- Source: Marshallese language
Marshallese (Marshallese: Kajin M̧ajeļ or Kajin Majōl [kɑzʲinʲ(i)mˠɑːzʲɛlˠ]), also known as Ebon, is a Micronesian language spoken in the Marshall Islands. The language of the Marshallese people, it is spoken by nearly all of the country's population of 59,000, making it the principal language. There are also roughly 27,000 Marshallese citizens residing in the United States, nearly all of whom speak Marshallese, as well as residents in other countries such as Nauru and Kiribati.
There are two major dialects, the western Rālik and the eastern Ratak.
Classification
Marshallese, a Micronesian language, is a member of the Eastern Oceanic subgroup of the Austronesian languages. The closest linguistic relatives of Marshallese are the other Micronesian languages, including Gilbertese, Nauruan, Pohnpeian, Mokilese, Chuukese, Refaluwash, and Kosraean. Marshallese shows 50% lexical similarity with Gilbertese, Mokilese, and Pohnpeian.
Within the Micronesian archipelago, Marshallese—along with the rest of the Micronesian language group—is not as closely related to the more ambiguously classified Oceanic language Yapese in Yap State, or to the Polynesian outlier languages Kapingamarangi and Nukuoro in Pohnpei State, and even less closely related to the non-Oceanic languages Palauan in Palau and Chamorro in the Mariana Islands.
Variation
The Republic of the Marshall Islands contains 34 atolls that are split into two chains, the eastern Ratak Chain and the western Rālik Chain. These two chains have different dialects, which differ mainly lexically, and are mutually intelligible. The atoll of Ujelang in the west was reported to have "slightly less homogeneous speech", but it has been uninhabited since 1980.
The Ratak and Rālik dialects differ phonetically in how they deal with stems that begin with double consonants. Ratak Marshallese inserts a vowel to separate the consonants, while Ralik adds a vowel before the consonants (and pronounced an unwritten consonant phoneme /j/ before the vowel). For example, the stem kkure 'play' becomes ikkure in Rālik Marshallese and kukure in Ratak Marshallese.
Status
Marshallese is the official language of the Marshall Islands and enjoys vigorous use. As of 1979, the language was spoken by 43,900 people in the Marshall Islands. in 2020 the number was closer to 59,000. Additional groups of speakers in other countries including Nauru and the United States increase the total number of Marshallese speakers, with approximately 27,000 Marshallese-Americans living in the United States Along with Pohnpeian and Chuukese, Marshallese stands out among Micronesian languages in having tens of thousands of speakers; most Micronesian languages have far fewer. A dictionary and at least two Bible translations have been published in Marshallese.
Phonology
= Consonants
=Marshallese has a large consonant inventory, and each consonant has some type of secondary articulation (palatalization, velarization, or rounding). The palatalized consonants are regarded as "light", and the velarized and rounded consonants are regarded as "heavy", with the rounded consonants being both velarized and labialized. (This contrast is similar to that between "slender" and "broad" consonants in Goidelic languages, or between "soft" and "hard" consonants in Slavic languages.) The "light" consonants are considered more relaxed articulations.
Although Marshallese has no voicing contrast in consonants, stops may be allophonically partially voiced ([p → b], [t → d], [k → ɡ]), when they are between vowels and not geminated. (Technically, partially voiced stops would be [p̬~b̥], [t̬~d̥], [k̬~ɡ̊], but this article uses voiced transcriptions [b], [d], [ɡ] for simplicity.) Final consonants are often unreleased.
Glides /j ɰ w/ vanish in many environments, with surrounding vowels assimilating their backness and roundedness. That is motivated by the limited surface distribution of these phonemes as well as other evidence that backness and roundedness are not specified phonemically for Marshallese vowels. In fact, the consonant /ɰ/ never surfaces phonetically but is used to explain the preceding phenomenon. (/j/ and /w/ may surface phonetically in word-initial and word-final positions and, even then, not consistently.)
Bender (1968) explains that it was once believed there were six bilabial consonants because of observed surface realizations, /p pʲ pʷ m mʲ mʷ/, but he determined that two of these, /p m/, were actually allophones of /pʲ mʲ/ respectively before front vowels and allophones of /pˠ mˠ/ respectively before back vowels. Before front vowels, the velarized labial consonants /pˠ mˠ/ actually tend to have rounded (labiovelarized) articulations [pʷ mʷ], but they remain unrounded on the phonemic level, and there are no distinct /pʷ mʷ/ phonemes. The pronunciation guide used by Naan (2014) still recognizes [p m] as allophone symbols separate from [pʲ pˠ mʲ mˠ] in these same conditions while recognizing that there are only palatalized and velarized phonemes. This article uses [pʲ pˠ mʲ mˠ] in phonetic transcriptions.
The consonant /tʲ/ may be phonetically realized as [tʲ], [t͡sʲ], [sʲ], [t͡ɕ], [ɕ], [c], or [ç] (or any of their voiced variants [dʲ], [d͡zʲ], [zʲ], [d͡ʑ], [ʑ], [ɟ], or [ʝ]), in free variation. Word-internally it usually assumes a voiced fricative articulation as [zʲ] (or [ʑ] or [ʝ]) but not when geminated. /tʲ/ is used to adapt foreign sibilants into Marshallese. In phonetic transcription, this article uses [tʲ] and [zʲ] as voiceless and voiced allophones of the same phoneme.
Marshallese has no distinct /tʷ/ phoneme.
The dorsal consonants /k ŋ kʷ ŋʷ/ are usually velar but with the tongue a little farther back [k̠ ɡ̠ ŋ̠ k̠ʷ ɡ̠ʷ ŋ̠ʷ], making them somewhere between velar and uvular in articulation. All dorsal phonemes are "heavy" (velarized or rounded), and none are "light" (palatalized). As stated before, the palatal consonant articulations [c], [ɟ], [ç] and [ʝ] are treated as allophones of the palatalized coronal obstruent /tʲ/, even though palatal consonants are physically dorsal. For simplicity, this article uses unmarked [k ɡ ŋ kʷ ɡʷ ŋʷ] in phonetic transcription.
Bender (1969) describes /nˠ/ and /nʷ/ as being 'dark' r-colored, but is not more specific. The Marshallese-English Dictionary (MED) describes these as heavy dental nasals.
