Fijian is an Austronesian language of the Malayo-Polynesian family spoken in Fiji. It has 350,000 first-language speakers, which is less than half the population of Fiji, but another 200,000 speak it as a second language. The 1997 Constitution established Fijian as an official language of Fiji, along with English and Hindustani, and there is discussion about establishing it as the "national language", though English and Hindustani would remain official. Fijian is a VOS language. Standard Fijian is based on the language of Bau, which is an East Fijian language.
[edit] PhonologyThe consonant phonemes of Fijian are as shown in the following table:
The sounds [p] and [f] occur only in loanwords from other languages. The sounds [x] and [h] only occur for speakers from certain regions of the country. The vowel phonemes are:
Syllables can consist of a consonant followed by a vowel (CV) or a single consonant (V).[1] Word stress is based on moras; a short vowel counts as one mora, diphthongs and long vowels count as two moras. Primary word stress then goes to the penultimate mora of the phonological word. That is, if the last syllable of a word is short, then the penultimate syllable will be stressed. If the last syllable consists of either a long vowel or a diphthong, the last syllable receives primary stress. Stress is not lexical and can shift when suffixes are attached to the root. Examples:
[edit] OrthographyThe Fijian alphabet is based on the Latin alphabet and consists of the following letters.
Among the consonants, there is almost a one-to-one correspondence between letters and phonemes:
In addition, the digraph dr stands for postalveolar [n̠d̠], sometimes trilled [n̠d̠r̠] for some people or in careful pronunciation. The vowel letters a e i o u have roughly their IPA values. The vowel length contrast is not usually indicated in writing, except in dictionaries and textbooks for learners of the language, where it is indicated by a macron over the vowel in question; Dixon, in the work cited below, doubles all long vowels in his spelling system. [edit] SyntaxThe normal Fijian word order is VOS (Verb Object Subject):
[edit] The national language debate
In May and June 2005, a number of prominent Fiji Islanders called for the status of Fijian to be upgraded. It was not an official language before the adoption of the 1997 Constitution, which made it co-official with English and Hindustani. It is still not a compulsory subject in schools, however; the present Education Minister, Ro Teimumu Kepa, has endorsed calls for it to be made so, as has Great Council of Chiefs Chairman Ratu Ovini Bokini. Similar calls came from Misiwini Qereqeretabua, the Director of the Institute of Fijian Language and Culture, and from Apolonia Tamata, a linguistics lecturer at Suva’s University of the South Pacific, who both said that recognition of the Fijian language is essential to the nation’s basic identity, as a unifying factor in Fiji’s multicultural society. Fiji Labour Party leader Mahendra Chaudhry also endorsed the call for Fijian to be made a national language and a compulsory school subject, provided that the same status be given to Hindi—a position echoed by Krishna Vilas of the National Reconciliation Committee. [edit] Notes[edit] Sources
[edit] See also[edit] External linksFijian language edition of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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