Naman: a vanishing language of Malakula (Vanuatu)

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Terry Crowley submitted the manuscript of this book to Pacific Linguistics just a few weeks before his sudden and untimely death in January 2005. Terry had been visiting the island of Malakula in Vanuatu since the end of 1999, and had undertaken studies of four languages spoken there: Naman, Tape and Nese, which are all moribund languages, and Avava, still actively spoken. Descriptions of all four were well advanced at the time of his death, though this one was the only one to have been actually submitted for publication. Naman, the subject of this linguistic description, is a moribund language that is spoken on the island of Malakula in the Republic of Vanuatu . Vanuatu is located in the southwest Pacific to the west of Fiji and to the east of northern Queensland (Map 1). Before it gained its independence from joint colonial control by France and the United Kingdom in 1980, it was known in English as the New Hebrides and in French as les Nouvelles-Hébrides.

Author(s): Terry Crowley; John Lynch
Series: Pacific Linguistics 576
Publisher: Pacific Linguistics, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, ANU
Year: 2006

Language: English; Naman (Litzlitz)
Pages: 287
City: Canberra

List of tables, maps and photographs
Preface
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Conventions in citing examples
Photographs
1 Introduction
2 Phonology
3 Nouns and noun phrases
4 Verbs and the verb complex
5 Simple sentences
6 Multi-predicate sentences
7 Illustrative texts
8 Naman lexicon
References