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Samoan language 

Samoan
gagana Samoa
Spoken in: Samoa, American Samoa 
Region: Spoken as first language on Samoan Islands Samoa and American Samoa, with substantial communities of speakers in New Zealand, Australia and the U.S.
Total speakers: 870,337 total speakers according to Ethnologue (1999)
Language family: Austronesian
 Malayo-Polynesian (MP)
  Nuclear MP
   Central-Eastern MP
    Eastern MP
     Oceanic
      Central-Eastern
       Central Pacific
        East Fijian-Polynesian
         Samoic
          Samoan 
Official status
Official language in: Samoa (199,377 speakers) and American Samoa (56,700 speakers)
Regulated by: no official regulation
Language codes
ISO 639-1: sm
ISO 639-2: smo
ISO 639-3: smo

The Sāmoan[1] or Samoan language is the traditional language of Samoa and American Samoa and is an official language — alongside English — in both jurisdictions. It is a member of the Austronesian family, and more specifically the Samoic branch of the Polynesian subphylum.

There are approximately 800,000 Samoan-speakers worldwide, 35% of who live in the Samoan Islands. Thereafter, the greatest concentration is in New Zealand, where people of Samoan ethnicity comprise the fifth largest group after New Zealand European, Māori, New Zealander and Chinese: the 2006 New Zealand census recorded 85,428 speakers of the Samoan language, and 131,103 people of Samoan ethnicity. Among ethnic Samoans in New Zealand, 70.5 percent of the Samoan speakers (77,109 people) could speak Samoan. Samoan is the 4th most commonly spoken language in New Zealand after English, Maori and Chinese. The majority of Samoans in New Zealand (66.4 per cent) reside in the commercial capital, Auckland. Of those who speak Samoan, 67.4 percent live in Auckland and 70.4 percent of people who are both of Samoan ethnicity and Samoan speakers live in that city.

According to the 2006 census, there were 28,525 speakers of Samoan in Australia, and 39,992 people of Samoan ancestry.

Contents

Writing systems

The Samoan alphabet consists of 15 letters, plus three (H, K, R) that are only used in loanwords:

Aa, Āā Ee, Ēē Ff Gg Hh Ii, Īī Kk Ll Mm Nn Oo, Ōō Pp Rr Ss Tt Uu, Ūū Vv
/ə/, /aː/ /ɛ/, /eː/ /f/ /ŋ/ (/h/) /ɪ/, /iː/ /k/ /l, ɾ/ /m/ /n/, /ŋ/ /o/, /ɔː/ /p/ /l/ /s/ /t/, /k/ /ʊ/, /uː/ /v/ /ʔ/

In formal Samoan, /k/ is only found in puke! 'catch!'. However, in colloquial speech /t/ has come to be pronounced [k], and in addition /n/ has merged with /ŋ/ as [ŋ].

/l/ is pronounced [ɾ] after a back vowel (/a, o, u/) and an /i/. /s/ is less sibilant than in English.

Metathesis of consonants is frequent, such as manu for namu 'scent', lava‘au for vala‘au 'to call', but vowels may not be mixed up in this way.

Phonology

Samoan syllable structure is (C)V. Vowels are length-distinct in Samoan.

Grammar

Personal pronouns

Like many Austronesian languages, Samoan has separate words for inclusive and exclusive we, and distinguishes singular, dual, and plural. The root for the inclusive pronoun may occur in the singular, in which case it indicates emotional involvement on the part of the speaker.

singular dual plural
First person exclusive a‘u , ‘ou mā‘ua, mā mātou
First person inclusive tā‘ua, tā tātou
Second person ‘oe, ‘e ‘oulua ‘outou, tou
Third person ia / na lā‘ua lātou

In formal speech, fuller forms of the roots mā-, tā-, and lā- are ‘imā-, ‘itā-, and ‘ilā-.

Vocabulary

Common phrases and words

English Samoan Pronounce
Yes ‘ioe ee-yaw-weh
No Leai leh-yai
Please Fa‘amolemole far-ahh-moh-leh-moh-leh
Thank you Fa‘afetai far-ahh-feh-tie
That's all right ‘Ua lelei oo-wah-leh-lay
big - small tele - la‘itiiti teh-leh - lah-ee-tee-tee
quick - slow vave/tope - gese vah-veh/toh-beh - ngeh-seh
early - late vave - tuai vah-veh - too-wai
cheap - expensive taugōfie - taugatā tah-oo-ngoh-fee-yeh - tah-oo-ngah-tar
near - far latalata - mamao lar-tar-lar-tar - mah-ma-aw
hot - cold vevela - mālūlū veh-veh-lah - mah-loo-loo
full - empty tumu - gaogao too-moo - nga-aw-nga-aw
easy - difficult faigōfie - faigatā fah-ee-ngo-fee-eh - fah-ee-nga-tar
heavy - light mamafa - māma mar-mar-fah - mar-mah
open - shut tatala - tapuni tah-oo-tah-lah - tah-boo-nee
right - wrong sa‘o - sesē sah-aw - seh-seh
old - new tuai - fou too-wai - for-oo
old - young matua - talavou mar-too-ah - tah-lah-vor-oo
beautiful - ugly matagōfie - mataga mar-tar-ngo-fee-eh - mar-tar-ngah
good - bad lelei / leaga leh-lay / leh-angah
better - worse feoloolo - leaga tele feh-oh-loh-loh - leh-angah-teh-leh

References

  • Milner, G.B. 1993, 1966. Samoan Dictionary. Polynesian Press. ISBN 0 908597 12 6
  • Payne, Thomas E. 1997. Describing morphosyntax: a guide for field linguists. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-58224-5.

External links

Wikipedia
Samoan language edition of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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