Consonants /rʲ/, /rˠ/ and /rʷ/ are all coronal consonants and full trills. /rˠ/ is similar to Spanish rr with a trill position just behind the alveolar ridge, a postalveolar trill [r̠ˠ], but /rʲ/ is a palatalized dental trill [r̪ʲ], articulated further forward behind the front teeth. The MED and Willson (2003) describe the rhotic consonants as "retroflex", but are not clear how this relates to their dental or alveolar trill positions. (See retroflex trill.) This article uses [rʲ], [rˠ] and [rʷ] in phonetic transcription.
The heavy lateral consonants /lˠ/ and /lʷ/ are dark l like in English feel, articulated [ɫ] and [ɫʷ] respectively. This article uses [lˠ] and [lʷ] in phonetic transcription.
The velarized consonants (and, by extension, the rounded consonants) may be velarized or pharyngealized like the emphatic consonants in Arabic or Mizrahi Hebrew.
= Vowels
=Marshallese has a vertical vowel system of just four vowel phonemes, each with several allophones depending on the surrounding consonants.
On the phonemic level, while Bender (1969) and Choi (1992) agree that the vowel phonemes are distinguished by height, they describe the abstract nature of these phonemes differently, with Bender treating the front unrounded surface realizations as their relaxed state that becomes altered by proximity of velarized or rounded consonants, while Choi uses central vowel symbols in a neutral fashion to notate the abstract phonemes and completely different front, back and rounded vowel symbols for surface realizations. Bender (1968, 1969), MED (1976) and Willson (2003) recognize four vowel phonemes, but Choi (1992) observes only three of the phonemes as having a stable quality, but theorizes that there may be a historical process of reduction from four to three, and otherwise ignores the fourth phoneme. For phonemic transcription of vowels, this article recognizes four phonemes and uses the front unrounded vowel /æ ɛ e i/ notation of the MED, following the approach of Bender (1969) in treating the front vowel surface realizations as the representative phonemes.
On the phonetic level, Bender (1968), MED (1976), Choi (1992), Willson (2003) and Naan (2014) notate some Marshallese vowel surface realizations differently from one another, and they disagree on how to characterize the vowel heights of the underlying phonemes, with Willson (2003) taking the most divergent approach in treating the four heights as actually two heights each with the added presence (+ATR) or absence (-ATR) of advanced tongue root. Bender (1968) assigns central vowel symbols for the surface realizations that neighbor velarized consonants, but the MED (1976), Choi (1992) and Willson (2003) largely assign back unrounded vowel symbols for these, with the exception that the MED uses [ə] rather than cardinal [ɤ] for the close-mid back unrounded vowel, and Choi (1992) and Willson (2003) use [a] rather than cardinal [ɑ] for the open back unrounded vowel. Naan (2014) is the only reference providing a vowel trapezium for its own vowels, and differs especially from the other vowel models in splitting the front allophones of /i/ into two realizations ([ɪ] before consonants and [i] in open syllables), merging the front allophones of /ɛ/ and /e/ as [ɛ] before consonants and [e] in open syllables, merging the rounded allophones of /ɛ/ and /e/ as [o], and indicating the front allophone of /æ/ as a close-mid central unrounded vowel [ɘ], a realization more raised even than the front allophone of the normally higher /ɛ/. For phonetic notation of vowel surface realizations, this article largely uses the MED's notation, but uses only cardinal symbols for back unrounded vowels.
Superficially, 12 Marshallese vowel allophones appear in minimal pairs, a common test for phonemicity. For example, [mʲæ] (mā, 'breadfruit'), [mʲɑ] (ma, 'but'), and [mʲɒ] (mo̧, 'taboo') are separate Marshallese words. However, the uneven distribution of glide phonemes suggests that they underlyingly end with the glides (thus /mʲæj/, /mʲæɰ/, /mʲæw/). When glides are taken into account, it emerges that there are only 4 vowel phonemes.
When a vowel phoneme appears between consonants with different secondary articulations, the vowel often surfaces as a smooth transition from one vowel allophone to the other. For example, jok 'shy', phonemically /tʲɛkʷ/, is often realized phonetically as [tʲɛ͡ɔkʷ]. It follows that there are 24 possible short diphthongs in Marshallese:
These diphthongs are the typical realizations of short vowels between two non-glide consonants, but in reality the diphthongs themselves are not phonemic, and short vowels between two consonants with different secondary articulations can be articulated as either a smooth diphthong (such as [ɛ͡ʌ]) or as a monophthong of one of the two vowel allophones (such as [ɛ ~ ʌ]), all in free variation. Bender (1968) also observes that when the would-be diphthong starts with a back rounded vowel [ɒ ɔ o u] and ends with a front unrounded vowel [æ ɛ e i], then a vowel allophone associated with the back unrounded vowels (notated in this article as [ɑ ʌ ɤ ɯ]) may also occur in the vowel nucleus. Because the cumulative visual complexity of notating so many diphthongs in phonetic transcriptions can make them more difficult to read, it is not uncommon to phonetically transcribe Marshallese vowel allophones only as one predominant monophthongal allophone, so that a word like [tʲɛ͡ɔkʷ] can be more simply transcribed as [tʲɔkʷ], in a condensed fashion. Before Bender's (1968) discovery that Marshallese utilized a vertical vowel system, it was conventional to transcribe the language in this manner with a presumed inventory of 12 vowel monophthong phonemes, and it remains in occasional use as a more condensed phonetic transcription. This article uses phonemic or diphthongal phonetic transcriptions for illustrative purposes, but for most examples it uses condensed phonetic transcription with the most relevant short vowel allophones roughly corresponding to Marshallese orthography as informed by the MED.
Some syllables appear to contain long vowels: naaj 'future'. They are thought to contain an underlying glide (/j/, /ɰ/ or /w/), which is not present phonetically. For instance, the underlying form of naaj is /nʲæɰætʲ/. Although the medial glide is not realized phonetically, it affects vowel quality; in a word like /nʲæɰætʲ/, the vowel transitions from [æ] to [ɑ] and then back to [æ], as [nʲæ͡ɑɑ͡ætʲ]. In condensed phonetic transcription, the same word can be expressed as [nʲɑɑtʲ] or [nʲɑːtʲ].
