Iwaidja language
Iwaidja, in phonemic spelling Iwaja, is an Australian aboriginal language of the Iwaidja people with about 150 speakers in northernmost Australia. Historically from the base of the Cobourg Peninsula, it is now spoken on Croker Island. It is still being learnt by children.
Phonology
Consonants
Iwaidja has the following 20 consonants.Vowels
Iwaidja has three vowels, /a, i, u/. The following table shows the allophones of the vowels as described by Pym and Larrimore.Vowel | Allophone | Environment |
/i/ | Occurs before laminal consonants. | |
/i/ | Occurs word initially. | |
/i/ | All other cases. | |
/a/ | Occurs before laminal consonants. | |
/a/ | Occurs following laminal consonants except utterance final. Free variation with in this environment. | |
/a/ | Occurs before /w/. Free variation with in this environment. | |
/a/ | All other cases. | |
/u/ | Occurs before laminal consonants. | |
/u/ | Occurs following velar consonant. Free variation with in this environment. | |
/u/ | All other cases. |
Morphophonemics
Iwaidja has extensive morphophonemic alternation. For example, body parts occur with possessive prefixes, and these alter the first consonant in the root:my foot | your foot | his/her foot |
Both the words arm and to be sick originally started with an /m/, as shown in related languages such as Maung. The pronominal prefix for it, its altered the first consonant of the root. In Iwaidja, this form extended to the masculine and feminine, so that gender distinctions were lost, and the prefix disappeared, leaving only the consonant mutation—a situation perhaps unique in Australia, but not unlike that of the Celtic languages.
arm | to be sick | |
they | a-mawur "their arms" | a-macu "they're sick" |
he/she/it | pawur "his/her arm" | pacu "s/he's sick" |