- Source: Western Dani language
Western Dani, or Lani, is a Nuclear-Trans-New Guinea language. It is the Papuan language with the most speakers in Indonesian New Guinea. It is spoken by the Lani people in the province of Highland Papua.
The Baliem Valley tribes are called Oeringoep and Timorini in literature from the 1920s, but those names are no longer used.
Phonology
= Consonants
=The consonant phoneme inventory of Western Dani has been described as follows:
At the beginning of words, oral stops have aspirated allophones [pʰ, tʰ, kʰ, kʷʰ]; intervocalically, voiceless /p t k / have voiced allophones [β d ~ ɾ ɣ ~ ʁ], for instance following the prefix no-/na- meaning "my".
An intervocalic /ɣ/ is pronounced as [ʁ], and a /ɹ/ before a high vowel becomes a fricative [z].
= Vowels
=Vowels /i, u, ɒ/ have allophones [ɪ, ʊ, ɔ].
Vowel length is contrastive in Western Dani, as illustrated by the minimal and near minimal pairs below:
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Bahasa Dani Barat
- Bahasa Sanskerta
- Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
- Peradaban Lembah Indus
- Eleanor Rosch
- Bahasa Sasak
- Abad Pertengahan
- Bahasa Lampung
- Sejarah dunia
- Bahasa Makassar
- Western Dani language
- Dani people
- Dani language
- Grand Valley Dani language
- Baliem Valley languages
- Ekari language
- Karuka
- Trans–New Guinea languages
- Keres language
- Western New Guinea