= Phonotactics
=Syllables in Marshallese follow CV, CVC, and VC patterns. Marshallese words always underlyingly begin and end with consonants. Initial, final, and long vowels may be explained as the results of underlying glides not present on the phonetic level. Initial vowels are sometimes realized with an onglide [j] or [w] but not consistently:
/jætʲ/ → [ætʲ ~ jætʲ] 'weave'
Only homorganic consonant sequences are allowed in Marshallese, including geminate varieties of each consonant, except for glides. Non-homorganic clusters are separated by vowel epenthesis even across word boundaries. Some homorganic clusters are also disallowed:
Obstruent-obstruent, nasal-nasal, liquid-liquid, nasal-obstruent, and nasal-liquid clusters undergo assimilation of the secondary articulation except if the first consonant is a rounded coronal or a rounded dorsal. Then, the clusters undergo assimilation of the rounded articulation.
†Obstruent-liquid and liquid-obstruent clusters besides /lʲtˠ/ and /lˠtˠ/ undergo epenthesis.
Liquid-nasal clusters undergo nasal assimilation.
Obstruent-nasal clusters undergo epenthesis (if coronal) or nasal assimilation (if non-coronal).
Clusters involving any glides undergo epenthesis, including otherwise homorganic clusters of two of the same glide.
The following assimilations are created, with empty combinations representing epenthesis.
The vowel height of an epenthetic vowel is not phonemic as the epenthetic vowel itself is not phonemic, but is still phonetically predictable given the two nearest other vowels and whether one or both of the cluster consonants are glides. Bender (1968) does not specifically explain the vowel heights of epenthetic vowels between two non-glides, but of his various examples containing such vowels, none of the epenthetic vowels has a height lower than the highest of either of their nearest neighboring vowels, and the epenthetic vowel actually becomes /ɛ̯/ if the two nearest vowels are both /æ/. Naan (2014) does not take the heights of epenthetic vowels between non-glides into consideration, phonetically transcribing all of them as a schwa [ə]. But when one of the consonants in a cluster is a glide, the height of the epenthetic vowel between them follows a different process, assuming the same height of whichever vowel is on the opposite side of that glide, forming a long vowel with it across the otherwise silent glide. Epenthetic vowels do not affect the rhythm of the spoken language, and can never be a stressed syllable. Phonetic transcription may indicate epenthetic vowels between two non-glides as non-syllabic, using IPA notation similar to that of semi-vowels. Certain Westernized Marshallese placenames spell out the epenthetic vowels:
Ebeye, from earlier Ebeje, from Epjā
Erikub, from Ādkup
Kwajalein, from Kuwajleen
Majuro, from Mājro
Namorik, from Nam̧dik
Omelek, from Kom̧le ("Kom̧le, Kom̧le")
Rongelap, from Ron̄ļap
Rongerik, from Ron̄dik
Ujelang, from Wūjlan̄
Uliga, from Wūlka
Utirik, from Utrōk
Epenthetic vowels in general can be omitted without affecting meaning, such as in song or in enunciated syllable breaks. This article uses non-syllabic notation in phonetic IPA transcription to indicate epenthetic vowels between non-glides.
= Timing
=The short vowel phonemes /æ ɛ e i/ and the approximant phonemes /j ɰ w/ all occupy a roughly equal duration of time. Though they occupy time, the approximants are generally not articulated as glides, and Choi (1992) does not rule out a deeper level of representation. In particular, /V/ short vowels occupy one unit of time, and /VGV/ long vowels (for which /G/ is an approximant phoneme) are three times as long.
As a matter of prosody, each /C/ consonant and /V/ vowel phonemic sequence carries one mora in length, with the exception of /C/ in /CV/ sequences where the vowel carries one mora for both phonemes. All morae are thus measured in /CV/ or shut /C/ sequences:
/CVC/ is two morae: /CV-C/. It is also the shortest possible length of a Marshallese word.
/CVCVC/ is three morae: /CV-CV-C/. Since approximants are also consonants, long vowel sequences of /CVGVC/ are also three morae.
/CVCCVC/ is four morae: /CV-C-CV-C/.
Prefixes like ri- are /CV-/ sequences occupying only one mora but are attached to words rather than standing as words on their own.
Suffixes like -in are /-VC/ sequences. The syllable itself occupies two morae but adds only one mora to the word because the vowel attaches itself to the last consonant phoneme in the word, changing /-C/ into /-C‿V-C/.
That makes Marshallese a mora-rhythmed language in a fashion similar to Finnish, Gilbertese, Hawaiian, and Japanese.
= Historic sound changes
=Marshallese consonants show splits conditioned by the surrounding Proto-Micronesian vowels. Proto-Micronesian *k *ŋ *r become rounded next to *o or next to *u except in bisyllables whose other vowel is unrounded. Default outcomes of *l and *n are palatalized; they become velarized or rounded before *a or sometimes *o if there is no high vowel in an adjacent syllable. Then, roundedness is determined by the same rule as above.
Orthography
Marshallese is written in the Latin alphabet. There are two competing orthographies. The "old" orthography was introduced by missionaries. This system is not highly consistent or faithful in representing the sounds of Marshallese, but until recently, it had no competing orthography. It is currently widely used, including in newspapers and signs. The "new" orthography is gaining popularity especially in schools and among young adults and children. The "new" orthography represents the sounds of the Marshallese language more faithfully and is the system used in the Marshallese–English dictionary by Abo et al., currently the only complete published Marshallese dictionary.
Here is the current alphabet, as promoted by the Republic of the Marshall Islands. It consists of 24 letters.
Marshallese spelling is based on pronunciation rather than a phonemic analysis. Therefore, backness is marked in vowels despite being allophonic (it does not change the meaning), and many instances of the glides /j ɰ w/ proposed on the phonemic level are unwritten, because they do not surface as consonants phonetically. In particular, the glide /ɰ/, which never surfaces as a consonant phonetically, is always unwritten.
The letter w is generally used only in three situations:
To mark a rounded consonant (one of kw ļw ņw n̄w rw) or approximant phoneme (w) before a vowel that precedes an unrounded consonant phoneme (a ā e i ō ū). Even then, if the consonant phoneme comes after a back rounded vowel o̧ o u and before another vowel, it is common to write one of ļ ņ r instead of ļw ņw rw, but the rounded dorsal consonants kw n̄w are still written with w in these circumstances.
To mark a velarized bilabial consonant (either bw or m̧w) before a vowel that precedes a palatalized consonant phoneme (ā e i).
To indicate a [w] glide phonetically surfacing either word-initially or between two vowels.
w is never written out word-finally or before another consonant.
Kuwajleen / Kuajleen [kʷuwɑzʲɛ̆lʲɛːnʲ] "Kwajalein".
