- Meso-Melanesian languages
-
Meso-Melanesian Geographic
distribution:Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands Linguistic classification: Austronesian - Malayo-Polynesian
- Oceanic
- Meso-Melanesian
- Oceanic
Subdivisions: —The Meso Melanesian languages are a moderately supported group of Oceanic languages spoken in the large Melanesian islands of New Ireland and the Solomon Islands east of New Guinea.
Composition
A 2008 analysis of the Austronesian Basic Vocabulary Database[1] supported the unity of Meso-Melanesian, including Southeast Solomonic, at an 82% confidence level. In addition, it supported core Meso-Melanesian, excluding Southeast Solomonic and Vitu–Bali, at an 84% confidence level. The traditional group of New Ireland languages, however, was broken up, into Northwest Solomonic and New Ireland proper.
- Southeast Solomonic (languages of Guadalcanal, Gela, Malaita, Makira, and south Isabel in the Solomon Islands)
- Bali–Vitu languages
- Core Meso-Melanesian
- St Matthias
- Northwest Solomonic (languages of Choiseul, New Georgia, and Santa Isabel in the Solomon Islands)
- Nehan–Bougainville (Austronesian languages of Bougainville)
- New Ireland languages (reduced; languages of New Ireland in Papua New Guinea)
There is moderate support for some subgrouping, with broad Meso-Melanesian, core Meso-Melanesian, and Bougainville – Northwest Solomonic each supported at about an 80% confidence level:
(82%) Southeast Solomonic
(58%) Bali–Vitu
(84%) Admiralties
(65%) New Ireland (reduced)
(78%) Nehan–Bougainville (95%)
Northwest Solomonic (99%)
The Bilur language, which is not closely related to other Melanesian languages, likely falls somewhere in the Bougainville–Northwest Solomonic group.
References
Categories:- Meso Melanesian languages
- Malayo-Polynesian
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