Damin

From HandWiki - Reading time: 10 min


Damin (Demiin in the practical orthography of Lardil) was a ceremonial language register used by the advanced initiated men of the aboriginal Lardil (Leerdil in the practical orthography) and Yangkaal peoples of northern Australia. Both inhabit islands in the Gulf of Carpentaria, the Lardil on Mornington Island, the largest island of the Wellesley Islands, and the Yangkaal on the Forsyth Islands. Their languages belong to the same family, the Tangkic languages. Lardil is the most divergent of the Tangkic languages, while the others are mutually comprehensible with Yangkaal.

The Lardil word Demiin can be translated as being silent.

History

Origin

The origin of Damin is unclear. The Lardil and the Yangkaal say that Damin was created by a mythological figure in Dreamtime. Hale and colleagues believe that it was invented by Lardil elders; it has several aspects found in language games around the world, such as turning nasal occlusives such as m and n into nasal clicks, doubling consonants, and the like. Evans and colleagues, after studying the mythology of both tribes, speculate that it was the Yangkaal elders who invented Damin and passed it to the Lardil.{{citation needed|date=August 2020} eccentric features of Damin developed in an emergent and unplanned manner in which conventionalized paralinguistic phonations became semanticized as they were linked up with a signed language employed by first-order male initiates".[1]

Past ceremonial use

The Lardil had two initiation ceremonies for men, namely luruku, which involved circumcision, and warama, which involved penile subincision. There were no ceremonies for women, although women did play an important role in these ceremonies, especially in the luruku ceremony.

It is sometimes said that Damin was a secret language, but this is misleading since there was no attempt to prevent the uninitiated members of the Leerdil tribe from overhearing it. However it was taught during the warama ceremony and, therefore, in isolation from the uninitiated. At least one elder is known, who, though not having been subincised, had an excellent command of Damin, but this seems to have been a unique case.

Damin lexical words were organised into semantic fields and shouted out to the initiate in a single session. As each word was announced, a second speaker gave its Lardil equivalent. However, it normally took several sessions before a novice mastered the basics and could use Damin openly in the community. One speaker did claim to have learned to speak Damin in a single session, but on the other hand two senior warama men admitted that they lacked a firm command of the register.

Once Damin had been learned, the speakers were known as Demiinkurlda ("Damin possessors"). They spoke the register particularly in ritual contexts, but also in everyday secular life, when foraging, sitting about gossiping, and the like.

Decline

The cultural traditions of the Lardil and Yangkaal have been in decline for several decades, and the Lardil and Yangkaal languages are nearly extinct. The last warama ceremony was held in the 1950s, so nowadays Damin is no longer in use by either the Yangkaal or the Lardil.

However, recently[when?] a revival of cultural traditions has begun, and luruku has been celebrated. It remains to be seen whether warama ceremonies will also be reactivated.

Phonology

Vowels

Damin words had three of Lardil's four pairs of vowels, [a, aː, i, iː, u, uː]; the fourth, color-coded [æ, æː] (written "e", "ee" in the practical orthography), occurred in grammatical suffixes.

Front Central Back
High i u
Low (æ) (æː) a

It is possible that in monosyllabic words the distinction between long and short vowels is conditioned. See #phonotactics below.

Consonants

Damin was the only click language outside Africa,[2] though lexical clicks do occur elsewhere in language games such as Chinese nursery rhymes. Many consonants are "rearticulated", meaning that the release is repeated.[3] In the word j2iwu (also written jjiwu), for example, the consonant j is articulated twice: [t̠ʲ\t̠ʲiwu], which on its own may even sound like [t̠ʲit̠ʲiwu].[4] Damin used only some of the consonants of everyday Lardil (which are all pulmonic), but they were augmented by four other airstream mechanisms: lingual ingressive (the nasal clicks), glottalic egressive (a velar ejective), pulmonic ingressive (an indrawn lateral fricative), and lingual egressive (a bilabial 'spurt'). Even some of the pulmonic egressive consonants are exotic for the Australian context: fricatives, voiceless nasals, bilabial trills, and uvular affricates.

