The Timoric languages are a group of
Austronesian languages (belonging to the
Central–Eastern subgroup) spoken on the islands of
Timor, neighboring
Wetar, and (depending on the classification)
Southwest Maluku to the east.
Within the group, the languages with the most speakers are
Uab Meto of
West Timor,
Indonesia
Indonesia, officially the Republic of Indonesia, is a country in Southeast Asia and Oceania between the Indian and Pacific oceans. It consists of over 17,000 islands, including Sumatra, Java, Sulawesi, and parts of Borneo and New Guine ...
and
Tetum of
East Timor
East Timor (), also known as Timor-Leste (), officially the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste, is an island country in Southeast Asia. It comprises the eastern half of the island of Timor, the exclave of Oecusse on the island's north-we ...
, each with about half a million speakers, though in addition Tetum is an official language and a lingua franca among non-Tetum East Timorese.
Languages
Hull (1998) & van Engelenhoven (2009)
Geoffrey Hull (1998) proposes a Timoric group as follows:
*Timoric A ("Extra-Ramelaic", Fabronic; whatever is not Ramelaic)
**West:
Dawan (Uab Meto)–
Amarasi,
Helong, Roti (
Bilba,
Dengka,
Lole Lole may refer to:
*Carlos Reutemann (1942–2021), Argentine retired racing driver and politician nicknamed "Lole"
*Simon Lole (born 1957), choral director, organist, composer, arranger and broadcaster
*Lole language, spoken on Roti Island, Indone ...
,
Ringgou,
Dela-Oenale,
Termanu,
Tii)
**Central:
Tetun,
Bekais,
Habu
**North:
Wetar,
Galoli
The Galoli, or Galolen, are a people of East Timor with a population of about 50,000, primarily along the northern coast of the district of Manatuto. To the west lies the Mambai people. There is an old colony on the southern coast of Wetar island ...
**East:
Kairui
Kawaimina is a syllabic abbreviation used to refer to four languages or dialects of East Timor:
: Kairui, Midiki, Waimaha, and Naueti,
spoken by one or two thousand speakers each. It is a name used by linguists discussing the languages, not ...
,
Waimaha,
Midiki
Kawaimina is a syllabic abbreviation used to refer to four languages or dialects of East Timor:
: Kairui language, Kairui, Midiki language, Midiki, Waimoa language, Waimaha, and Nauete language, Naueti,
spoken by one or two thousand speakers e ...
,
Naueti
Naueti (also written as Nauoti, Nauete and Nauweti but ultimately from Naueti nau eti 'now') is an Austronesian language spoken by 15,045 (census 2010) in the subdistricts of Uato-Lari, Uatucarbau and Baguia in southeastern East Timor. 1,062 Nau ...
*Timoric B ("Ramelaic", near the
Ramelau range)
**West:
Kemak,
Tukudede
Tokodede (also known as Tukude, Tocodede, Tokodé, and Tocod) is one of the languages of East Timor, spoken by about 39,000 people in the municipality of Liquiçá, especially the administrative posts of Maubara and Liquiçá along the northern ...
**Central:
Mambai
**East (Idalaka):
Idaté
Idalaka ( pt, Idalaca) is a Malayo-Polynesian dialect chain spoken in East Timor. The name is a portmanteau of Idaté and Lakalai.
Relation to other languages
The Idalaka dialects are closely related to Tetum and Habun, while they exhibit man ...
,
Isní,
Lakalei,
Lolein
Van Engelenhoven (2009) accepts Hull's classification, but further includes
Makuva
Makuva, also known as Maku'a or Lóvaia, is an apparently extinct Austronesian language spoken at the northeast tip of East Timor near the town of Tutuala.
Makuva has been heavily influenced by neighboring East Timorese Papuan languages, to ...
and the Luangic–Kisaric languages (
Kisar
Kisar, also known as ''Yotowawa'', is a small island in the Southwestern Moluccas in Indonesia, located to the northeast of Timor Island. Most of the island is included within the Southernmost Islands District ('' Kecamatan Pulau Pulau Terselatan ...
,
Romang,
Luang,
Wetan,
Leti
Leti may refer to:
* Leti, Chakwal, a village and Union Council in Pakistan
* Leti Islands, Maluku, Indonesia
** Leti (island), one of the Leti islands in Maluku, Indonesia
* Leti language, a language in Indonesia
* Leti language (Cameroon), a lan ...
) in the Eastern branch of Timoric A.
