Belait | |
Also Known As: | Lemeting, Metteng |
Region: | Brunei, Malaysia |
State: | Belait, Tutong (Brunei), Sarawak (Malaysia) |
Ethnicity: | Belait people |
Speakers: | 1,000 in Brunei |
Date: | no date |
Ref: | e16 |
Speakers2: | (700 in 1995) |
Familycolor: | Austronesian |
Fam2: | Malayo-Polynesian |
Fam3: | North Bornean |
Fam4: | North Sarawakan |
Fam5: | Berawan–Lower Baram |
Fam6: | Lower Baram |
Fam7: | Kiput–Belait |
Iso3: | beg |
Glotto: | bela1260 |
Glottorefname: | Lemeting |
Belait, or Lemeting, is a Malayo-Polynesian language of Brunei and neighbouring Malaysia. It is spoken by the Belait people who mainly reside in the Bruneian Belait District. There were estimated to be 700 speakers in 1995.[1]
Belait is related to the Miri, Kiput and Narum languages of Sarawak. It is considered part of the Lower Baram subgroup of North Sarawak languages.[2]
There are four mutually-intelligible dialects of Belait.[3] These are spoken in two main regions:
Two distinct dialects of Belait – Metting and Bong – are spoken within the Mungkom village, Kiudang. There are very few speakers of any of the dialects.
General references on Belait phonology include Martin (1990) on Metteng Belait[4] and Noor Alifah Abdullah (1992) on Labi Belait.[5] This sketch is based on the Metteng dialect (Clynes 2005). Other dialects may vary in their phonology and lexicon.
Labial | Apical | Laminal | Dorsal | Glottal | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasals | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | |||
Plosives | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | ||
pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | ||||
Fricatives | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | ||||
Laterals | pronounced as /link/ | ||||||
Glides | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ |
Metteng Belait has five monophthong vowels pronounced as //i, u, e, o, a//. There is one diphthong pronounced as //iə//.
The phoneme pronounced as //e// is realised as pronounced as /[ə]/ in non-final syllables, and as pronounced as /[ɛ]/ and pronounced as /[e]/ in final syllables.
Lexical roots are disyllabic. Final syllables are typically (C)V((C)C). Non-final are typically ((C)C)V(C).
The major word classes in Belait are verbs and nouns. The two classes can be distinguished by their distribution, form and function. For example, verbs are negated with the form (e)ndeh and nouns with the form kay':
There are also several closed functional classes:
Belait is head-initial. This means that head nouns precede possessors and other modifiers. They also precede relative clauses. Most clauses consist of a predicate and a subject. The subject can either follow or precede the predicate. Hence, word order is flexible.
Predicates can be Verb Phrases (VP), Noun Phrases (NP) or a Prepositional Phrase (PP). Non-subject arguments of a verbal predicate occur immediately after the verb.
The head of a verbal predicate is the verb. There are two main types of verbs in Belait: intransitive and transitive. Intransitive verbs only have a single subject argument. They do not have any voice morphology on the verb. In contrast, transitive verbs occur in two different voices: Actor Voice (AV) and Undergoer Voice (UV). The two constructions are illustrated below:
AV:actor voiceUV:undergoer voice
In the AV construction in (5) the subject is the Actor, i.e. idih unnah 'the people before'. In the UV construction in (6) the subject in the Undergoer, i.e. brejin 'durian'. In both cases, the subject comes before the predicate. The undergoer voice typically has perfective semantics. The actor voice tends to be used in other contexts.