- Yawa languages
Infobox Language family
name=Yawan
region=Cenderawasih Bay,Indonesia
familycolor=Papuan
fam1=Extended West Papuan ?
child1=Yawa
child2=SaweruThe Yawa languages are a small family of two closely related
Papuan languages , Yawa (or Yava) and Saweru, which are often considered to be divergent dialects of a single language (and thus alanguage isolate ). They are spoken on centralYapen Island and nearby islets, inCenderawasih Bay , Indonesian Papua.Yawa proper had 6000 speakers in 1987. Saweru has been variously reported to be partially intelligible with other dialects of Yawa and to be considered a dialect of Yawa by its speakers, and to be too divergent for intelligibility and to be perceived as a separate language. It is moribund, spoken by 150 people out of an ethnic group of 300.
Classification
C. L. Voorhoeve tentatively linked Yawa with theEast Geelvink Bay languages in his Geelvink Bay proposal. However, the relationship would be a distant one at best, and Mark Donohue felt in 2001 that Yawa had not been shown to be related to any other language. RecentlyMalcolm Ross made a tentative proposal that Yawa might be part of anExtended West Papuan language phylum, but this has yet to be substantiated. The pronominal resemblances are most apparent when comparing proto-Yawa to the East Bird's Head language Meax::
"d~r, b~w, we~o, p~f" are all common sound correspondences.istorya mong bibs
References
* [http://www.papuaweb.org/bib/hays/loc/YAWA.pdf Papuaweb article on Yawa]
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