The palatal glide phoneme /j/ may also be written out but only as e before one of a o ō o̧, or as i before one of either u ū. The approximant is never written before any of ā e i. A stronger raised palatal glide [i̯], phonemically analyzed as the exotic un-syllabic consonant-vowel-consonant sequence /ji̯j/ rather than plain /j/, may occur word-initially before any vowel and is written i. For historical reasons, certain words like io̧kwe may be written as yokwe with a y, which does not otherwise exist in the Marshallese alphabet.
One source of orthographic variation is in the representation of vowels. Pure monophthongs are written consistently based on vowel quality. However, short diphthongs may often be written with one of the two vowel sounds that they contain. (Alternate phonetic realizations for the same phonemic sequences are provided purely for illustrative purposes.)
wōtōm / otem [wɤdˠɤmʲ ~ o͜ɤdˠɤ͜emʲ ~ odˠemʲ] "all; every".
Modern orthography has a bias in certain spelling choices in which both possibilities are equally clear between two non-approximant consonants.
a is preferred over ā.
ļap [lˠɑpʲ ~ lˠɑ͜æpʲ ~ lˠæpʲ] "big", not *ļāp
i is preferred over ū.
dik [rʲik ~ rʲi͜ɯk ~ rʲɯk] "small", not *dūk
Historically, both ō and e have been common and sometimes interchangeable. It is still true today with some words. In the new orthography, ō is generally preferred over e in most such situations.
aelōn̄ [ɑelʲɤŋ ~ ɑelʲe͜ɤŋ ~ ɑelʲeŋ] "atoll; island; land", not *aelen̄
Epatōn [ɛbʲɑdˠʌnʲ ~ ɛbʲæ͜ɑdˠʌ͜ɛnʲ] "Ebadon", not *Epaten
Kūrijm̧ōj [kɯrˠizʲĭmˠɤtʲ ~ kɯrˠɯ͜izʲĭ͜ɯ̆mˠɤ͜etʲ] "Christmas", not *Kūrijm̧ej
Nōļ [nʲʌlˠ ~ nʲɛ͜ʌlˠ ~ nʲɛlˠ] "Nell", not *Neļ
However, after one of d j m p and before one of unrounded b k ļ m̧ ņ n̄ r t, the spelling e is preferred over ō.
pinjeļ [pʲinzʲɛlˠ ~ pʲinzʲɛ͜ʌlˠ ~ pʲinzʲʌlˠ] "pencil", not *pinjōļ
For the name of the Marshall Islands, the new orthography prefers e, but the spelling with ō is still found.
M̧ajeļ or M̧ajōļ [mˠɑːzʲɛlˠ ~ mˠɑːzʲɛ͜ʌlˠ ~ mˠɑːzʲʌlˠ], "Marshall Islands"
In a syllable whose first consonant is rounded and whose second consonant is palatalized, it is common to see the vowel between them written as one of a ō ū, usually associated with a neighboring velarized consonant:
O̧kwōj [ɒɡʷʌtʲ ~ ɒɡʷɔ͜ɛtʲ] "August".
Wūjlan̄ [wɯzʲĭlʲɑŋ ~ u͜izʲĭlʲæ͜ɑŋ ~ uzʲĭlʲɑŋ] "Ujelang".
The exception is long vowels and long diphthongs made up of two mora units, which are written with the vowel quality closer to the phonetic nucleus of the long syllable:
jouj [tʲoutʲ] "kindness".
naaj [nʲɑːtʲ] "will be".
tāākji [tˠæːɡĭzʲi] "taxicab".
If the syllable is phonetically open, the vowel written is usually the second vowel in the diphthong: the word bwe [pˠɛ] is usually not written any other way, but exceptions exist such as aelōn̄ (/ɰajɘlʲɘŋ/ [ɑelʲɤŋ] "land; country; island; atoll"), which is preferred over *āelōn̄ because the a spelling emphasizes that the first (unwritten) glide phoneme is dorsal rather than palatal.
The spelling of grammatical affixes, such as ri- (/rˠi-/) and -in (/-inʲ/) is less variable despite the fact that their vowels become diphthongs with second member dependent on the preceding/following consonant: the prefix ri- may be pronounced as any of [rˠɯ͜i, rˠɯ, rˠɯ͜u] depending on the stem. The term Ri-M̧ajeļ ("Marshallese people") is actually pronounced [rˠɯmˠɑːzʲɛlˠ] as if it were Rūm̧ajeļ.
= Display issues
=In the most polished printed text, the letters Ļ ļ M̧ m̧ Ņ ņ O̧ o̧ always appear with unaltered cedillas directly beneath, and the letters Ā ā N̄ n̄ Ō ō Ū ū always appear with unaltered macrons directly above. Regardless, the diacritics are often replaced by ad hoc spellings using more common or more easily displayable characters. In particular, the Marshallese-English Online Dictionary (but not the print version), or MOD, uses the following characters:
As of 2019, there are no dedicated precomposed characters in Unicode for the letters M̧ m̧ N̄ n̄ O̧ o̧; they must be displayed as plain Latin letters with combining diacritics, and even many Unicode fonts will not display the combinations properly and neatly. Although Ļ ļ Ņ ņ exist as precomposed characters in Unicode, these letters also do not display properly as Marshallese letters in most Unicode fonts. Unicode defines the letters as having a cedilla, but fonts usually display them with a comma below because of rendering expectations of the Latvian alphabet. For many fonts, a workaround is to encode these letters as the base letter L l N n followed by a zero-width non-joiner and then a combining cedilla, producing Ļ ļ Ņ ņ.
Both systems already require fonts that display Basic Latin (with A a B b D d E e I i J j K k L l M m N n O o P p R r T t U u W w) and Latin Extended-A (with Ā ā Ō ō Ū ū). The standard orthography also requires Combining Diacritical Marks for the combining diacritics. The MOD's alternative letters have the advantage of being neatly displayable as all-precomposed characters in any Unicode fonts that support Basic Latin, Latin Extended-A along with Latin-1 Supplement (with Ñ ñ) and Latin Extended Additional (with Ḷ ḷ Ṃ ṃ Ṇ ṇ Ọ ọ). If a font comfortably displays both the International Alphabet of Sanskrit Transliteration and the Vietnamese alphabet, it can also display MOD Marshallese.
