Bardi (also Baardi, Baard) is an endangered
Australian Aboriginal language
The Indigenous languages of Australia number in the hundreds, the precise number being quite uncertain, although there is a range of estimates from a minimum of around 250 (using the technical definition of 'language' as non-mutually intellig ...
in the
Nyulnyulan
The Nyulnyulan languages are a small family of closely related Australian Aboriginal languages spoken in northern Western Australia. Most languages in this family are extinct, with only three extant languages, all of which are almost extinct.
I ...
family, mutually intelligible with
Jawi and possibly other dialects. It is spoken by the
Bardi people
The Bardi people, also spelt Baada or Baardi and other variations, are an Aboriginal Australian people, living north of Broome and inhabiting parts of the Dampier Peninsula in the Kimberley region of Western Australia. They are ethnically cl ...
at the tip of the
Dampier peninsula
The Dampier Peninsula is a peninsula located north of Broome and Roebuck Bay in Western Australia. It is surrounded by the Indian Ocean to the west and north, and King Sound to the east. It is named after the mariner and explorer William Dampi ...
and neighbouring islands (north of
Broome, in
Northwestern Australia
The North West, North West Coast, North Western Australia and North West Australia, are usually informal names for the northern regions of the State of Western Australia. However, some conceptions of "North West Australia" have included adjoi ...
). There are few fluent speakers in the 21st century, but efforts are being made to teach the Bardi language and culture at at least one school.
Background
Before European settlement at the end of the 19th century, the population size is estimated to have been ~1500 people, with essentially the entire community speaking Bardi. Since then, the ethnic population has increased in number (now contains about 2000 people), but is essentially monolingual in English today (with only the oldest few people still fluent in Bardi). Estimates vary as to how many fluent Bardi speakers remain, but , many middle-aged people could still understand the language, and some of them could speak it to a limited degree.
[Bowern, Claire (2012). ''A Grammar of Bardi.'' Berlin/Boston: De Gruyter, Inc. pp. 1, 5, 25-26, 28. .]
The language and culture is being taught at Christ the King Catholic School in
Djarindjin
Djarindjin is a medium-sized Aboriginal community located north of Broome in the Kimberley region of Western Australia, within the Shire of Broome. It is within the traditional lands of the Bardi and Jawi peoples.
Location
Djarindjin is l ...
community by Bardi/
Jabirr Jabirr
The Jabirr Jabbirr are an Indigenous Australian people of the Kimberley region of Western Australia.
Jabirr Jabirr, is also written as Jabirrjabirr and with other spellings such as DjaberrDjaberr, Djaberadjabera, Dyaberdyaber and Jabba Jabba. Th ...
man Vincent McKenzie, who grew up speaking Bardi.
Classification
Bardi is a member of the Western branch of the
Nyulnyulan language family.
According to
R. M. W. Dixon (2002), Bardi was
mutually intelligible with the following
dialect
The term dialect (from Latin , , from the Ancient Greek word , 'discourse', from , 'through' and , 'I speak') can refer to either of two distinctly different types of linguistic phenomena:
One usage refers to a variety of a language that ...
s:
Jawi,
Nyulnyul,
Jabirr-Jabirr,
Ngumbarl, and
Nimanburru
The Nimanburu were an Aboriginal Australian people of the Kimberley region of Western Australia.
Language
The Nimanburu language was one of the Nyulnyulan languages. Their speech was described by other aboriginal informants as a 'heavy' dialec ...
.
Ethnologue (206) treats all but Ngumbarl as distinct languages, and this view is supported by those linguists who have worked on the languages, including Claire Bowern and William McGregor. It is also the view of Bardi speakers.
Documentation
There is considerable documentation of the Bardi language, but most of it is unpublished. The earliest work on the language, though now lost, dates from the 1880s. The earliest surviving records are from the start of the 20th century.
Gerhardt Laves spent some time on Sunday Island in the late 1920s and recorded textual materials totalling over 1000 pages, and steady documentation has progressed since the late 1960s. In 2012, an extensive reference grammar was written by
Claire Bowern and published by
De Gruyter Mouton.
