Select your language

Where *R they all? The Geography and History of *R-loss in Southern Oceanic Languages

François Alexandre. 2011. .
ARTICLE, (2011 ) - PUBLISHEDVERSION - English (en-GB)

OPENACCESS - info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess.
Audience : OTHER
HAL CCSD, University of Hawai'i Press
Subject
Oceanic languages, linguistics, contact linguistics, Historical linguistics, Pacific Island studies, Oceanic languages, Austronesian Languages, Historical dialectology, Lapita, Pacific Archaeology, Vanuatu, Historical Phonology, [SHS.LANGUE]Humanities and Social Sciences/Linguistics
Domains
Archéologie, Histoire, Linguistique, Sciences Sociales, Sciences humaines
Description

International audience Some twenty years ago, Paul Geraghty offered a large-scale survey of the retention and loss of Proto-Oceanic *R across Eastern Oceanic languages, and concluded that *R was “lost in proportion to distance from Western Oceanic.” This paper aims at testing Geraghty’s hypothesis based on a larger body of data now available, with a primary focus on a tightly knit set of languages spoken in Vanuatu. By observing the dialectology of individual lexical items in this region, I show that the boundaries between languages retaining vs. losing *R differ for each word, yet they all define a consistent north-to-south cline whereby *R is lost in the south. This cline, which confirms Geraghty’s observations, can be recognized all the way to southern Vanuatu and New Caledonia. Such a neat geographic distribution observed today can be interpreted in historical terms. I propose that the tendency to lose *R emerged somewhere south of Efate, at an early date in the settlement of the archipelago. This sound change triggered a range of individual lexical innovations, each of which spread across what was then a vast social and linguistic network, encompassing the whole of Vanuatu and New Caledonia. The geography of *R reflexes constitutes a fossilized picture of prehistoric social networks, as the once unitary world of Lapita settlers was beginning to break down into increasingly diversified dialects—the ancestors of modern languages.

Keywords
Language
English (en-GB)
Creators
François, Alexandre
Contributors
Australian National University (ANU), Langues et civilisations à tradition orale (LACITO) ; Université Sorbonne Nouvelle - Paris 3-Institut National des Langues et Civilisations Orientales (Inalco)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), ANR-11-IDEX-0005,USPC,Université Sorbonne Paris Cité(2011)
Sources
ISSN: 0029-8115, EISSN: 1527-9421, Oceanic Linguistics, https://hal.science/hal-01137686, Oceanic Linguistics, 2011, 50 (1), pp.140 - 197. ⟨10.1353/ol.2011.0009⟩
Relation
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/doi/10.1353/ol.2011.0009
Coverage
Vanuatu
Name of newspaper