Mah Meri language
Mah Meri, also known as Besisi, Cellate, Hmaʼ Btsisiʼ, Maʼ Betisek, and pejoratively as Orang Sabat,[2] is an Austroasiatic language spoken in the Malay Peninsula. Along with Semaq Beri, Semelai and Temoq, Mah Meri belongs to the Southern Aslian branch of the Aslian languages.[1] Mah Meri is the only remaining Aslian language spoken in a coastal area (on the coasts of Negeri Sembilan and Selangor) and its speaker population is 3,675 as recorded at the Orang Asli Museum in Gombak.[1] A dictionary of the Mah Meri language has been compiled by Nicole Kruspe.[3][4] PhonologyVowelsSource:[5]
Voice registerSource:[5] There are two voice registers in Mah Meri: ConsonantsSource:[5]
GrammarSyntaxSource:[4] In Mah Meri, modifiers and demonstratives occur after the head as shown in examples (1) and (2) while prepositions occur before the head as shown in example (3). (1) dṳk house naleʔ old 'old house' (2) lɘmɔl man horoʔ old ke that 'that old man' (3) haʔ LOC mbɘri forest 'in the forest' For transitive clauses, Mah Meri generally follows an Agent-Verb-Object (AVO) order as shown in example (4), but a Verb-Agent-Object (VAO) order is more common during natural discourse as shown in example (5). (4) hŋkiʔ 3 tomboʔ punch lɘmɔl man ke that 'He punched that man.' (5) lɘpas after ke that nɔŋ, PST:PROX ʔeʔə̤t 1SG kɘdeʔ, hide kaye see hŋkiʔ 3 ʔeʔə̤t 1SG 'After that, I hid, (lest) he see me.' For intransitive clauses in Mah Meri, both Subject-Verb (SV) and Verb-Subject (VS) orders are possible as shown in examples (6) and (7) respectively. (6) ʔeʔə̤t lSG nimbol come.from bawaw sea nɔŋ PST:PROX 'I came from the sea just now.' (7) lɛp enter do water haʔ LOC tə̤k ear 'Water got into (my) ear.' MorphologySource:[4] Morphology in Mah Meri is exclusively through prefixation and infixation. Semi-productive derivations1. Detransitivizing N- 'DTR'
2. Transitive focus ka- 'TR'
3. Distributive < l > 'DISTR'
Regular productive derivationsIterative sɘ-RDP-root 'ITER'The prefix sɘ is attached to the initial constituent of reduplicated bases to express iteration. Example: sɘ-nake-nake ITER-REDUP-that 'that one over and over again' Happenstance tɘ- 'happ'The prefix tɘ- expresses:
Example: tɘ-ka-ca 'happen to eat' Middle voice bɘ- 'MID'The prefix bɘ- is applied to either verbal or nominal roots to express an attributive or possessive function. Example: bɘ-dṳk 'having a house' Language endangerment and vitalityAccording to Ethnologue,[2] the language status of Mah Meri is '6b: Threatened', referring to the situation whereby the language is used for face-to-face communications within all generations, but is losing users. This status is based on Lewis and Smino's (2010)[6] Expanded Graded Intergenerational Disruption Scale (EGIDS). A study by Coluzzi, Riget & Wang (2017)[7] on language use and attitudes across 4 different Mah Meri villages on Carey Island suggests that while Mah Meri still holds a strong and positive status in the community, there is a possibility of a complete language shift towards Malay in the future due to lesser usage of Mah Meri amongst the younger generation. References
External links
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