Phonology
Consonants
Bardi contains 17 phonemes in its consonant inventory, across five
places of articulation and five
manners of articulation. There are no fricatives or voicing distinctions among Bardi consonants.
The plosives are voiceless word-initially and -finally, and usually voiced elsewhere. Intervocalically, plosives are often weakly lenited to approximants. This is distinct from the morpho-phonological processes involving lenition that occur in the morphological system, such as in allomorphs of the locative case (''-goon ~ -yoon ~ -oon'').
Vowels
Bardi has an unusual vowel inventory. It is a seven vowel system, with long and short peripheral (/i/, /a/, and /u/) vowels and /o/, which is short. Short vowels are used much more frequently than long vowels, excepting /o/, the least common vowel quality in Bardi.
As expected for languages with rather few vowel qualities, allophonic variation is extensive, though long vowels have a more stable realization. /a/ is probably the most variable vowel, ranging from
�to
� from entirely front to back. /aː/ is more consistently realized as
�ː /i/, /u/, /uː/ are usually a more lower
�and
�~o(ː) with /iː/ being closer to the cardinal vowel. Finally, /o/ is most often realized as
�
While otherwise quite similar to that of languages in the more well-known
Pama-Nyungan family, the orthography of Bardi is exceptional in its transcribing of both high-back vowels as 'oo' rather than 'u'. This convention is typical of other Kimberly languages, such as
Gooniyandi and
Miriwoong. While one might suspect that this orthographic depth could lead to communication difficulties, /uː/ is by far the least common vowel in the language and bears little functional load.
Syllable structure
Bardi's syllabic template is .
Bardi does not allow consonant clusters in the onset, except in borrowed words. A cluster of two consonants is allowed in the coda. That said, "within a syllable coda, the only possibility is /l/, /ɻ/ , or /r/ followed by a nasal which is homorganic with the following stop."
Stress
Stress is demarcative in Bardi.
Primary stress
In linguistics, and particularly phonology, stress or accent is the relative emphasis or prominence given to a certain syllable in a word or to a certain word in a phrase or sentence. That emphasis is typically caused by such properties as i ...
in Bardi is always assigned to the first syllable, and all Bardi words receive this stress. In fact, primary stress even falls on the initial syllable of borrowed words that placed the stress elsewhere in their language of origin.
Stress alone never distinguishes between
minimal pair
In phonology, minimal pairs are pairs of words or phrases in a particular language, spoken or signed, that differ in only one phonological element, such as a phoneme, toneme or chroneme, and have distinct meanings. They are used to demonstrate ...
s in Bardi.
Morphology
Bardi is highly
affix
In linguistics, an affix is a morpheme that is attached to a word stem to form a new word or word form. Affixes may be derivational, like English ''-ness'' and ''pre-'', or inflectional, like English plural ''-s'' and past tense ''-ed''. They ...
al, containing both
derivational and
inflectional
In linguistic morphology, inflection (or inflexion) is a process of word formation in which a word is modified to express different grammatical categories such as tense, case, voice, aspect, person, number, gender, mood, animacy, an ...
affixation.
There are four major word classes in Bardi: nominals, verb roots, preverbs, and particles. These classes are defined according to their abilities to combine with other words and to inflect. Regarding their positioning across these two (i.e., distributional and inflectional) measures, "
l four of the primary word classes can be distinguished on distributional criteria and three of the four can be distinguished on inflectional criteria as well."
Nominal morphology
Nominal derivational morphology
Nouns can only take a single derivational suffix as Bardi does not allow for multiple derivation. Little of Bardi's derivational morphology is
productive or involves a change in
word class.
The most common derivational morpheme in Bardi is the suffix . This morpheme attaches to the end of a noun to denote a person who is heavily associated with that area or who has reached a level of expertise in it. For example, means ‘speed,' while means a person who is an expert in speed (i.e., a super fast runner). Similarly, the Bardi word for a storyteller, is derived when this suffix is attached to the noun , meaning ‘story.’ Despite its frequency of use, is not productive and can only be applied to certain nouns (though there does not appear any systematicity governing ''which'' nouns do and do not permit its application).
In addition to , there are about 20 other nominal derivational morphemes in Bardi. Several are displayed in the table below.
