Finisterre languages

Finisterre
Geographic
distribution:
New Guinea
Linguistic classification:

Trans–New Guinea

Subdivisions:
  • Erap
  • Gusap–Mot
  • Uruwa
  • Wantoat
  • Warup
  • Yupna
Glottolog: fini1245[1]

The Finisterre languages are a family within the original TransNew Guinea (TNG) proposal, and William A. Foley considers their TNG identity to be established. They share with the Huon languages verbs that are suppletive depending on the person & number of the object, strong morphological evidence that they are related.

Internal structure

Huon and Finisterre, and then the connection between them, were identified by Kenneth McElhanon (1967, 1970). They are clearly valid language families. Finisterre contains six clear branches. Beyond that, classification is based on lexicostatistics, which is generally unreliable. The outline below follows McElhanon and Carter et al. (2012).

References

  1. Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2013). "Finisterre–Saruwaged". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.

Bibliography


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