Fuyug language

Goilalan language spoken in Papua New Guinea


title: "Fuyug language" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["languages-of-central-province-(papua-new-guinea)", "goilalan-languages"] description: "Goilalan language spoken in Papua New Guinea" topic_path: "linguistics" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuyug_language" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Goilalan language spoken in Papua New Guinea ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox language"]

FieldValue
nameFuyug
regionPapua New Guinea
speakers14,000
date2003
refe18
familycolorPapuan
fam1Trans-New Guinea?
fam2Goilalan
iso3fuy
glottofuyu1242
glottorefnameFuyug
::

|name=Fuyug |region=Papua New Guinea |ethnicity= |speakers=14,000 |date=2003 |ref=e18 |familycolor=Papuan |fam1=Trans-New Guinea? |fam2=Goilalan |iso3=fuy |glotto=fuyu1242 |glottorefname=Fuyug

Fuyug (Fuyuge, Fuyughe, Mafulu) is a language of Papua New Guinea spoken in the Central Province of the country. The language's 14,000 speakers live in 300 villages in the Goilala District.

Phonology

The usual orthographic convention used to transcribe Fuyug is to use a for , e for , y for , and the corresponding IPA characters for the remaining phonemes.

Vowels

Fuyug possesses five vowel phonemes.

::data[format=table]

FrontBackCloseMidOpen
iu
ɛo
ɑ
::

The vowel is pronounced as the diphthong when word-final as well as before a word-final consonant. For example, ateg ("truth") is pronounced and ode ("where") as .

All vowels are nasalised before a nasal consonant, as in in ("pandanus") , ung ("nose") , em ("house") .

Consonants

Fuyug has 14 consonant phonemes.

::data[format=table]

LabialCoronalVelarPlosiveVoicelessVoicedFricativeVoicelessVoicedNasalApproximantLiquid
ptk
bdɡ
fs
v
mn
wj
l
::

The voiceless plosive are aspirated in a word-final position and before : endanti ("outside") , oki ("fire") , eyak ("return") .

The nasal phoneme assimilates before a velar consonant becoming : yangos ("rain") .

The pronunciation of the liquid is in free variation between a lateral and a flap . However, with the exception of words of foreign origin where the word in the source language is written with an r, this is represented in the orthography as l.

Syllables

Fuyug syllables come in the shape (C)V(C)(C). There cannot be more than two consonants adjacent to one another word-internally and the only final clusters permitted are mb, nd and ng. Within a word vowels may not follow one another.

Stress

Stress in Fuyug is predictable. Stress falls on the final syllable in mono- and disyllabic words and on the antepenult in words of three of four syllables. Affixes do not alter the stressed syllable.

Morphophonology

Certain suffixes (notably the illative -ti) cause a change in the end of the word to which it is attached:

  • m assimilates to n before t: im + -tiinti ("in the eye")
  • l is elided before t: fuy + -ti → fuy ("in the heart")
  • Voiced plosives are devoiced at the end of a word when the following word begins with a vowel or a voiceless consonant: fuy + fuy → fuy ("a road"), fuy + fuy → fuy ("a lot of sand").
  • an i is inserted between two consonant if the first is not l or a nasal: ev + -tieviti ("in the Sun"). With certain verbal suffixes an e is inserted: id + -ngoidengo ("is sleeping").
  • When a root with a final vowel has suffix or clitic attached to it that begins with a vowel, the first vowel is deleted: ne + -ana ("he eats").

Grammar

Personal pronouns

Fuyug has personal pronouns for three numbers (singular, dual, plural) but not gender distinction.

::data[format=table]

PersonSingularDualPlural1st2nd3rd
nadadi
nuyayi
hutumu
::

These pronouns can take four different suffixes: the genitive -l or -le, the emphatic -ni, the comitative -noy and the contrastive -v.

Numerals

Numerals in Fuyug are very restricted, having only fidan ("one") and fuy ("two"). The numbers 3, 4 and 5 are composed of 1 and 2:

  • 3: fuy ("two its other")
  • 4: fuy ("two and two");
  • 5: fuy ("two and two and its other").

After five English numerals are used (numbers less than five often do so as well). The quantifier fuy ("a lot") is also used after three.

References

Bibliography

References

  1. {{harvsp. Bradshaw. 2007
  2. {{harvsp. Bradshaw. 2007
  3. {{harvsp. Bradshaw. 2007
  4. {{harvsp. Bradshaw. 2007
  5. {{harvsp. Bradshaw. 2007
  6. {{harvsp. Bradshaw. 2007
  7. {{harvsp. Bradshaw. 2007
  8. {{harvsp. Bradshaw. 2007
  9. {{harvsp. Bradshaw. 2007
  10. {{harvsp. Bradshaw. 2007
  11. {{harvsp. Bradshaw. 2007

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languages-of-central-province-(papua-new-guinea)goilalan-languages