Tolomako Language (tlm)

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Also Known As: Marina,Tolomako-jereviu,Big Bay


Description:

Tolomako is a language of the Oceanic subgroup of Austronesian languages. It is spoken on Santo island in Vanuatu. It distinguishes four numbers for its personal pronouns: singular, dual, trial, plural. Its verbs have no tense or aspect marking, but two moods, realis and irrealis. Substantives and numerals also have the same two moods. E.g. Someone is missing   There is nobody.   Tolomako is characterized by having dentals where the mother language had labials before front vowels. It shares this feature with Sakao, but not with its very close dialect Tsureviu. Thus:     

  When labials do occur preceding front vowels they seem to be reflexes of older labiovelars:      Compare with Fijian ŋata "snake" (spelt gata).

It has been speculated that Tolomako is a very simplified daughter-language or pidgin of the neighboring language Sakao. However, Tolomako is more likely a sister language of Sakao, not a pidgin. It cannot be phonologically derived from Sakao, whereas Sakao can be from Tolomako to some extent. Comparing Tolomako with its close dialect of Tsureviu allows to reconstruct an earlier state, from which most of Sakao can be regularly derived. This earlier state is very close to..... full article at Wikipedia

Location of Tolomako Language Speakers

http://llmap.org/languages/tlm/static_map.png?width=400&height=300&kilroywashere=.png

Rosetta Document Collection

Grammar:
1(download)(browse)
Table Of Contents:
1(download)(browse)

Overview

Main Country: Vanuatu
Spoken In:

Regions: Oceania

ISO 639-3 Code: tlm

Classification Taxonomy

All Languages

  Austronesian Group

    Malayo-Polynesian Group

      Central-Eastern Group

        Eastern Malayo-Polynesian Group

          Oceanic Group

            Central-Eastern Oceanic Group

              Remote Oceanic Group

                North and Central Vanuatu Group

                  Northeast Vanuatu-Banks Islands Group

                    West Santo Group

                      Tolomako Language