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Iaai language

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Iaai ( Iaai pronunciation: [jaːi] in English as / ˈ j aɪ / Y-EYE ) is a language of Ouvéa Island ( New Caledonia ). It shares the island of Ouvéa with Fagauvea , a Polynesian outlier language.

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8-466: Iaai is the sixth-most-spoken language of New Caledonia, with 4078 speakers as of 2009. It is taught in schools in an effort to preserve it. The language has been studied by linguists Françoise Ozanne-Rivierre and Anne-Laure Dotte. Iaai is remarkable for its large inventory of unusual phonemes, in particular its consonants, with a rich variety of voiceless nasals and approximants. Iaai has ten vowel qualities, all of which may occur long and short. There

16-492: A o u/ are written with their IPA letters. /y/ is written û, /æ/ is written ë, /ɔ/ is written â, and /ɤ/ is written ö. Long vowels, which are twice as long as short vowels, are written double. Iaai has an unusual voicing distinction in its sonorants , as well as several coronal series. Unlike most languages of New Caledonia, voiced stops are not prenasalized . Unlike many languages with denti-alveolar stops, Iaai /t̪, d̪/ are released abruptly, and /t̪/ has

24-567: A similar relationship. The voiceless sonorant often marks object incorporation . However, many roots with voiceless sonorants have no voiced cognate. The labialized labials are more precisely labio-velarized labials. There is evidence that non-labialized labial consonants such as /m/ are palatalized /pʲ/ , /mʲ/ , etc. , but this is obscured before front vowels. If this turns out to be the situation, it would parallel Micronesian languages which have no plain labials. Fran%C3%A7oise Ozanne-Rivierre Françoise Ozanne-Rivierre (1941–2007)

32-724: A very short voice onset time . However, the apical post-alveolar and laminal palatal stops /ʈ, ɖ, c, ɟ/ have substantially fricated releases [ʈᶳ, ɖᶼ, cᶜ̧, ɟᶨ] , and may be better described as sounds between proper stops and affricates. The labial approximants are placed in their respective columns following their phonological behaviour (their effects on following vowels), but there is evidence that all members of these series are either labial-palatal or labial-velar . /ɥ̊, ɥ/ are sometimes pronounced as weak fricatives [ɸʲ, βʲ] . In many cases, words with voiced and voiceless approximants are morphologically related, such as /liʈ/ "night" and /l̥iʈ/ "black". /h/ - and vowel-initial words have

40-518: Is little difference in quality depending on length. Iaai constitutes one of the few cases of front rounded vowels attested outside of their geographic stronghold in Eurasia , even if other cases have since been reported in the Oceanic family. The vowel /ø øː/ is only known to occur in six words. In all of these but /ɲ̊øːk/ "dedicate", it appears between a labial (b, m) and velar (k, ŋ) consonant. After

48-458: The non-labiovelarized labial consonants and the vowel /y yː/ , the vowel /ɔ ɔː/ is pronounced [œ œː] . The open vowels only contrast in a few environments. /æ æː/ only occurs after the plain labial consonants and the vowel /y yː/ , the same environment that produces [œ œː] . /a aː/ does not occur after /ɥ ɥ̊ y yː/ , but does occur elsewhere, so that there is a contrast between /æ æː/ and /a aː/ after /b p m m̥ f/ . The vowels /i e ø

56-425: The various languages of Hienghène ( Fwâi , Pije , Jawe , Nemi ); Fagauvea ; and Nyelâyu . She was known for her work on Austronesian comparative linguistics, in particular for the application of the comparative method to the study of Oceanic languages . Her husband, Jean-Claude Rivierre  [ fr ] (1938-2018), was also a linguist working on the languages of New Caledonia. This article on

64-593: Was a French linguist based at LACITO – CNRS , internationally known for her work on the languages of New Caledonia . She completed her doctorate in linguistics in 1973, with a dissertation titled Le iaai, langue mélanésienne d'Ouvéa (Nouvelle-Calédonie) , at Université Paris III , where she was a student of Haudricourt and Hagège . She became a member of the CNRS in 1972 and joined LACITO in 1976, where she remained until her retirement in 2006. She published extensively on several New Caledonian languages, especially Iaai ;

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