Korafe language


Korafe is a Papuan language spoken in Oro Province, in the "tail" of Papua New Guinea. It is part of the Binanderean family of the Trans–New Guinea phylum of languages. Korafe or could also be called Kailikaili, Kaire, Korafe, Korafi, Korape,and Kwarafe is a language spoken in the Oro Province more specifically in the Tufi District, and Cape Nelson Headlands.

Speakers

For the people that lived of the Korafe language lived with three main principles:
  1. Self-sustaining economy
  2. Responsibilities and such go beyond one generation and can be passed down to one's children and so on and so forth
  3. Belief in magic powers as well as a spirit world that are involved in a good well being for the community
The Korafe people are a people that live in a mainly tribal manner as they wear very outlandish headgear as well as many other types of jewelry not commonly found anywhere else. The people were rich in culture and that can be seen within the complexity in the Korafe Language.

Phonology

Consonants

Stress

Uppercase lettersABDEFGGhIJKMNORSTUVY
Lowercase lettersabdefgghIjkmnorstuvy
IPA

Grammar

The Korafe language has primarily SOV or Subject-Object-Verb word order. An example of the use of Subject-Object-Verb word order is shown below:
ere-gov-ena
REP-plant.vs1-PRES.1S.FN
‘I am planting’

Pronouns

Interrogatives

Stems and Verbs

For stem verbs I the structure of that verb would be said root word followed by -e, -i, or -u.
Example:
sé íti gémbu
say.I cook.I write.I
Stem II verbs are normally somewhat close to Stem I verbs but with a few changes whether it be a vowel shift, reduplication etc. Normally, removes one of the vowels which are most likely -u, or -i
Example:
si itutu gefu
say.II cook.II write.II
Verbs follow serial verb construction, or basically using more than 1 verb next to each other in a clause.
Example:
si-r-ur-ono s gefu-sira
ay.II-EPEN-IPF-SIM.lR. l S.DS write.II-DP.3S.FN
'while I will be speaking' 'he wrote'

Non-Finite Verb">Nonfinite verb">Non-Finite Verb Forms

Positive Deverbals
When creating a positive deverbal it is a root word followed by the suffix -ari.
Example:
s-ari it-ari gemb-ari
say.I-DvB cook.l-DVB write. I-DVB
'to speak/speaking' 'to cook/cooking' 'to write/writing'
Negative Deverbals
Negative versions of Positive Deverbals are the same structurally but just has a different suffix which for negatives is -ae
Example:
s-ae it-ae gemb-ae
say.l-not.do cook.l-not.do write.l-not.do
'not saying' 'not cooking' 'not writing'

Verb Formation

In Korafe only one heavy syllable is allowed
Almost all imperfective verbs will use the -ere rules

-ere replacement rules

  1. When the verb is a stem II verb and also follows any of the following order V, CV, VCV, CVCV, VNCV, CVNCV, then the -ere will be put right before the stem word
Example:
ere-gefu ere-bundi ere-oji
IPF-write.TI IPF-bind.II IPF -butcher.I1
'be writing' 'be binding' 'be butchering'
2. Verb is stem two but have longer configurations such as VCVCV, CVCVCV, VNCVCV,CYNCVCV. In this case the -ere rule applies by having the root word followed by -ere.
Example:
teteru-ere-u t undudu-ere-u
eter-er-u undud-er-u
enter.II-IPF-do.lI.IMP nurture. 11-IPF -do.II'! MP
'be entering' be nurturing'

Nominal and Verb Combinations

Some phrases and expressions can be made with the use nominals and verbs together.
Korafe N+V:Literal renderingFree translation
isoro ewar make'wage war on enemies'
saramana ework do'work'
dubo mema eneck pain do'feel sad, grieve'
Baiboro seBible say'promise on the Bible'
kori seshout say'shout'
tirotarogheripples do again' slosh, ripple, lap'
bainghenod do again'nod off, bow head'

The Epenthetic">Epenthesis">Epenthetic Insertion Rules

The epenthetic rules are used in order to avoid changing the meaning of words that would be changed from suffixes.

Epenthetic r-insertion (imperfective">Imperfective aspect">imperfective)

For r-insertion it is normally used between the stem II verb and the -uru
Example:
gefu-uru --> gefu-r-uru
write. I1-IPF --> write.II-EPEN-IPF
'be writing while'
r-Insertion for one syllable (Ci or Cu stems)
For this case an r is inserted between the stem II verb and the suffix -arira
Example:
barija di-arira --> barija di-r-arira, Not --> d-arira
rainfall rain-F.3S.FN --> rainfall rain-EPEN-F.3S.FN
'it will rain'

Nouns

Noun Phrases">Noun phrase">Noun Phrases