This chart highlights the display issues in common web fonts and common free Unicode fonts that are known to support standard or MOD Marshallese lettering. Distinct typefaces appear only if the operating environment supports them. Some fonts have combining diacritic alignment issues, and the vast majority of the fonts have the Latvian diacritic issue; of the fonts shown below, only the Noto series displays Marshallese correctly.
= Differences in orthography
=The old orthography was still very similar to the new orthography but made fewer phonological distinctions in spelling than the new orthography does. The new orthography attempts phonological consistency while adhering to most of the spelling patterns of the old orthography, especially in regard to vowels and w. It has made the new orthography relatively easy for old orthography users to learn. The phonology of Marshallese was documented by Bender (1969) with written examples using the old orthography. Here are some differences between the new and old orthographies:
The new orthography uses the cedillaed letters ļ m̧ ņ o̧. The old orthography did not use cedillas and ambiguously wrote them l m n o.
The new orthography uses p for "light" /pʲ/ and b for "heavy" /pˠ/. The old orthography used b for both.
Compare old binjel vs. new pinjeļ [pʲinzʲɛlˠ], 'pencil'.
The new orthography consistently uses d for "light" /rʲ/ in all positions. The old orthography often wrote dr before vowels, and r after vowels.
Compare old Amerka vs. new Amedka [ɑmʲɛrʲɛ̆ɡɑ], 'United States'.
Compare old indreo or indrio vs. new indeeo [inrʲeːɔ], 'forever'.
Except in certain affixes like -an whose spelling may be fixed, the new orthography spells the vowel monophthong allophone [æ] as ā in all positions. The old orthography had ā, but it was relatively less common, and [æ] was sometimes written e instead.
Compare old Ebeje vs. new Epjā [ɛbʲɛ̆zʲæ], 'Ebeye'.
Except in certain affixes like ri- whose the spelling of the vowels may be fixed, the new orthography spells the vowel monophthong allophone [ɯ] as ū in all positions. The old orthography spelled [ɯ] as i between consonants.
Compare old Kirijmōj vs. new Kūrijm̧ōj [kɯrˠizʲĭmˠɤtʲ], 'Christmas'.
The new orthography uses only e o ō for allophones of the vowel phoneme /e/. In the old orthography, some words used e o ō, but other words used i u (ū) instead.
Compare old ailin̄ vs. new aelōn̄ [ɑelʲɤŋ ~ ɑelʲeŋ], 'land'.
The new orthography uses the letter o̧ for the vowel monophthong allophone [ɒ] along with many of its related diphthong allophones. The old orthography spelt [ɒ] as a between consonants but o at the ends of words.
Compare old iakwe vs. new io̧kwe [i̯ɒɡʷɛ], 'hello; good bye; love'.
Compare old mo vs. new mo̧ [mʲɒ], 'taboo'.
The new orthography tries to consistently write long vowels and geminated consonants with double letters. The old orthography habitually wrote these as single letters.
Compare old ekatak vs. new ekkatak [ɛkːɑdˠɑk], 'study'.
Compare old jab vs. new jaab [tʲɑːpˠ], 'no'.
The word io̧kwe [i̯ɒɡʷɛ] ('hello; goodbye; love') and the phrase io̧kwe eok [i̯ɒɡʷɛe̯okʷ] ('hello [to you]') are a special case. The new orthography's rules use io̧kwe eok, while the old orthography's rules used iakwe iuk. However, yokwe yuk has been historically more entrenched in both orthographies, but the letter y does not exist in the normal spelling rules of either orthography. That spelling has multilingual significance as well; yokwe (yuk) /ˈjɒkweɪ (ˈjʊk)/ is also the established spelling for the greeting when used in Marshallese-influenced English and by anglophones in the Marshall Islands.
Bender's orthography
In his 1968 publication Marshallese Phonology, linguist Byron W. Bender designed a purely morphophonemic orthography, containing only non-IPA symbols corresponding to consonant phonemes, vowel phonemes and regular reflexes between the dialects, intended for use in dictionaries and language teaching. Besides also appearing in his 1969 tutorial Spoken Marshallese, it appeared in a modified form alongside the "new" orthography in the 1976 Marshallese-English Dictionary (MED) to which he contributed. Bender later collaborated with Stephen Trussel when the MED was adapted to website format as the Marshallese-English Online Dictionary (MOD), with Bender's orthography appearing in an again-modified form.
The MOD's version of Bender's orthography uses under-dot diacritics instead of the cedillas used both by the "new" orthography and by the 1976 MED's version of Bender's orthography, for reasons specific to the MOD's display issues.
In addition to plain sequences of phonemes, Bender's orthography recognizes a few special sequences, many of which relate to regular differences between the Rālik and Ratak dialects of Marshallese.
{yi'y} is for a "passing over lightly" version of the vowel allophone i that occurs at the beginning of certain words, phonetically pronounced [i̯] and existing on the phonemic level as /ji̯j/. For example, {yi'yakʷey} is equivalent to io̧kwe [i̯ɒɡʷɛ] /ji̯jækʷɛj/ "hello; goodbye; love".
{'yiy} is for a "dwelling upon" version of i that occurs at the beginning of certain words, now generally written ii in the "new" orthography, phonetically pronounced [iː] and existing on the phonemic level as /jijj/, effectively making it identical to {yiyy}. An example is {'yiyayiyȩw}, which is equivalent to iiāio [iːæio] /jijjæjijew/ "reunion".
{yiy} at the beginning of a word, without apostrophes, indicates a version of i whose reflex differs between the two dialects. In the Rālik dialect, this assumes the "dwelling upon" pronunciation, equivalent to {'yiy}. In the Ratak dialect, it instead assumes the "passing over lightly" pronunciation, equivalent to {yi'y}. An example is {yiyaļ}, equivalent to iaļ "road":
In the Rālik dialect, {yiyaļ} becomes [iːɑlˠ] /jijjælˠ/ and is often instead written as iiaļ in the "new" orthography.
In the Ratak dialect, {yiyaļ} becomes [i̯ɑlˠ] /ji̯jælˠ/.
{hhV} at the beginning of a word (where "V" can be any vowel) indicates a back unrounded vowel that whose reflex differs between the dialects. In the Rālik dialect, {hhV} becomes {hVhV}, lengthening the vowel. In the Ratak dialect, the second {h} disappears, becoming {hV}, and the vowel remains short. An example is {hhayȩt}, equivalent to aet "yes":
In the Rālik dialect, {hhayȩt} becomes [ɑːetˠ] /ɰæɰæjetˠ/ and is often instead written as aaet in the "new" orthography.
