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Dom is a Trans–New Guinea language of the Eastern Group of the family, spoken in the and Sinasina Districts of and in some other isolated settlements in the western highlands of Papua New Guinea.


Sociolinguistic Background
The Dom people live in an agricultural society, which has a tribal, patrilocal and patrilineal organization. There is only small dialectal differentiation among the clans. The predominant religion is Christianity.


Language Contact Situation
There are three different languages spoken by Dom speakers alongside Dom: , Kuman and . serves as the Papuan lingua franca. Kuman, which is a closely related eastern Chimbu language of high social and cultural prestige, functions as the prestige language used in ceremonies and official situations. School lessons are mostly held in .


Grammar

Phonology

Vowels
+ Vowels ! ! Front ! Back


Minimal pairs
e~i˦ de 'faeces'~˦ di 'axe'
o~u˦ kol 'part~˦ kul 'grass'
e~o~a˥˩ pel 'to dig'~˥˩ pol 'to pull out'~˥˩ pal 'to skin'
a~a:˥˩ bna 'brother'~˥˩ bna: 'frame over the fireplace'


Allophones
Vowel lengthening in a contour pitched syllable has allophonic character.

ee~ɛe:ə,Øi>#C_#
iii:ii
oo~ɔo:~oɔoo
uuu:uu
aaa:aa


Vowel Sequences
iu,io,ia uo
: eu,ei,ea o
::: au,ai,ae a:


Consonants
Source:

The Dom consonant system consists of 13 indigenous and 3 loan consonants.


Minimal pairs
˩˥ su 'two' ~ ˩˥ tu 'thick'
::~ ˩˥ du 'squeeze'
::~ ˩˥ nu 'aim at'
::~ ˩˥ ku 'hold in the mouth'
::~ ˩˥ gu 'shave'
::~ ˩˥ pu 'blow'
::~ ˩˥ mu 'his/her back'
::~ ˩˥ yu 'harvest taro'


Allophones
Variants can be determined by the factors of dialect or age. Certain exceptions show archaic variants, for example the existence of intervocal b in the word ˥˩ iba 'but' or the otherwise non-existent sequence lk, which is used only by elderly people or in official situations. Brackets "()" show, that the allophone is used only in loanwords.


Tones
Source:

Dom is a tonal language. Each word carries one of three tones as shown in the examples below:

  • high:
    • ka˥ 'word'
    • mu˥kal˥ 'a kind of bamboo'
    • no˥ma˥ne˥ 'to think'
  • falling:
    • ŋgal˥˩ 'string back'
    • jo˥pa˩ ' yopa tree', jo˥pal˥˩ 'people'
    • a˥ra˥wa˩ 'pumpkin'
  • rising:
    • kal˩˥ 'thing'
    • a˩pal˧ 'woman'
    • au˩pa˩le˧ 'sister..'


Minimal pairs
wam˥˩ (personal name) ~ wam˩ 'to hitch.' ~ wam˥ 'son..'


Non-phonemic Elements
  • ɨ is optionally inserted between consonants:

::˥˩ komna 'vegetable' kom˥ na˩ or kom˥ ɨ na˩


Morphology
Dom is a suffixing language. Morpheme boundaries between person-number and mood morphemes can be combined.


Syntax
Source:


Phrase Structure
Noun Phrase

attributive noun phrases

possessor marker

relative clause

noun classifier

head nounnumerals

adjectives

appositions

demonstratives

  • elements preceding the head:
* attributive NP

*possessive marker

*relative clause

*noun classifier

  • elements following the head:
*numerals

*adjectives

*appositions

*demonstratives

If a noun phrase includes a demonstrative element, it has always the last position of the phrase:

Adjective Phrase

head adjectiveintensifier

Postpositional Phrase

nounhead postposition

Verbal Phrase

subject

(object)

object

(subject)

adverbials

conditional adverbial clauses

final adverbial clauses

head verbAUX

mutual knowledge marker

enclitics

demonstratives

  • elements preceding the head verb:

* subject:

* subject-object:

* adverbial

* final clause

  • elements following the head verb:

* auxiliars:

* mutual knowledge marker

* demonstratives

There are no zero-place predicates in Dom. As a subject ˩˥kamn 'world' is used:


Constituent Order
Source:

The predominant constituent order is SOV. Only the predicate has to be expressed overtly. An exception are absolute-topic type clauses, which consist only of one noun phrase.


Characteristics of the constituent order
  • Three Place Predicate Order

In the case of a three place predicate the recipient noun always follows the gift noun:

The only position which can be optionally filled is the sentence topic. Possible constituents can be the subject of an equational sentence (default), an extrasentential or a topicalized constituent:

  • subject in an equational sentence (default)
subjectobjectverb

  • extrasentential:
extrasententialsubjectverb

  • topicalized constituent:
object (topicalzied)subjectverb


Marking of Syntactical Relations

Person and Number
Source:

Dom has three different person-number-systems: for pronouns, possessive suffixes on nouns and cross reference markers on verbs.

+ person-number system for pronouns: ! !1 !2

+ person-number system for possessive suffixes: ! !1 !2 !3

+ cross reference markers: ! !1 !2 !3

The marking of dual and plural is not obligatory in all cases but depends on the sem ±human ±animate:


Tense
Source:

Dom has an unmarked non-future tense and a marked future tense.


Non-Future
Non-future tense is used, if
  • the event follows immediately
  • the event is in the past


Future tense
Future tense is marked by the suffix -na (-na~-ra~-a) and is used, if
  • the event is part of the speaker's plan for the next day
  • the event is the speaker's intention and it is possible for the speaker to go through with it
  • the event describes a potentiality or a permanent quality


Negation
A predicate is negated by the suffix -kl. The preceding negation particle ˥ta is optional.


Lexic

Noun Classifiers
Source:

Noun classifiers are lexical items preceding a noun with a more specified meaning. Phonetically and syntactically they form one unit with the following noun and thus differ from an apposition, which consists of two or more phonetic constituents. Noun classifiers can have the following functions:

  • no obvious lexical specification:

  • specifying a polysemoous word:

  • explaining loanwords:


Repetition
A noun can be repeated to express the following relations:

  • reciprocity

  • plurality


Loanwords
is the main source for lexical borrowing, borrowings from are often made indirectly via . Borrowed lexemes mostly refer to new cultural objects and concepts as well as proper names and high numbers., which did not exist in the Dom language before:
  • kar ’car’
  • skul 'school, to study'
  • akn 'Mount Hagen'
  • andret 'hundred'
But recently some already existing Dom words have begun to be replaced by lexical items:
  • wanpla for dom tenanta 'one'
  • blat for dom miam 'blood'
  • stori for dom kapore-el- 'to tell a story'


The Demonstrative System
Source:

Dom has a spatial referencing demonstrative system, i.e. there are certain demonstrative lexemes bearing information about the spatial relation of the referred object to the speaker alongside neutral demonstratives. A Dom speaker also uses different lexemes for visible and invisible objects. In the case of visible objects, the speaker locates it on a horizontal and vertical axis as to whether it is proximal, medium or distal from the speaker and on the same level, uphill or downhill.

Demonstratives with spatial alignment:

For invisible objects one must be aware of the cause for its invisibility. If it is invisible because the object is behind the speaker, a proximal demonstrative is used. Objects obscured behind an obstacle are referred to with distal demonstratives and invisible objects by their nature with downhill demonstratives. Invisible objects, that are very far away, are referred to with the downhill distal demonstrative ˩˥ime.

SRD:subordinative MUT:mutual knowledge

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