The consonants of Damin, in the practical orthography and IPA equivalents, were the following:[5][lower-alpha 1]

Damin lexical consonants
Bilabial Alveolar Postalveolar Velar Uvular
laminal apical apical laminal
Plosive voiceless b [p] th [] d [] (rd [ʈ]) j [t̠ʲ]
j2 [t̠ʲ\t̠ʲ], [ɕ]?[lower-alpha 1]
k [k]
ejective k' []
Nasal voiced (m [m]) (nh []) n []
(coda only)
(rn [ɳ] ) ny [n̠ʲ]
(in fny, p'ny only)
ng [ŋ]
voiceless ng* [ŋ̊]
Flap rr [ɾ]
Trill pr [ʙ]
pr2 [ʙ\ʙ]
(in pr2y only?)
Approximant median (r [ɻ] ~
rl [ɭ])
y [j] w [w]
lateral (l [l])
Click nasal m! [ʘ̃] nh!2 [ʇ̃\ʇ̃] n! [ʗ̃]
n!2 [ʗ̃\ʗ̃]
rn! [ψ̃]
rn!2 [ψ̃\ψ̃]
oral egressive p' Error using {{IPA symbol}}: "ʘ↑" not found in list
(in p'ny, p'ng only)[7]
Fricative voiceless f [ɸ]
voiceless ingressive l* [ɬ↓ʔ]
Affricate pf [] qx [][8]

The Lardil consonants rd, rn, rl, m, n, l, r (color-coded) are only found in Lardil grammatical suffixes used in Damin, if they occur at all; stronger Damin may replace many of these with simpler morphology.

There is no apical alveolar–retroflex distinction in Damin root words, with the apparent exception of the clicks.[9] In Lardil, the distinction is neutralized to apico-domal in word-initial position, but in Damin it is neutralized to apical alveolar in all positions. However, a contrast may occur when Lardil suffixes are added to Damin roots.[8]

L* is described as "ingressive with egressive glottalic release".[3]

pf is transcribed [pɸ] but "is possibly a pre-stopped alternate" of f.[3]

Some of the consonants listed above only occur in clusters. /n̺/ only occurs as a coda.

Phonotactics

Damin consonant clusters at the beginning of a word are p'ny [ʘ↑n̠ʲ], p'ng [ʘ↑ŋ], fny [ɸn̠ʲ], fng [ɸŋ], fy [ɸj], prpry [ʙ\ʙj], thrr [t̻ɾ]. Words in normal Lardil may not begin with a cluster. However, Lardil has several clusters in the middle of words, and many of these are not found in Damin words, as Damin only allows n [n̺] and rr [ɾ] in a syllable coda. The attested stem-medial Damin clusters are rrd, rrth, rrk, rrb, jb,[10] though j of jb is not otherwise allowed in coda position. Other clusters, such as nasal–stop, are produced by Lardil grammatical suffixes, and indeed the future suffix is -ngkur, which produces a three-consonant cluster after a coda, as on wijburrngkur 'firewood.FUT'.

Hale & Nash posit that the minimum Damin syllable shape is CVV or CCV. (In Lardil it is CVV.) Words they transcribe as monosyllabic CV are restricted to cases where C is k', ng*, l* ([kʼ], [ŋ̊], [ɬ↓ʔ]), suggesting that these are complex consonants, possibly underlyingly rearticulated k2, ng2, l2 (/k\k, ŋ\ŋ, l\l/, rather as [ɕ] is an alternative realization of j2 /t̠ʲ\t̠ʲ/ and as thrr [t̻ɾ] might be analyzed as d2 /t̺\t̺/). (Note however that some transcriptions do not record CV words, with CVV instead.)[11] In polysyllabic words and compounds, however, long and short vowels appear to contrast, with one recorded minimal pair being didi 'to affect/harm' vs diidi 'to act'[12] (as in 'cut' firewood vs 'gather' firewood).[13]

With only 150 roots in Damin, not all consonants occur before all three vowels. However, as several consonants and consonant clusters are attested from only a single root, there are certain to be accidental gaps, and it is not clear that any gaps are due to phonotactic constraints.

Morphology and lexicon

Damin had a much more restricted and generic lexicon than everyday language. With only about 150 lexical roots, each word in Damin stood for several words of Lardil or Yangkaal. It had only two pronouns (n!aa "me" (ego) and n!uu "not me" (alter)), for example, compared to Lardil's nineteen, and used kurri 'not' as an antonymic prefix (j2iwu "small", kurrij2iwu "large").

Grammatically, the Damin registers of the Lardil and Yangkaal use all the grammatical morphology of those languages, and so therefore are broadly similar, though it does not employ the phonologically conditioned alternations of that morphology.

Damin is spoken by replacing the lexical roots of ordinary Lardil with Damin words. Apart from a leveling of grammatical allomorphs, the grammar remains the same.

Script error: No such module "Interlinear".