In the Ratak dialect, {hhayȩt} becomes [ɑetˠ] /ɰæjetˠ/.
{yiwV} at the beginning of a word (where "V" can be any vowel) is usually equivalent to {yiwwV}.
{wiwV} at the beginning of a word (where "V" can be any vowel) usually becomes {yiwwV} in the Rālik dialect, but usually becomes {wiwwV} in the Ratak dialect.
When a Bender orthography spelling begins with a doubled consonant other than {hh}, such as {m̧m̧an} "good", its reflex differs between the dialects.
In the Rālik dialect, {m̧m̧an} becomes {yem̧m̧an}, sprouting both a prothetic {y} and a vowel. The dialect generally spells this em̧m̧an [ɛmˠːɑnʲ] /jemˠmˠænʲ/ "good" in the "new" orthography, making it homophonous with the phrase em̧m̧an which means "it is good" in both dialects.
In the Ratak dialect, {m̧m̧an} becomes {m̧em̧an} with only a prothetic vowel, appearing instead between the two consonants. The dialect generally spells this m̧ōm̧an [mˠʌmˠɑnʲ] /mˠɛmˠænʲ/ "good" in the "new" orthography.
In both dialects, the prothetic vowel is equivalent to the first stem vowel unless it is {a}, in which case the stem vowel is always paired with the prothetic vowel {e}. But when spellings like {m̧m̧an} take prefixes with a vowel, there are no prothetic vowels: {ri-} "person" + {m̧m̧an} "good" becomes {rim̧m̧an} /rˠi-mˠmˠænʲ/ [rˠɯmˠːɑnʲ], which the "new" orthography spells rūm̧m̧an "good person".
Grammar
= Morphology
=Nouns are not overtly marked as such, and do not inflect for number, gender, or case. Nouns are often verbalized and verbs nominalized without any overt morphological marker:
Marshallese has determiners and demonstratives which follow the noun they modify. These are marked for number, and in the plural also encode a human/nonhuman distinction. For example, in the singular pinjeļ eo 'the pencil' and ļaddik eo 'the boy' take the same determiner, but in the plural pinjeļ ko 'the pencils' and ļaddik ro have different determiners. Indefinites are an exception; in the singular they are expressed with the word juon 'one' before the noun (e.g. juon al 'a song'), and there is no plural indefinite determiner.
The Marshallese demonstrative system has five levels:
near the speaker (sg. e / pl. human rā / pl. nonhuman kā)
near the speaker and listener (in / rein / kein)
near the listener (ņe / raņe / kaņe)
away from both speaker and listener (eņ / raņ / kaņ)
distant but visible (uweo / roro / koko).
Marshallese possesses two sets of 1st and 2nd person singular pronouns, known as "absolutive" or "emphatic" pronouns and as "objective" pronouns. Marshallese 1st person plurals mark for clusivity. Third person objective pronouns may only be used for humans; nonhumans instead take a null pronoun:
The emphatic pronouns serve as subjects of equational sentences, as complements of prepositions, in order to emphasize objects, in coordination structures, and with topicalized or focused subjects. It is common in Oceanic languages for a special type of pronoun to be used in equational sentences and for topicalization or focus.
Marshallese has four verb tenses: present, past, near future, and future. The tenses are formed by adding a tense suffix to the personal pronoun in the sentence. If the subject is not a personal pronoun, a third-person pronoun is added with the appropriate tense suffix. The present tense is formed by attaching the suffix -j to the personal pronoun (-ij for kōm and kom̧). The suffix for the past tense is either -ar or -kar depending on the dialect. -naaj is the suffix used for the regular future tense and -itōn is used for the near future.
= Syntax
=Marshallese, like many Micronesian languages, divides sentences into two types: predicational sentences and equational sentences. Predicational sentences have SVO word order and a main verb:
In equational sentences, both the subject and predicate are noun phrases:
Vocabulary
= Cardinal numbers
