-laa-min) to the stem. Verbs also can be divided based on transitivity. Some require direct objects, some with optional objects, some with optional locational objects, and a few intransitive verbs.


Tense and aspect

Most final verbs mark tense, mood, and person, but most verbs can mark aspect and not tense and still be a final verb. # "initial consonant of the customary or class changing marker is retained" Tifal sentences are contain inflected verb-root-chains, often with a final fully conjugated verb. One must inflect for the amount of time between one verb in the chain and the next.


Deixis

Marking spatial relation between verbs and their objects is obligatory. "up" must be clarified as either "upslope" or "upstream", "down" as "downslope" or "downstream", and "across" as "across land" or "across a river".


Kinship

Tifal has dyadic kinship terms (terms referring to the relationship two or more people have to each other), which are present in less than 10 languages and not prevalent in Papua New Guinea. However, they are a salient feature of the Ok languages. Related terms are found in
Oksapmin Oksapmin is a Trans–New Guinea language spoken in Oksapmin Rural LLG, Telefomin District, Sandaun, Papua New Guinea. The two principal dialects are distinct enough to cause some problems with mutual intelligibility. Oksapmin has dyadic ki ...
, Mian, and Telefol.The Oksapmin Kinship System
, retrieved May 21, 2009.


See also

*
Urapmin language Tifal is an Ok language spoken in Papua New Guinea. Dialects are (1) Tifal (Tifalmin) and Urap (Urapmin) and (2) Atbal (Atbalmin). Geography The Tifal language is bounded by Papuan and Irian Jaya speakers to the south and west, the Telefomin ...


References


Bibliography

*Boush, Al and Susan Boush. 1974. Tifal phonology. anuscript40 p

*Boush, Al. 1975. ''Tifal grammar essentials''. anuscript75 p

*Boush, Al. 1979''. Aspect on Tifal final and medial verbs''. anuscript23 p

*''Tifal Organised Phonology Data''. [Manuscript


Further reading

*Steinkraus, Walter. 1969. 'Tifal phonology showing vowel and tone neutralization.' Kivung 2:1 *Healey, Phyllis, and Walter Steinkraus. 1972. 'A Preliminary Vocabulary of Tifal with Grammar Notes.' Language Data Microfiche AP 5, S.I.L., Huntington Beach, v + 117 pp.  *Steinkraus, Walter. 1962–63. Manuscripts. SIL, Ukarumpa. *Boush, Al. 1974–79. Manuscripts. SIL, Ukarumpa.


External links


PNG Language Resources: TifalWALS - TifalTifal on globalrecordings.netMissionary video in TifalTifal Grammar Essentials
{{Central and South New Guinea languages Languages of Sandaun Province Languages of Western Province (Papua New Guinea) Ok languages