- Proto-Pama-Nyungan language
The Proto-Pama-Nyungan language (abbreviated pPN) is the putative ancestor of all the languages of the Pama-Nyungan family, encompassing almost all the
Australian Aboriginal languages , except for somenon-Pama-Nyungan languages spoken in the north and theTasmanian languages . Like mostprotolanguage s it is not directly attested (e.g. in writing), but many linguists believe that it can be reconstructed using thecomparative method . Some however, notablyR. M. W. Dixon , think this is impossible.Proto-Pama-Nyungan may have been spoken as recently as about 5,000 years ago, much more recently than the 40,000 to 60,000 years
Indigenous Australians are believed to have been inhabitingAustralia . How the Pama-Nyungan languages spread over most of the continent and displaced any pre-Pama-Nyungan languages is uncertain; one possibility is that language could have been transferred from one group to another alongsideculture andritual . [Hale & O'Grady, pp. 91–92] [Evans & Rhys]Phonology
Proto-Pama-Nyungan's phonological inventory, as reconstructed by
Barry Alpher (2004), is quite similar to those of most present-day Australian languages.Vowels
Vowel length is contrastive only in the first (i.e. stressed) syllable in a word.Consonants
Proto-Pama-Nyungan seems to have had only one set of
laminal consonant s; the two contrasting sets (lamino-dental and lamino-alveopalatal or "palatal") found in some present-day languages can largely be explained as innovations resulting from conditionedsound change s.Nevertheless, there are a small number of words where an alveopalatal stop is found where a dental would be expected, which are symbolised as *cunicode|ʸ. There is no convincing evidence, however, of an equivalent nasal *ñunicode|ʸ or lateral *λunicode|ʸ.
Notes
References
*cite book |author=Alpher, Barry |year=2004 |chapter=Pama-Nyungan: phonological reconstruction and status as a phylogentic group |editor=Claire Bowern, Harold Koch (eds.) |title=Australian Languages: Classification and the Comparative Method |location=Amsterdam/Philadelphia |publisher=John Benjamins Publishing Company |pages=pp. 93–126
*cite book |author=Evans, Nicholas; Jones, Rhys |year=1997 |chapter=The cradle of the Pama-Nyungans: archaeological and linguistic speculations |editor=Patrick McConvell, Nicholas Evans (eds.) |title=Archaeology and linguistics: Aboriginal Australia in global perspective |location=Melbourne |publisher=Oxford University Press |pages=pp. 385–417
*cite book |author=Hale, Ken; O'Grady, Geoff |year=2004 |chapter=The coherence and distinctiveness of the Pama-Nyungan language family within the Australian linguistic phylum |editor=Claire Bowern, Harold Koch (eds.) |title=Australian Languages: Classification and the Comparative Method |location=Amsterdam/Philadelphia |publisher=John Benjamins Publishing Company |pages=pp. 4–92
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.