Vanimo language

Vanimo
Native to Papua New Guinea
Region Sandaun Province
Ethnicity Dumo people, Dusur
Native speakers
2,700 (2000 census)
Skou
Dialects
  • Dusur (Duso)
  • Dumo (Vanimo)
Language codes
ISO 639-3 vam
Glottolog vani1248
ELP Vanimo

Vanimo (Wanimo, Manimo) is a Skou language of Papua New Guinea which extends from Leitre to Wutung on the Papua New Guinea - Indonesian border.

Phonology

The Duso dialect of Vanimo is unusual in not having any phonemic velar consonants, though it does have phonetic [ŋ].

The vowels of Dumo dialect are,

i u
e~ei ø ⟨ö⟩ o
ɛ~æ ɔ
a

All occur nasalized, varying phonetically between a nasal vowel and a vowel followed by consonantal [ŋ]. Nasal /u/ may be realized as a syllabic [ŋ̍].

In Dumo, there are no velar consonants apart from this [ŋ] (and also as noted below). The other consonants are,

p~ɸ t
b d j~dʲ~d͡ʒ
β~w s ɦ
m n ɲ
l

Consonant clusters are /pl, bl, ml, ɲv, hv, hm, hn, hɲ, hj/ (hv and hm may be allophones). /ɲv/ is pronounced [ŋβ]. There are no coda consonants apart from [ŋ].

/k, ɡ, ŋ/ do occur in Dusö dialect. They correspond to /ɦ/ or zero in Dumo.

Dumo syllables may have either a 'high' or a 'long' tone. There is strict syllable timing, a 'long'-toned syllable takes the entire time allotted for a syllable, whereas with a high-tone or atonic syllable, there is a slight gap between it and the following syllable. Ross writes high tone with a grave accent, and long tone with an acute accent. A syllable with a nasal vowel / coda [ŋ] is not necessarily long, it may have any of the three tones.