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Lau, also known as Mala, is an
Oceanic language The approximately 450 Oceanic languages are a branch of the Austronesian languages. The area occupied by speakers of these languages includes Polynesia, as well as much of Melanesia and Micronesia. Though covering a vast area, Oceanic languages ...
spoken on northeast
Malaita Malaita is the primary island of Malaita Province in Solomon Islands. Malaita is the most populous island of the Solomon Islands, with a population of 161,832 as of 2021, or more than a third of the entire national population. It is also the se ...
, in the
Solomon Islands Solomon Islands, also known simply as the Solomons,John Prados, ''Islands of Destiny'', Dutton Caliber, 2012, p,20 and passim is an island country consisting of six major islands and over 1000 smaller islands in Melanesia, part of Oceania, t ...
. In 1999, Lau had about 16,937 first-language speakers, with many second-language speakers through Malaitan communities in the Solomon Islands, especially in
Honiara Honiara () is the capital and largest city of Solomon Islands, situated on the northwestern coast of Guadalcanal. , it had a population of 92,344 people. The city is served by Honiara International Airport and the seaport of Point Cruz, and lies ...
.


The language


Phonology

Lau distinguishes voiced and voiceless stops and has a separate series of labial-velar phonemes distinct from the regular velars. The complete consonant inventory is presented in the table below (with orthographical conventions in angled brackets). The /r/ is a trilled apical rhotic. /w/ is realized as �ʷamong northern Lau speakers, and as among southern Lau speakers. The vowel inventory of five items is presented in the table below These vowels can be long or short depending on the word. Long vowels are orthographically represented by doubling the vowel. The phonotactics do not allow closed syllables, i.e. every word ends with a vowel.


Morphology

Nouns describe people, places, or things. Nouns can be suffixed by possessive markers. For example, ''Aba'' 'hand' can be suffixed by the first person singular possessive marker ''-gu'' to form ''Aba'gu'' 'my hand'. The same suffix can be used on position phrases such as in ''buri'gu'' 'behind me', where ''buri'' means 'behind'. Nouns are split into independent nouns and verbal nouns. ''Na'' is the only independent noun that is used in the Lau language. It is only added to nouns when one is expressing relationships, or it is added to cardinal numbers to form an ordinal number. Pronouns are words that replace a noun in a sentence and can function by themselves as a noun phrase. In Lau, pronouns may suffixed to nouns to denote possession, and suffixed to a verb to mark the subject. Pronouns may only be attached to a certain class of nouns, namely anything that is in close relationship to the person who takes, occupies or holds something without necessarily having ownership. When a pronoun is suffixed to a verb, a second object appears in the suffixed pronoun singular and plural third. Lastly, when a pronoun is used as the subject of a verb such as ''i'', there are multiple ways you can use it. One way is when the suffixed pronoun cannot be added to a word, the longer forms of ''i'' are used as possessive pronouns. Shorter forms of ''i'' are always used with the forms of ''i'' because they cannot be used by themselves as the subject. Verbs are words that describe an action, state or occurrence of something. In Lau, any word can be suffixed by verbal particles and thus used as a verb. In other words, they can be joined to governing pronouns of first persons singular and second persons singular. These verbal particles are ''ka'' and ''ko''. ''Ka'' can be used at the same time when someone is talking about something in the present and in the future tense. On the other hand, ''ko'' can be used when someone is talking in the present and future tense but it cannot be used at the same time. Moreover, ''ko'' is used only with personal pronouns. Adverbs are words or phrases that modify an adjective, verb or another adverb. Most adverbs that are use in the Lau language are just nouns and verbs and occasionally some adjectives. Adverbs are used when someone is talking about a place, a time, and manner. Adjectives are words or phrases denoting an attribute. Lau uses verbs for attributes, but some adjectives appear without the verbal particles. Adjectival prefixes that are prefixed to verbs includes ''a-, ma-, tata-,'' and ''m-''. The ''a-'' is prefixed to verbs to form participles, as in ''luga'' 'to lose'; ''ma-'' denotes condition, e.g. ''lingi'' 'to pour'. Lau has two types of prepositions: the verb-like and the noun-like. Verb-like prepositions use the same object morphology as in verbs. The verb-like prepositions index their complements with object suffixes, which are otherwise used to index objects on verbs. By contrast, the noun-like prepositions index their complements with personal suffixes, which are otherwise used to index possessors on inalienably possessed nouns. Numerals are prefixed by ''e-''. However, this initial ''e-'' is dropped in quick counting, except in the numeral ''eta''. Lau uses the base ten. Single digits are connected to the preceding multiple of ten with the conjunction ''mana'', as in ''aqala mana fai'' 'fourteen'. This conjunction is not used after multiples of hundred, as can be seen in ''tangalau fai aqala mana fai'' 'one hundred and forty four'.


Syntax

The Lau clause is divided into five different domains, which are, in order: left periphery > subject field > verbal complex > object field > right periphery In the example below, ''ioli gi'' 'people' is a noun phrase located in the subject field. ''gera'' is a co-indexed subject pronoun followed by an aspect marker ''ka''. Finally, the head of the predicate is an intransitive verb ''rii'' 'shout':


Wordlist


Sample text

God Save the King "God Save the King" ("God Save the Queen" when the monarch is female) is ''de facto'' the national anthem of the United Kingdom. It is one of national anthems of New Zealand, two national anthems of New Zealand and the royal anthem of the Isle ...
, from an Anglican translation published in 1945.


Notes and references


Notes


Bibliography

* * * Na tala ʼuria na idulaa diana, reading primer, 1981. * Tala ʼaelana idulaa, reading primer, 1982. *


External links


Na Book Fooalaa.
Portions of the
Book of Common Prayer The ''Book of Common Prayer'' (BCP) is the title given to a number of related prayer books used in the Anglican Communion and by other Christianity, Christian churches historically related to Anglicanism. The Book of Common Prayer (1549), fi ...
published by the Melanesian Mission Press, 1945, digitized by Richard Mammana * Paradisec ha
a number of collections that include Lau materials
notable is Anna Margetts's
AM4
collection of Lau recordings {{Authority control Malaita languages Languages of the Solomon Islands