Search: Start Page ➙ Language: Mokilese (mkj)
Alternative Names Mokil, Mwoakilese, Mwoakiloa
Family/Group Austronesian, Malayo-Polynesian
Area SE Asia and Oceania
General Data • phonology: • long vowels and vowel-glide sequences are not treated as bisyllabic • vowel reduction: the nucleus of the 2nd of two open syllables in a word of more than two syllables is deleted (exception: vowel of the 1st syllable is high) • final vowel/consonant deletion in derived verbs
• morphology: two word classes: substantive and verb (active, stative, transitive, intransitive) • in Micronesian languages grammatical and semantic (in-)transitivity often differ from each other
Typological Information Western Micronesian language • rightwards derivational reduplication seems to be a feature of all nuclear Micronesian languages (Harrison 1973: 438)
Reduplication Form-Function leftwards (CV:-, CVC-, VCC-: strong syllable-inflection) - rightwards (-CV(C); -CV(C)(V): derivation) - full (intensification; nominalization)
Relationship Form-Function various forms - various functions
Reduplication System • triplication: leftwards duplication (progressive) and triplication (continuative) are usually neutralized, i.e. for most verbs there exists only the duplicated or the triplicated form respectively; triplication occurs mainly if duplication would be ambiguous (with regard to the distinction between derivation and inflection) - triplication is always inflectional
• leftwards (inflectional) reduplication: always a heavy (bimoraic) syllable (CVC- or CV:- or VCC-)
• total assimilation applies in reduplication, but not across other morpheme boundaries
• rightwards reduplication: derives intransitive or neutral verbs from transitives
• a lot of lexicalized reduplication, denoting animals, plants, diseases, colours, etc.
Diachrony The origin of leftwards reduplication might be CV-, which developed to CVC- or CV:- respectively. (Some unproductive CV-reduplications exist.) Today some younger speakers generally use (C)V:- reduplication for inflection (instead of CVC-/VCC-).
Productivity Leftwards triplication (continuative) is fully productive. Rightwards (derivational) reduplication is restricted to certain roots.
Repetitive Operations Onomatopoetic expressions, e.g. koak~koak~koak "to cluck (hen)"; duk~duk~duk "chicken calling"; kuk~kuk~kuk "to nibble on bait" etc.
Forms 
  Functions 
Patterns 
Semantics 
  Word Classes  Word Class of Simplex Form — Word Class of Reduplicant
  All Examples 
⊞ References
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© by Reduplication Project, Institute of Linguistics, University of Graz