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Angor (Anggor) a.k.a. Senagi is a Senagi language of northern Papua New Guinea. It is spoken in 11 villages of Amanab Rural LLG, Sandaun Province, including Senagi village (3°40′53″S 141°12′27″E / 3.681265°S 141.20755°E / -3.681265; 141.20755 (Senagi)) of Bibriari ward.[1][2] Dialects Dialects are Wai (Central Anggor) and Samanai (Southern Anggor).[3] Loving and Bass (1964) list these Anggor dialects and their villages:[4] - Western: Mongo
- Central west: Amandan (3°41′25″S 141°10′05″E / 3.690148°S 141.168092°E / -3.690148; 141.168092 (Amondon)), Fisi, Kwaraman (3°39′07″S 141°09′25″E / 3.651891°S 141.156937°E / -3.651891; 141.156937 (Kwaramun)), Puramen (3°39′02″S 141°10′26″E / 3.650583°S 141.17401°E / -3.650583; 141.17401 (Purumun))
- Central east: Akrani, Baribari, Bibriari (3°39′46″S 141°12′49″E / 3.662695°S 141.213604°E / -3.662695; 141.213604 (Bibriari)), Merere, Nai (3°37′27″S 141°17′23″E / 3.624291°S 141.289758°E / -3.624291; 141.289758 (Nai 1)), Senagi (3°40′53″S 141°12′27″E / 3.681265°S 141.20755°E / -3.681265; 141.20755 (Senagi)), Unupuwai, Wamu (3°40′11″S 141°13′47″E / 3.669845°S 141.229746°E / -3.669845; 141.229746 (Wamu))
- Southern: Samanai
Writing system Angor alphabet[5] Orthography | IPA | A | a | /ɑ/ | B | b | /b/ | D | d | /d/ | E | e | /e/ | F | f | /ɸ/ | G | g | /ɡ/ | H | h | /x/ | I | i | /i/ | Ɨ | ɨ | /ə/ | K | k | /k/ | M | m | /m/ | Mb | mb | /ᵐb/ | N | n | /n/ | Nd | nd | /ⁿd/ | Ŋ | ŋ | /ŋ/ | Ŋg | ŋg | /ᵑɡ/ | O | o | /o/ | P | p | /p/ | R | r | /ɾ/ | S | s | /s/ | T | t | /t/ | U | u | /u/ | Ü | ü | /ɨ/ | W | w | /w/ | Y | y | /j/ | Phonology Consonants Angor has the following 18 consonants.[6][5] Litteral notes the following allophonic processes:[5] - /ɸ/ is voiced [β] word medially.
- /x/ is voiced [ɣ] word medially.
- /ɾ/ is sometimes retroflexed after /a/.
- Final unstressed vowels, especially /ə/, tend to be elided in speech after voiceless plosives /p t k/, prenasalized plosives /ᵐb ⁿd/, and /m n ŋ x/. Prenasalized consonants are pronounced voiceless and aspirated in this position.
Vowels Monophthongs Angor has the following 7 monophthongs.[6] - ^ a b Foley did not explicitly label these as close-mid, but they are written higher than /ə/ in the vowel diagram.
Diphthongs | Phoneme | Orthography | Gloss | Closing | /ai/ | kaiahɨ | white cockatoo | hai | fire | /au/ | nau | like.V.COMP | bau | father | /ao/ | penao | knife | sao | give.me.IMP | /ei/ | ahei | go.3FPL | /o.u/[a] | hou | COMPL.3MPL | tɨ mouyanɨ | mosquito | Opening | /oa/ | koako | shell | gogoa | there | Height-harmonic | /ui/ | mbuifɨ | fingernail | yikui | papaya | /oe/ | hoeyembɨ | sugarcane | baboe | type of banana | nɨmoei | stone | - ^ /o.u/ is technically a vowel sequence
Litteral notes the following allophonic processes:[5] - /e/ tends to be phonetically a glide [eɪ̯] in the medial position (e.g., tefɨ [teɪ̯βə] 'tongue').
- /o/ is generally [ɔ] before [ⁿd] and [ɾ].
References - ^ a b Angor at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022)
- ^ United Nations in Papua New Guinea (2018). "Papua New Guinea Village Coordinates Lookup". Humanitarian Data Exchange. 1.31.9.
- ^ Steer, Martin (2005). Languages of the Upper Sepik and Central New Guinea (PDF). Canberra: Australian National University.
- ^ Loving, Richard and Jack Bass. 1964. Languages of the Amanab Sub-District. Port Moresby: Department of Information and Extension Services.
- ^ a b c d Litteral, Robert (1997). "Organised Phonology Data" (PDF). SIL. Archived (PDF) from the original on 19 April 2022.
- ^ a b Foley, William A. (2018). "The Languages of the Sepik-Ramu Basin and Environs". In Palmer, Bill (ed.). The Languages and Linguistics of the New Guinea Area: A Comprehensive Guide. The World of Linguistics. Vol. 4. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton. pp. 197–432. ISBN 978-3-11-028642-7.
External links Look up Category:Angor lemmas in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. - Angor Grammar Sketch
- PARADISEC archive items for Angor language
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