Taber (1993)
In a
lexicostatistical classification of the languages of Southwest Maluku, Taber (1993:396) posits a "Southwest Maluku" branch of the Timoric languages, that comprises all languages of the area, except for
West Damar and the
Babar languages.
*Timoric
**(other branches on Timor)
**Southwest Maluku
***
East Damar
***Wetar:
Talur,
Wetar cluster (''Aputai'', ''Perai'', ''Tugun'', ''Iliun'')
***Kisar-Roma:
Kisar
Kisar, also known as ''Yotowawa'', is a small island in the Southwestern Moluccas in Indonesia, located to the northeast of Timor Island. Most of the island is included within the Southernmost Islands District ('' Kecamatan Pulau Pulau Terselatan ...
,
Roma
Roma or ROMA may refer to:
Places Australia
* Roma, Queensland, a town
** Roma Airport
** Roma Courthouse
** Electoral district of Roma, defunct
** Town of Roma, defunct town, now part of the Maranoa Regional Council
* Roma Street, Brisbane, a ...
***Luang:
Leti
Leti may refer to:
* Leti, Chakwal, a village and Union Council in Pakistan
* Leti Islands, Maluku, Indonesia
** Leti (island), one of the Leti islands in Maluku, Indonesia
* Leti language, a language in Indonesia
* Leti language (Cameroon), a lan ...
,
Luang,
Wetan
***TNS (Teun-Nila-Serua):
Teun, Nila-Serua (''
Nila
Nila may refer to:
* Nila, alternate name of Nileh Safid, a village in Iran
* Baby Nila, Leela’s little sister on Sesame Street
* Nila River or Bharathapuzha, is a river in the Indian state of Kerala
* Pulau Nila, a small Indonesian volcanic isl ...
'', ''
Serua'')
*(other branches of CMP, including
Babar languages and
West Damar)
Edwards (2018, 2019)
Edwards (2018, 2019) divides the languages of Timor and Southwest Maluku into three branches:
[Edwards, Owen (2019). Reintroducing Welaun. ''Oceanic Linguistics'', Volume 58, Number 1, June 2019, pp. 31-58. https://doi.org/10.1353/ol.2019.0002]
*
Helong
*Central Timor:
Kemak,
Tokodede,
Mambae,
Welaun
*"Timor-Wetar-Babar"
The latter subgroup includes all other languages grouped by Hull as Timoric, as well all languages of Southwest Maluku (including the Babar languages). Within "Timor-Wetar-Babar", Edwards proposes a Rote-Meto branch, with languages spoken on
Rote Island
Rote Island ( id, Pulau Rote, also spelled ''Roti'') is an island of Indonesia, part of the East Nusa Tenggara province of the Lesser Sunda Islands. According to legend, this island got its name accidentally when a lost Portuguese sailor arriv ...
and in
West Timor.
;Rote-Meto
*West Rote-Meto
**
Dela
Dela may refer to:
People
* Dela, Count of Empúries (died c. 894), count of Empúries
* Dela (footballer) (born 1999), Adrián de la Fuente, Spanish footballer
* Dela Smith, headteacher at Beaumont Hill Technology College
* Dela Yampolsky (born ...
,
Oenale
**Dengka-Meto
***
Dengka,
Lelain
***
Meto
*Nuclear Rote
**
Tii,
Lole Lole may refer to:
*Carlos Reutemann (1942–2021), Argentine retired racing driver and politician nicknamed "Lole"
*Simon Lole (born 1957), choral director, organist, composer, arranger and broadcaster
*Lole language, spoken on Roti Island, Indone ...
**
Termanu,
Ba'a,
Korbafo,
Bokai,
Talae,
Keka
**
Bilbaa,
Diu,
Lelenuk
**
Rikou,
Landu,
Oepao
References
* Hull, Geoffrey. 1998. "The basic lexical affinities of Timor's Austronesian languages: a preliminary investigation." ''Studies in Languages and Cultures of East Timor'' 1:97–202.
* Taber, Mark (1993).
Toward a Better Understanding of the Indigenous Languages of Southwestern Maluku" ''Oceanic Linguistics'', Vol. 32, No. 2 (Winter, 1993), pp. 389–441. University of Hawai'i.
External links
LexiRumah(part of th
Lesser Sunda linguistic databasesReconstructing the past through languages of the present: the Lesser Sunda Islands(Revised 24.8.2004) Geoffrey Hull
{{DEFAULTSORT:Timor-Babar languages
Languages of Indonesia
Languages of East Timor