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Kewa is an Engan language complex of the
Southern Highlands province Southern Highlands is a province in Papua New Guinea. Its provincial capital is the town of Mendi. According to Papua New Guinea's national 2021 census, the total population of Southern Highlands province is 927,306. History Separation of H ...
of
Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea, officially the Independent State of Papua New Guinea, is an island country in Oceania that comprises the eastern half of the island of New Guinea and offshore islands in Melanesia, a region of the southwestern Pacific Ocean n ...
. A dictionary of the western dialect of Kewa has been compiled by .


Phonology


Consonants

* /p, k/ can also be heard as fricatives ¸, x Other realizations of /k/ are x or in the south dialect. * /c/ can also be heard as ʃ * /s/ may also be fronted as ̪when before /a/. * Common realizations of /l, ɾ/ are retroflex sounds ­Ì†, ɽ /l/ may also be heard as a flap º * /ɾ/ can also be heard as a trill in the southeast dialect.


Vowels


Kewa pandanus register

Kewa's elaborate pandanus avoidance register, which is used only in the forest during the
karuka The karuka (''Pandanus julianettii'', also called karuka nut and ''Pandanus'' nut) is a species of tree in the screwpine family (Pandanaceae) and an important regional food crop in New Guinea. The nuts are more nutritious than coconuts, and ar ...
harvest, has been extensively documented. The grammar is regularized and the vocabulary is restricted, with about a thousand words that differ from normal language. This was first described by Karl J. Franklin in 1972. Pandanus-register words have a broader semantic scope. For example, ''yoyo'', a reduplication of ''yo'' 'leaf', refers to hair, ear, breast, and scrotum, all things which hang from the body as pandanus leaves hang from the tree. ''Palaa,'' 'limb,' (either thigh or branch) is used for any reference to trees, including root, firewood, and fire. (Even in normal Kewa, ''repena'' means both 'tree' and 'fire'.) ''Maeye'' or 'crazy' refers to any non-human animal except dogs. It contrasts with the rational world of humans. Many words are coined from Kewa morphology but have idiosyncratic meanings in the forest. ''Aayagopa'', from ''aa'' 'man', ''yago'' 'fellow', and ''pa'' 'to do, to make', refers to man, knee, skin, and neck. Many idiosyncratic phrases are then built on this word. For example, ''ni madi aayagopa-si'' (I carry man- ) means "my father". The grammar has also been simplified. Clause-linking morphology is lost and replaced by simple juxtaposition of the clauses. In standard Kewa, there are two sets of verbal endings, one indicating actions done for the speaker's benefit. That set is missing from the pandanus language. The other inflection differs somewhat. For example, the forms of 'to be' are: (The ''-nu'' in ''aayagopanu'' is a collective suffix.)


Notes


References

* * * *


External links

* Materials on East Kewa are included in the open access
Arthur Capell Arthur Capell (28 March 1902 – 10 August 1986) was an Australian linguist, who made major contributions to the study of Australian languages, Austronesian languages and Papuan languages. Early life Capell was born in Newtown, New South W ...
collections
AC1
an
AC2
held by Paradisec.
Kewa – English Dictionary
{{Languages of Papua New Guinea Engan languages Languages of Southern Highlands Province Taboo Pandanus avoidance registers