Nominal case morphology
Nouns in Bardi also often inflect for case. Case marking is phrasal, as it always occurs on the initial element of the noun phrase. There is no additional way in which case is represented in the phrase (Bardi is unusual in this respect).
Core cases are those able to trigger agreement marking on the verb; thus, core case markers indicate argument relations within a clause. In Bardi there are three core cases:
ergative,
absolutive, and
instrumental
An instrumental is a recording normally without any vocals, although it might include some inarticulate vocals, such as shouted backup vocals in a big band setting. Through semantic widening, a broader sense of the word song may refer to instr ...
.
Nouns in Bardi are marked by the ergative case when they are the subject of a transitive verb. Ergative subjects do not need to be animate or personal; for example, meaning 'the sea,' can receive the ergative case marker and thus become .
Nouns in Bardi take the absolutive case when they appear as the subject of an intransitive verb or the object (direct or indirect) of a transitive verb. Nouns receiving the absolutive case are unmarked.
When the applicative construction promotes them to the object of the verb, instrumental nouns can receive case agreement on the verb, thus satisfying the primary condition of a core case. In these instances, the instrumental case marker (''-nga'' or ''-na'') denotes that the noun is the instrument or the means by which an action was carried out. Instruments are always inanimate; if animate, they would be given the ergative (or comitative) case instead.
Bardi also uses local case markers to indicate spatial relations involving location, motion, and direction. The suffixes used to denote these local cases are listed in the table below.
Verbal morphology
Verbal morphology in Bardi is "quasi-agglutinative," in that much of the morphology is able to be divided into segments. It is also entirely
inflectional
In linguistic morphology, inflection (or inflexion) is a process of word formation in which a word is modified to express different grammatical categories such as tense, case, voice, aspect, person, number, gender, mood, animacy, an ...
, with the exception of a single affix with derivational properties.
Simple verbal
predicates in Bardi consist of a verb inflected with prefixes indicating number and person. Suffixes and clitics are optional . Complex verbal predicates additionally feature an uninflected preverb before the root. A prefix indicating person is found in all inflecting verbs. Beyond containing this prefix, inflecting verbs can contain up to ten additional prefixes and suffixes which indicate "transitivity, tense, aspect, applicatives, and reflexive/reciprocal derivation."
Two examples of the inflectional affixation within simple verbal predicates can be seen below.
Other morphological processes
Though Bardi is highly affixal, it also utilizes other morphological processes, including
reduplication,
infixation, and
compounding.
Verbal reduplication in Bardi is primarily used for
iterative,
distributive, or
pluractional
In linguistics, pluractionality, or verbal number, if not used in its aspectual sense, is a grammatical aspect that indicates that the action or participants of a verb is/are plural. This differs from frequentative or iterative aspects in that ...
functions. Iterative reduplication of a verb marks that its action is repetitive (as seen below). Reduplicating a verb can also mark that the action is distributive, or done multiple times by multiple parties. Pluractionality, or multiple parties engaging in the ''same'' action, is also indicated by means of verbal reduplication.
Bardi employs the morphological process of compounding.
means 'mother's father' and means 'mother's mother.' The two are combined to make , meaning 'grandparents.' This same process is seen at work in a majority of Bardi's
kinship terms.
Syntax
Word Order
Bardi has
free word order governed by information structure.
Consider the sentence "," which is ordered V-S-DO-IO:
In addition to the above construction, all other permutations of this sentence are also possible:
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
* (etc.)
Other ordering preferences
Though Bardi has
free word order, some ordering preferences do exist. These preferences are based on principles of “pragmatics, grounding, and focus.”
Often constituents are located 1) clause-initially or 2) clause-finally based on their contextual relevance.
# Focus constituents are usually clause-initial. These constituents include information bearing contrastive focus, as well as information that is novel.
# Non-omitted topics—information that is old but reintroduced—are usually clause-final. In Bardi, topics that persist in discourse are usually omitted in the sentences following their initial introduction. However, if an old topic is overt it may be reintroduced into the sentence—in which case, it will usually be located in the final position of the clause.
References
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*
Further reading
*
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{{Australian Aboriginal languages
Nyulnyulan languages
Kimberley (Western Australia)
Endangered indigenous Australian languages in Western Australia