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Yuat

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The Yuat languages are an independent family of five Papuan languages spoken along the Yuat River in East Sepik Province , Papua New Guinea . They are an independent family in the classification of Malcolm Ross, but are included in Stephen Wurm's Sepik–Ramu proposal. However, Foley and Ross could find no lexical or morphological evidence that they are related to the Sepik or Ramu languages.

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5-644: Yuat may refer to: Papua New Guinea [ edit ] one of the Yuat languages of Papua New Guinea one of the Upper Yuat languages of Papua New Guinea the Yuat River Yuat Rural LLG in East Sepik Province, Papua New Guinea Australia [ edit ] the Yuat people of Australia the Yuat language (Australia) Topics referred to by

10-816: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Yuat languages It is named after the Yuat River of northern Papua New Guinea . Yuat languages are spoken mostly in Yuat Rural LLG of East Sepik Province . The Yuat languages proper are: Foley (2018) provides the following classification. Changriwa and Mekmek are attested only by short words, and are tentatively grouped as separate branches by Foley (2018: 226) due to scanty evidence. The pronouns Ross (2005) reconstructs for proto-Yuat are: Mundukumo and Miyak pronouns are: The following basic vocabulary words are from Davies & Comrie (1985), as cited in

15-550: The Trans-New Guinea database. The words cited constitute translation equivalents, whether they are cognate (e.g. ŋkaᵐbaᵐgat∘ , ŋgambaŋ for “leg”) or not (e.g. fufuimaye , ϕə'ziru for “hair”). Yuat languages distinguish inclusive and exclusive first person pronouns, a feature not found in most other Papuan languages. This tyopological feature has also diffused from Yuat into the Grass languages , which are spoken contiguously to

20-558: The Yuat languages. Yuat grammar and phonology are similar to those of the neighboring Ramu languages . Yuat verbal morphology is relatively simple. Yuat languages are accusative , unlike many other Papuan languages, e.g., Trans New Guinea, East Cenderawasih Bay, Lakes Plain, South Bougainville, which are all ergative . Word order in Yuat languages, like in the Yawa languages , is rigidly SOV, whereas in many other Papuan families, OSV word order

25-404: The same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Yuat . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Yuat&oldid=916172202 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

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