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Tamambo

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 December 2005

Anastasia K. Riehl
Affiliation:
Department of Linguistics, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY akr6@cornell.edu
Dorothy Jauncey
Affiliation:
Australian National Dictionary Centre, Australian National University, Canberra dorothy.jauncey@anu.edu.au
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Abstract

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Tamambo is an Oceanic language spoken on the western half of the island of Malo in northern Vanuatu. There are at least 3000 speakers of the language, most of them living on Malo, with several hundred residing on the neighboring island of Santo and in the country's capital, Port Vila. Many speakers are also fluent in Bislama (an English-lexifier creole spoken in Vanuatu), one of three official languages. A dialect of Tamambo spoken on the eastern half of the island is now almost extinct, the main phonetic differences from the western dialect being the lack of prenasalized stops and labialized consonants, and the short articulation of vowels. Previous phonetic work on Tamambo is limited to a descriptive grammar of the language (Jauncey 1997).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Journal of the International Phonetic Association 2005
Supplementary material: File

Tamambo sound files

These audio files are licensed to the IPA by their authors and accompany the phonetic descriptions published in the Journal of the International Phonetic Association. The audio files may be downloaded for personal use but may not be incorporated in another product without the permission of Cambridge University Press

Download Tamambo sound files(File)
File 1.6 MB