Lo-Toga language

{{short description|Austronesian language spoken in Vanuatu}}

{{Infobox language

|name=Lo-Toga

|altname=Loh, Toga

|dialects=Lo, Toga

|states=Vanuatu

|region=Torres Islands

|speakers=580

|date=2012

|ref=François (2012):88).

|familycolor=Austronesian

|fam2=Malayo-Polynesian

|fam3=Oceanic

|fam4=Southern Oceanic

|fam5=North-Central Vanuatu

|fam6=North Vanuatu

|fam7=Torres-Banks

|iso3=lht

|glotto=loto1240

|glottorefname=Lo-Toga

}}

File:WIKITONGUES- Kami speaking Lo-Toga.webm.]]

Lo-Toga is an Oceanic language spoken by about 580 people on the islands of Lo and Toga, in the Torres group of northern Vanuatu.{{Harvcoltxt|François|2005|p=444}} The language has sometimes been called Loh {{sic}} or Toga, after either of its two dialects.

Name

The language is named after the two islands where it is spoken: Lo and Toga.

Situation and dialects

Its 580 speakers live mostly in Lo and Toga, the two main islands in the southern half of the Torres group. The same language is also spoken by the small populations of the two other islands of Linua and Tegua.

Lo-Toga is itself divided into two very close dialects, Lo (spoken on Lo island) and Toga (spoken on Toga). The inhabitants of northern Vanuatu generally don't draw a distinction between dialects and languages.{{Harvcoltxt|François|2012|p=89}}

Conversely, Lo-Toga is a distinct language from the other language of the Torres group, Hiw.

Phonology

The Lo dialect of Lo-Toga phonemically contrasts 16 consonants and 13 vowels.François (2021).

=Consonants=

class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"

|+ Lo-Toga consonants

! Bilabial

! Alveolar

! Retroflex

! Dorsal

! Labialized
velar

! Glottal

Nasal

| {{IPA link|m}} {{angbr|m}}

| {{IPA link|n}} {{angbr|n}}

|

| {{IPA link|ŋ}} {{angbr|n̄}}

| {{IPA link|ŋʷ}} {{angbr|n̄w}}

|

Plosive

| {{IPA link|p}} {{angbr|p}}

| {{IPA link|t}} {{angbr|t}}

| {{IPA link|ʈ͡ʂ}} {{angbr|d}}

| {{IPA link|k}} {{angbr|k}}

| {{IPA link|kʷ}} {{angbr|q}}

|

Fricative

| {{IPA link|β}} {{angbr|v}}

| {{IPA link|s}} {{angbr|s}}

|

| {{IPA link|ɣ}} {{angbr|g}}

|

| {{IPA link|h}} {{angbr|h}}

Rhotic

|

| {{IPA link|r}} {{angbr|r}}

|

|

|

|

Lateral

|

| {{IPA link|l}} {{angbr|l}}

|

|

|

|

Glide

|

|

|

|

| {{IPA link|w}} {{angbr|w}}

|

=Vowels=

The 13 vowel phonemes of the Lo dialect include 8 monophthongs /i e ɛ a ə ɔ o ʉ/, and five diphthongs /i͡e i͡ɛ i͡a o͡ə o͡ɔ/.{{Harvcoltxt|François|2005|p=460}}; {{Harvcoltxt|François|2011|p=194}}

class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"

|+ Lo-Toga vowels

! rowspan="2" |

! colspan="3" style="text-align:center;"| Monophthongs

! rowspan="7" style="text-align:center;"|

! colspan="2" style="text-align:center;"| Diphthongs

|Front

! |Central

! |Back

! |Front

! |Back

Close

| {{IPA link|i}} {{angbr|i}} || {{IPA link|ʉ}} {{angbr|u}} || || colspan="2" style="text-align:center;"|

Close-mid

| {{IPA link|e}} {{angbr|ē}} || || {{IPA link|o}} {{angbr|ō}} || {{IPA|i͡e}} {{angbr|iē}} ||

Mid

|colspan="3" style="text-align:center;"| {{IPA link|ə}} {{angbr|e}} || || {{IPA|o͡ə}} {{angbr|ōe}}

Open-mid

| {{IPA link|ɛ}} {{angbr|ë}} || || {{IPA link|ɔ}} {{angbr|o}} || {{IPA|i͡ɛ}} {{angbr|ië}} || {{IPA|o͡ɔ}} {{angbr|ōo}}

Open

| colspan="3" style="text-align:center;"| {{IPA link|a}} {{angbr|a}} || colspan="2" style="text-align:center;"| {{IPA|i͡a}} {{angbr|ia}}

Stress may either fall on the penultimate or final syllable, reminiscent of the neighboring Hiw language.

Grammar

Lo-Toga presents various forms of verb serialization.François (2010:) 511-512).

The system of personal pronouns contrasts clusivity, and distinguishes three numbers (singular, dual, plural).François (2016).

