Melpa language

Melpa (also written Medlpa) is a Papuan language spoken by about 130,000 people predominantly in Mount Hagen and the surrounding district of Western Highlands Province, Papua New Guinea.

Melpa
Native toPapua New Guinea
RegionMount Hagen District, Western Highlands Province
Native speakers
(130,000 cited 1991)[1]
Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-3med
Glottologmelp1238

Melpa has a pandanus language used during karuka harvest.[2]

Melpa has a voiceless velar lateral fricative, written as a double-barred el (Ⱡ, ⱡ). It is notable for its binary counting system.

Phonology

Consonants

Labial Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar
Voiceless stop p t t k
prenasalized stop ᵐb <mb> ⁿd̪ <nd> ⁿd <nd> ᵑɡ <ng>
Nasal m n n ŋ <ng>
Rhotic r~ɾ r
Lateral l̪d̪ <ld> l ʟ~ʟ̝̊ <ⱡ>
Approximant w j y

Vowels

Front Central Mid
High i ɨ <ʉ> u
Near-high ɪ <i> ʊ <u>
Mid e o
Low a

Numeral system

Decimal Melpa Interpretation
1tenda"one"
2ragl"two"
3ragltika"two-one"
4tembokak"four"
5pömp tsi gudl"one past four"
6pömp ragl gudl"two past four"
7pömp ragltika gudl"two-one past four"
8engak"eight"
9pömp tsi pip"one past eight"
10pömp ragl pip"two past eight"

Melpa language in films

Temboka, a dialect of Melpa, is the native language of the Ganiga tribe,[3] who featured prominently in the Highlands Trilogy of documentaries by Robin Anderson and Bob Connolly (First Contact, Joe Leahy's Neighbours, and Black Harvest).

The documentary Ongka's Big Moka also has Melpa dialogue.

References

  1. Melpa at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  2. Franklin, Karl J. (September 1972). "A Ritual Pandanus Language of New Guinea". Oceania. 43 (1): 66–76. doi:10.1002/j.1834-4461.1972.tb01197.x. OCLC 883021898.
  3. Connolly, Bob (14 February 2017). "Filmmaker Bob Connolly returns to PNG 25 years after 'Black Harvest'". The Australian Financial Review. Retrieved 25 January 2017.
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