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Yil is a Torricelli language of Papua New Guinea spoken in twelve villages in Sundaun province.

Yil
Native toPapua New Guinea
RegionSandaun Province
Native speakers
2,500 (2000 census)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3yll
Glottologyill1241
ELPYil

Phonology

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This section follows Martens and Tuominen (1977).[2] Yil has a small inventory of ten consonants:

Bilabial Alveolar Velar
Stop p t k
Fricative s ɣ
Nasal m n ŋ
Trill r
Lateral l

And seven vowels:

Front Central Back
unrounded rounded
Close i y ə~ɵ u
Mid ɛ~æ o
Open a

In addition there are the diphthongs /ai̯ au̯ ay̯ ei̯/. /i u/ have non-syllabic allophones [j w~β] in onset or coda position. /ɣ/ is devoiced to [x] word-finally, e.g. /uəmaɣ/ [wəmax] 'hawk'.

Phonotactics

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Maximum syllable structure is (C) (C) V (C) (C). Syllables with two-consonant codas only occur word-finally. Distribution of phonemes in different syllable types is shown in the table below.

Syllable type Phoneme distribution Example(s)
V Any vowels may occur /i/ "I"
CV Any consonant or vowel may occur /ni/ "water"
CVC /sak/ "pig"
VC V: /i ə o ɛ a/

C: /p s m n ŋ l r u i/

/an/ "he"

/ar/ "she"

C₁C₂VC₃ C₁: /p t k/

C₂: /r/ V: /u o a/ C₃: /p k r/

/prok/ "quickly"

/trok/ "thigh" /krup/ "white bird"

C₁VC₂C₃ C₁: any consonant may occur

V: /u o a/ C₂: /ɣ m n ŋ l r/ C₃: /p t k ɣ r/

/lank/ "night"

/nakalp/ "back of house" /namaŋalk/ "bird"

VC₁C₂ Rarely observed /ark/ "termite"
*C₁C₂VC₃C₄ Not observed

Stress usually falls on the first syllable, although it is contrastive in some verb forms, e.g. /əˈŋati/ "I bury a man" vs. /ˈəŋati/ "I hurry"

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References

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  1. ^ Yil at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. ^ Martens, Mary; Tuominen, Salme (1977). "A tentative phonemic statement in Yil in West Sepik province". Workpapers in Papua New Guinea Languages. 19: 29–48.