=This includes the cardinal numbers one through ten in the Rālik dialect. Where Ratak forms differ, they are listed in parentheses.
juon [tʲuɔnʲ]
ruo [rˠuɔ]
jilu [tʲilʲu]
emān [ɛmʲænʲ]
ļalem [lˠɑlʲemʲ]
jiljino [tʲizʲinʲɔ] (the l is silent)
jimjuon [tʲimʲ(i)zʲuɔnʲ]
ralitōk [rˠɑːlʲiːdˠɤk] (ejino)
ratimjuon [rˠɑːdˠimʲ(i)zʲuɔnʲ] (ejilimjuon)
jon̄oul [tʲoŋʷoulʲ]
= Months
=Jānwōde [tʲænʲ(ɔ)wɔrˠɛ], 'January'
Pāpode [pʲæbʲɔːrˠɛ], 'February'
M̧aaj [mˠɑːtʲ], 'March'
Eprōļ [ɛbʲ(ɛ)rˠʌlˠ], 'April'
Māe [mʲæe], 'May'
Juun [tʲuːnʲ], 'June'
Juļae [tʲuːlˠɑːɛ], 'July'
O̧kwōj [ɒɡwʌtʲ], 'August'
Jeptōm̧ba [tʲɛbʲ(ɛ)dˠʌmbˠɑ], also Jebtōm̧ba [tʲɛbˠ(ʌ)dˠʌmbˠɑ], 'September'
Oktoba [wɔɡ(ʌ)dˠɔːbˠɑ], 'October'
Nobōm̧ba [nʲɔːbˠʌmbˠɑ], also Nopem̧ba [nʲɔːbʲɛmbˠɑ], 'November'
Tijem̧ba [tˠiːzʲɛmbˠɑ], 'December'
= Weekdays
=Jabōt [tʲɑbˠʌtˠ], 'Sunday; Sabbath'
M̧ande [mˠɑnrʲɛ], 'Monday'
Juje [tʲuːzʲɛ], 'Tuesday'
Wōnje [wʌnzʲɛ], 'Wednesday'
Taije [tˠɑːizʲɛ], 'Thursday'
Bōraide [pˠʌrˠɑːirʲɛ], also Bōļaide [pˠʌlˠɑːirʲɛ], also Būļāide [pˠɯlˠæirʲɛ], 'Friday'
Jādede [tʲærʲɛːrʲɛ], 'Saturday'
= Marshallese atolls and islands
=M̧ajeļ or M̧ajōļ [mˠɑːzʲɛlˠ], 'Marshall Islands'
Ratak [rˠɑːdˠɑk], 'Ratak Chain'
Aelok [ɑelʲokʷ], 'Ailuk Atoll'
Arņo [ɑnnˠɔ], 'Arno Atoll'
Aur [ɑurˠ], 'Aur Atoll'
Ādkup [ærʲ(u)ɡʷupʲ], 'Erikub Atoll'
Bokaak or Bok-ak [pˠɔɡwɑːk], 'Bokak (Taongi) Atoll'
Jāmo̧ [tʲæːmʲɒ], 'Jemo Island'
Likiep [lʲiɡiɛpʲ], 'Likiep Atoll'
Mājeej [mʲæzʲɛːtʲ] or Mājej [mʲæzʲɛːtʲ], 'Mejit Island'
Mājro [mʲæzʲ(e)rˠo], 'Majuro Atoll'
Jarōj [tʲɑrˠʌtʲ], 'Djarrit'
Ļora [lˠɔːrˠɑ], 'Laura'
Teļap [tˠɛːlˠɑpʲ], 'Delap'
Wūlka [wɯlʲ(i)ɡɑ], 'Uliga'
Mile [mʲilʲe], 'Mili Atoll'
M̧aļo-eļap [mˠɑlˠɔːɛlˠɑpʲ], 'Maloelap Atoll'
Ņa-dikdik [nˠɑːrʲiɡ(i)rʲik], 'Knox Atoll'
Pikaar [pʲiɡɑːrˠ], 'Bikar Atoll'
Tōkā [tˠʌɡæ], 'Toke (Taka) Atoll'
Utrōk [wudˠ(ɯ)rˠɤk], 'Utirik Atoll'
Wōjjā [wʌttʲæ], 'Wotje Atoll'
Rālik [rˠæːlʲik], 'Ralik Chain'
Aelōn̄in-ae [ɑelʲɤŋinʲɑːɛ], 'Ailinginae Atoll'
Aelōn̄ļapļap [ɑelʲɤŋ(ɤ)lˠɑbʲ(ɛ)lˠɑpʲ], 'Ailinglaplap Atoll'
Āne-wātak [ænʲeːwæːdˠɑk], also Ānewetak [ænʲeːwɛːdˠɑk], 'Enewetak (Eniwetok) Atoll'
Ellep [ɛllʲɛpʲ], 'Lib Island'
Epoon [ɛbʲɔːnʲ], 'Ebon Atoll'
Jālwōj [tʲælʲ(o)wɤtʲ] or Jālooj [tʲælʲoːtʲ], 'Jaluit Atoll'
Jebwad [tʲɛbˠ(ɔ)wɑrʲ], 'Jabor Island'
Jebat [tʲɛbˠɑtˠ], 'Jabat (Jabot, Jabwot) Island'
Kōle [kɤlʲe], 'Kili Island'
Kuwajleen [kʷuwɑzʲ(ɛ)lʲɛːnʲ], 'Kwajalein Atoll'
Epjā [ɛbʲ(ɛ)zʲæ], also Ibae [ibˠɑːɛ], 'Ebeye Island'
Lae [lʲɑːɛ], 'Lae Atoll'
Nam̧dik [nʲɑmˠ(wi)rʲik], 'Namdrik (Namorik) Atoll'
Nam̧o [nʲɑmˠo], 'Namu Atoll'
Pikinni [pʲiɡinnʲi], 'Bikini Atoll'
Ron̄dik [rʷɔŋʷ(ɯ)rʲik], 'Rongerik (Rongdrik) Atoll'
Ron̄ļap [rʷɔŋʷ(ɔ)lˠɑpʲ], 'Rongelap Atoll'
Wōtto [wʌttˠɔ], 'Wotho Atoll'
Wūjae or Ujae [wɯzʲɑːɛ], 'Ujae Atoll'
Wūjlan̄ or Ujlan̄ [wɯzʲ(i)lʲɑŋ], 'Ujelang Atoll'
Āneen-kio [ænʲeːnʲ(i)ɡiɔ], 'Wake (Enenkio) Atoll' (claimed by the Marshall Islands, administered by the United States)
= Other countries and places
=Amedka [ɑmʲɛrʲ(ɛ)ɡɑ], 'United States (America)'
Awai [ɑwɑːi], 'Hawaii', where a Marshallese diaspora lives
Kalboonea [kɑlʲ(ʌ)bˠɔːnʲɛ̯ɑ], 'California', where a Marshallese diaspora lives
O̧kōnjo̧ [ɒɡwʌnzʲɒ], 'Arkansas', where a large Marshallese diaspora lives
Aujtōrōlia [ɑuttˠʌrˠʌlʲiɑ], 'Australia'
Eijia [eizʲiɑ], 'Asia'
Jaina [tʲɑːinʲɑ], also Jāina [tʲæinʲɑ], also Jeina [tʲeinʲɑ], 'China'
Jepaan [tʲɛbʲɑːnʲ], also Nibbon̄ [nʲippˠɔŋʷ], 'Japan (Nippon)', former colonial ruler
Kuria [kʷurˠiɑ], 'Korea'
Pilipin [pʲilʲibʲinʲ], 'Philippines', former colonial administrator under Spanish rule
Rojia [rʷoːzʲiɑ], 'Russia'
Taiwan [tˠɑːiwɑnʲ], 'Taiwan'
In̄len [iŋ(i)lʲɛnʲ], 'England'
Jam̧uwa [tʲɑːmˠuːwɑ], 'Samoa'
Jāmne [tʲæmʲ(ɛ)nʲɛ], 'Germany', former colonial ruler
Jipein [tʲibʲeinʲ], 'Spain', former colonial ruler
M̧aikronijia [mˠɑːiɡ(u)rʷɔnʲizʲiɑ], 'Micronesia'
Karoļāin [kɑrˠɔːlˠæinʲ], 'Caroline Islands'
Bōļau [pˠʌlˠɑːu], also Bōļao [pˠʌlˠɑːɔ], 'Palau'
FSM [ɛbʲɛzʲɛmʲ], 'Federated States of Micronesia (F.S.M.)'