Together with its neighbour Hiw, Lo-Toga has developed a rich system of verbal number, whereby certain verbs change their root depending on the number of their main participant.François (2019). Lo-Toga has 18 such pairs of verbs.

Spatial reference in Lo-Toga is based on a system of geocentric (absolute) directionals, which is in part typical of Oceanic languages, and yet innovative.François (2015:) 175-176).

References

{{reflist|2|}}

Bibliography

  • {{citation

|doi=10.1353/ol.2005.0034

|last=François

|first=Alexandre

|author-link = Alexandre François (linguist)

|year=2005

|title=Unraveling the history of vowels in seventeen north Vanuatu languages

|journal=Oceanic Linguistics

|volume=44

|issue=2

|pages=443–504

|url=http://alex.francois.online.fr/data/AlexFrancois_VowelsNorthernVanuatu_OL44-2.pdf

|citeseerx=10.1.1.395.4359

|s2cid=131668754

}}

  • {{Citation

| last = François

| first = Alexandre

|author-mask=2

| author-link =

| contribution = Pragmatic demotion and clause dependency: On two atypical subordinating strategies in Lo-Toga and Hiw (Torres, Vanuatu)

| editor-last = Bril

| editor-first = Isabelle

| title = Clause hierarchy and Clause linking: The Syntax and Pragmatics interface

| volume =

| pages = 499–548

| publisher = Benjamins

| place = Amsterdam

| year = 2010

| contribution-url = http://alex.francois.online.fr/data/AlexFrancois_2010_Pragmatic-demotion-Subordination-Torres.pdf

| ref = demotion

}}

  • {{citation

|last=François

|first=Alexandre

|author-mask=2

|year=2011

|title=Social ecology and language history in the northern Vanuatu linkage: A tale of divergence and convergence

|journal=Journal of Historical Linguistics

|volume=1

|issue=2

|pages=175–246

|doi=10.1075/jhl.1.2.03fra

|url=http://alex.francois.online.fr/data/AlexFrancois_2011_JHL1-2_Social-ecology_Vanuatu.pdf

|hdl=1885/29283

|hdl-access=free

}}

  • {{citation

|last=François

|first=Alexandre

|author-mask=2

|year=2012

|title=The dynamics of linguistic diversity: Egalitarian multilingualism and power imbalance among northern Vanuatu languages

|journal=International Journal of the Sociology of Language

|volume=2012

|issue=214

|doi=10.1515/ijsl-2012-0022

|pages=85–110

|s2cid=145208588

|url=http://alex.francois.online.fr/data/AlexFrancois_2012_NorthVanuatuSocioling_IJSL.pdf

}}

  • {{Cite book

| publisher = Asia-Pacific Linguistics

| isbn = 978-1-922185-23-5

| pages = 137–195

|editor=Alexandre François |editor2=Sébastien Lacrampe |editor3=Michael Franjieh |editor4=Stefan Schnell

| last = François

| first = Alexandre

| author-mask=2

| title = The languages of Vanuatu: Unity and diversity

| chapter = The ins and outs of up and down: Disentangling the nine geocentric space systems of Torres and Banks languages

| location = Canberra

| series = Studies in the Languages of Island Melanesia

| url = http://hdl.handle.net/1885/14819

| contribution-url= http://alex.francois.online.fr/data/AlexFrancois_2015_North-Vanuatu-space-directionals.pdf

| date = 2015

| hdl = 1885/14819

| ref = updown }}

  • {{citation

|last=François

|first=Alexandre

|author-mask=2

|year=2016

|contribution = The historical morphology of personal pronouns in northern Vanuatu

|editor1-last = Pozdniakov

|editor1-first = Konstantin

|title = Comparatisme et reconstruction : tendances actuelles

|volume = 47

|pages = 25–60

|publisher = Peter Lang

|place = Bern

|series = Faits de Langues

|contribution-url= http://alex.francois.online.fr/data/AlexFrancois_2016_History-personal-pronouns_north-Vanuatu_s.pdf

|ref=pronouns

}}

  • {{Cite journal

| doi = 10.1111/1467-968X.12168

| issn =

| volume = 117

| issue = 3

| pages = 338–371

| last = François

| first = Alexandre

| author-mask=2

| title = Verbal number in Lo–Toga and Hiw: The emergence of a lexical paradigm

| journal = Transactions of the Philological Society

| year = 2019

| url = http://alex.francois.online.fr/data/AlexFrancois_2019_Verbal-number-in-Hiw-and-LoToga_TPhS.pdf

| ref= number }}.

  • {{cite web

|url=https://pangloss.cnrs.fr/corpus/Lo-Toga?lang=en&mode=pro&seeMore=true

|title=Presentation of the Lo-Toga language and audio archive

|last=François

|first=Alexandre

| author-mask=2

|date=2021

|website=Pangloss Collection

|location=Paris

|publisher=CNRS

|access-date=21 Feb 2022

|quote=

|ref=pangloss}}