Some vocabulary:[14]

n!aa 'ego', n!uu 'alter'
kaa 'now', kaawi 'not now'
l*i 'bony fish', thii 'elasmobranch'
ngaajpu 'human', wuujpu 'animal', wiijpu 'wood' (incl. woody plants), kuujpu 'stone'
m!ii 'vegetable food', wii 'meat/food',[lower-alpha 2] n!2u 'liquid', thuu 'sea mammal', thuuwu 'land mammal'
didi 'harm (affect harmfully)', diidi 'act', kuudi 'see', kuuku 'hear, feel', yiidi 'be (in a place)', wiiwi 'burn', wiidi 'spear', ngaa 'die, decay', fyuu 'fall; the cardinal directions'
n!aa thuuku 'point on body', wii 'surface on body', nguu 'head', k'uu 'eye', nguuwii 'hand, foot'
thuuku 'one, another; place', kurrijpi 'two; hither, close; short'

Antonymic derivation with kurri 'not':

j2iwu 'small', kurrij2iwu 'large' (not small)
thuuku 'one', kurrithuuku 'many' (not one)
kurrijpi 'short', kurrikurrijpi 'long' (not short)
kawukawu 'light', kurrikawukawu 'heavy' (not light)

Specific reference requires paraphrasing. For example, a sandpiper is called a 'person-burning creature' (ngaajpu wiiwi-n wuujpu 'human burn-NOM animal') in reference to its role as a character in the Rainbow Serpent Story, while a wooden axe is 'wood that (negatively) affects honey' (m!iwu didi-i-n wiijpu 'honey affect-PASS-NOM wood')

There is some suggestion of internal morphology or compounding, as suggested by the patterns in the word list above. For example, m!iwu '(native) beehive, honey' and wum!i 'sp. mud crab' may derive from m!ii 'food' and wuu 'mud shell clam'.[clarification needed]

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 The IPA symbols used by Hale & Nash are not always clear without the accompanying description in the text, and sometimes even with that context. For example, j2 is described as a rearticulated Lardil j (see also McKnight 1999: 254), but also alternatively as a voiced fricative, which however is transcribed as a voiceless fricative ⟨ʆ⟩, which if not a typo is an obsolete variant of ⟨ɕ⟩. The IPA letters for a palatal nasal click, ⟨ŋ͡ǂ⟩, are used for what is described as "apico-domal" rn!, perhaps because retroflex clicks did not have a proper symbol in IPA at the time. p' is transcribed and labeled 'ejective', but in the text is clarified as being "produced with increased velaric (not laryngeal) pressure."[6] However, to conclude that this means p' is not actually ejective, one must assume that Hale & Nash use the words 'velaric' and 'laryngeal' to define clicks and ejectives.
  2. more generally, any amorphous food; also food in the abstract

References

  1. Fleming (2017), pp. 1–18.
  2. Traill, Anthony. "Click languages | Clicks, Khoisan, Bushmen | Britannica" (in en). https://www.britannica.com/topic/click-languages. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Hale & Nash (1997), pp. 252.
  4. McKnight (1999), p. 254.
  5. Hale & Nash (1997), pp. 247–259.
  6. Hale & Nash (1997), pp. 252, 258.
  7. Hale & Nash (1997), pp. 258 fn.
  8. 8.0 8.1 McKnight (1999), p. 27.
  9. In attempting to simplify the consonant inventory, Hale & Nash note that the Damin alveolar and retroflex clicks are 'not securely documented' as distinct sounds.
  10. Hale & Nash (1997), p. 255.
  11. Hale & Nash (1997), pp. 257, fn 9.
  12. Hale & Nash (1997), pp. 248.
  13. McKnight (1999), p. 143.
  14. Hale & Nash (1997), pp. 248–249.

Sources

  • Fleming, Luke (2017). "Artificial language, natural history: Speech, sign, and sound in the emergence of Damin". Language & Communication 56: 1–18. doi:10.1016/j.langcom.2017.01.001. 
  • Hale, K.; Nash, D. (1997). "Lardil and Damin Phonotactics". in Tryon, Darrell; Walsh, Michael. Boundary Rider: Essays in Honour of Geoffrey O'Grady. doi:10.15144/PL-C136. 
  • McKnight, D. (1999). People, Countries and the Rainbow Serpent. 

Further reading

  • Dixon, R. M. W. (1980). The Languages of Australia. 
  • Hale, K. (1973). Deep-Surface Canonical Disparities in Relation to Analysis and Change. 
  • Memmott, P.; Evans, N.; Robins, R.; Lilley, I. (January 2006). "Understanding Isolation and Change in Island Human Populations through a Study of Indigenous Cultural Patterns in the Gulf of Carpentaria". Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia 130 (1): 29–47. doi:10.1080/3721426.2006.10887046. Bibcode2006TRSAu.130...29M. 

Template:Australian Aboriginal languages




Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 | Source: https://handwiki.org/wiki/Damin
19 views |
↧ Download this article as ZWI file
Encyclosphere.org EncycloReader is supported by the EncyclosphereKSF