Boonpe [pˠoːnʲ(e)bʲe], 'Pohnpei (Ponape)'
Iaab [i̯ɑːpˠ], 'Yap'
Kujjae [kʷuttʲɑːɛ], also Kōjae [kʌzʲɑːɛ], 'Kosrae (Kusaie)'
Ruk [rˠukʷ], 'Chuuk (Truk)'
Kilbōt [kilʲ(i)bˠʌtˠ], 'Kiribati (Gilbert Islands)'
M̧adianna [mʲærʲiɑːnnʲɑ], 'Mariana Islands'
Jāipaan [tʲæibʲɑːnʲ], 'Saipan'
Kuwaam̧ [kʷuwɑːmˠ], 'Guam'
Nawōdo [nʲɑːwʌrʲɔ], 'Nauru (Naoero)'
Mejjiko [mʲɛttʲiɡɔ], 'Mexico', former colonial administrator under Spanish rule
Nijiiļōn [nʲuːzʲiːlˠʌnʲ], 'New Zealand'
Nukne [nʲuɡʷ(u)nʲe], also [nʲuɡʷ(u)nʲɛ], 'New Guinea', former colonial administrator under German rule
Piji [pʲiːzʲi], 'Fiji'
Tubaļu [tˠuːbˠɑːlˠu], 'Tuvalu'
Text examples
= Modern orthography
=Here is the Hail Mary in standard Marshallese orthography:
Io̧kwe eok Maria, kwo lōn̄ kōn
menin jouj;
Irooj ej pād ippam̧.
Kwo jeram̧m̧an iaan kōrā raņ im
ejeram̧m̧an ineen lo̧jiōm̧, Jesus.
O Maria kwojarjar, jinen Anij,
kwōn jar kōn kem rijjerawiwi.
Kiiō im ilo iien
amwōj mej. Amen.
= Older orthography
=Here is the Lord's Prayer from the 1982 Marshallese Bible, which uses the older orthography:
Jememuij iljōn̄:
En kwojarjar im utiej etam;
En itok am Ailin̄;
Kimin kōmōnmōn ankilam ilōl einwōt air kōmmōn ilōn.
Letok n̄ōn kim kijim rainin.
Jolok amuij bwid ibbam,
Einwōt kimij julok bwid ko an ro jet ibbem.
Am melejjon̄e kim en jab ellā jen jon̄an,
Ak kwon kejbarok kim jen Eo Enana.
Bwe am Ailin̄ im kajur im aibuijuij indrio, Amen.
References
Bibliography
Abo, Takaji; Bender, Byron; Capelle, Alfred; DeBrum, Tony (1976). Marshallese–English Dictionary. University Press of Hawai‘i. Retrieved 2012-12-29.
Bender, Byron (1968). "Marshallese Phonology". Oceanic Linguistics. 7 (1): 16–35. doi:10.2307/3622845. JSTOR 3622845.
Bender, Byron (1969). Spoken Marshallese: an intensive language course with grammatical notes and glossary. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 0-87022-070-5.
Bender, Byron W.; Goodenough, Ward H.; Jackson, Frederick H.; Marck, Jeffrey C.; Rehg, Kenneth L.; Sohn, Ho-min; Trussel, Stephen; Wang, Judith W. (2003). "Proto-Micronesian Reconstructions: I". Oceanic Linguistics. 42 (1): 1–110. doi:10.2307/3623449. JSTOR 3623449.
Choi, John (1992). "Phonetic Underspecification and Target Interpolation: An Acoustic Study of Marshallese Vowel Allophony". Working Papers in Phonetics. 82. Los Angeles: UCLA. Retrieved 2012-12-30.
Miller, Rachel (2010). Wa kuk wa jimor: Outrigger canoes, social change, and modern life in the Marshall Islands. University of Hawai’i. hdl:10125/21114.
Rudiak-Gould, Peter (2004). Practical Marshallese (PDF). WorldTeach. Retrieved 2012-12-05.
Willson, Heather (2002), The Marshallese Complementizer Phrase (PDF), Arizona State University, archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04, retrieved 2012-12-10
Willson, Heather (2003). A Brief Introduction to Marshallese Phonology (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2024-06-16. Retrieved 2012-12-04.
Willson, Heather (2008). Subject Positions in Marshallese (PDF). University of California, Los Angeles. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-11-13. Retrieved 2012-12-10.
Further reading
Bender, Byron W. (1969). Vowel dissimilation in Marshallese. In Working papers in linguistics (No. 11, pp. 88–96). University of Hawaii.
Bender, Byron W (1973). "Parallelisms in the morphophonemics of several Micronesian languages". Oceanic Linguistics. 12 (1/2): 455–477. doi:10.2307/3622863. JSTOR 3622863.
Erdland, August (1906). Wörterbuch und Grammatik der Marschall-Sprache. Archiv für das Studium der deutschen Kolonialsprachen IV (in German). Berlin: Georg Reimer.
Hale, Mark. (2007) Chapter 5 of Historical Linguistics: Theory and Method. Blackwell
Hale, Mark (2000). "Marshallese phonology, the phonetics-phonology interface and historical linguistics". The Linguistic Review. 17 (2–4): 241–257. doi:10.1515/tlir.2000.17.2-4.241. S2CID 143601901.
Kroeber, A. L. (1911). "Phonetics of the Micronesian Language of the Marshall Islands". American Anthropologist. New Series. 13 (3): 380–393. doi:10.1525/aa.1911.13.3.02a00020. hdl:10524/11920. JSTOR 659915.
Pagotto, L. (1987). Verb subcategorization and verb derivation in Marshallese: a lexicase analysis.
External links
Naan, a free Marshallese–English Dictionary for beginner/intermediate learners of both languages
Marshallese–English Online Dictionary
Marshallese Phrasebook on the website for the Republic of Marshall Islands lists the Marshallese word for the Marshallese language as kajin Majöl
Peace Corps Marshall Islands Marshallese Language Training Manual (PDF, 275 KB; instead of macrons uses trema on vowels and tilde on n, and underlines instead of cedillas)
Marshallese Spelling Reforms article in the blog, "Far Outliers"
Kaipuleohone has recordings of stories from the 1950s as well as index cards of plant and animal words
Materials on Marshallese are included in the open access Arthur Capell collections (AC1 and AC2) held by Paradisec
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Daftar bahasa menurut ISO 639-2
- Marshallese language
- Marshallese
- Marshallese Americans
- Ralik
- Cedilla
- Langor Island
- Vertical vowel system
- Government of the Marshall Islands
- Flag of Bikini Atoll
- Marshall Islands