One Orthography, Four Lects: The Unified Berawan Orthography

Berawan is an endangered Austronesian language family consisting of four lects, which are Batu Belah, Long Teru, Long Jegan, and Long Terawan. Their settlements are located in the Malaysian state of Sarawak. The impetus for a unified orthography came from the Berawan community, who desire to write t...

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Main Authors: Burkhardt, Jurgen Martin, Burkhardt, Jey Lingam *, Hoon, A. L.
Format: Article
Published: Institute of Borneo Studies (IBS), Universiti Malaysia Sarawak 2020
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Online Access:http://eprints.sunway.edu.my/1334/
http://publisher.unimas.my/ojs/index.php/BJK/issue/view/160
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spelling my.sunway.eprints.13342020-07-22T03:42:21Z http://eprints.sunway.edu.my/1334/ One Orthography, Four Lects: The Unified Berawan Orthography Burkhardt, Jurgen Martin Burkhardt, Jey Lingam * Hoon, A. L. P Philology. Linguistics PL Languages and literatures of Eastern Asia, Africa, Oceania Berawan is an endangered Austronesian language family consisting of four lects, which are Batu Belah, Long Teru, Long Jegan, and Long Terawan. Their settlements are located in the Malaysian state of Sarawak. The impetus for a unified orthography came from the Berawan community, who desire to write their lects consistently and reflecting the way they speak. The unified orthography was developed starting with a phonological analysis of the Berawan lects. This was followed by several orthography workshops and discussions with individual Berawan communities, culminating in a combined orthography workshop in which a unified orthography was agreed upon. The aim of the paper is to provide the groundwork for establishing the unifed orthography of the Berawan language family. A phonological comparison of the four Berawan varieties is included for this purpose. The phonological descriptions are taken from Burkhardt (2014). Smalley’s (1959, 1965) maxim of ‘maximal representation of speech’ and Rogers’s (2005) ‘shallow orthography’ approach are employed. On this basis, issues that arise for graphemic representation of Berawan phonemes are then discussed and the decisions made by the participants of the combined workshops are described. The paper also touches on issues encountered throughout the discussion. The issues that arose are primarily related to the differences in orthographic systems between the Berawan lects and the Malay language. The paper ends with a proposed unified Berawan orthography. Institute of Borneo Studies (IBS), Universiti Malaysia Sarawak 2020-07-14 Article PeerReviewed Burkhardt, Jurgen Martin and Burkhardt, Jey Lingam * and Hoon, A. L. (2020) One Orthography, Four Lects: The Unified Berawan Orthography. Journal of Borneo-Kalimantan, 6 (1). ISSN 2289-2583 http://publisher.unimas.my/ojs/index.php/BJK/issue/view/160 doi:10.33736/jbk.2411.2020
institution Sunway University
building Sunway Campus Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Sunway University
content_source Sunway Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.sunway.edu.my/
topic P Philology. Linguistics
PL Languages and literatures of Eastern Asia, Africa, Oceania
spellingShingle P Philology. Linguistics
PL Languages and literatures of Eastern Asia, Africa, Oceania
Burkhardt, Jurgen Martin
Burkhardt, Jey Lingam *
Hoon, A. L.
One Orthography, Four Lects: The Unified Berawan Orthography
description Berawan is an endangered Austronesian language family consisting of four lects, which are Batu Belah, Long Teru, Long Jegan, and Long Terawan. Their settlements are located in the Malaysian state of Sarawak. The impetus for a unified orthography came from the Berawan community, who desire to write their lects consistently and reflecting the way they speak. The unified orthography was developed starting with a phonological analysis of the Berawan lects. This was followed by several orthography workshops and discussions with individual Berawan communities, culminating in a combined orthography workshop in which a unified orthography was agreed upon. The aim of the paper is to provide the groundwork for establishing the unifed orthography of the Berawan language family. A phonological comparison of the four Berawan varieties is included for this purpose. The phonological descriptions are taken from Burkhardt (2014). Smalley’s (1959, 1965) maxim of ‘maximal representation of speech’ and Rogers’s (2005) ‘shallow orthography’ approach are employed. On this basis, issues that arise for graphemic representation of Berawan phonemes are then discussed and the decisions made by the participants of the combined workshops are described. The paper also touches on issues encountered throughout the discussion. The issues that arose are primarily related to the differences in orthographic systems between the Berawan lects and the Malay language. The paper ends with a proposed unified Berawan orthography.
format Article
author Burkhardt, Jurgen Martin
Burkhardt, Jey Lingam *
Hoon, A. L.
author_facet Burkhardt, Jurgen Martin
Burkhardt, Jey Lingam *
Hoon, A. L.
author_sort Burkhardt, Jurgen Martin
title One Orthography, Four Lects: The Unified Berawan Orthography
title_short One Orthography, Four Lects: The Unified Berawan Orthography
title_full One Orthography, Four Lects: The Unified Berawan Orthography
title_fullStr One Orthography, Four Lects: The Unified Berawan Orthography
title_full_unstemmed One Orthography, Four Lects: The Unified Berawan Orthography
title_sort one orthography, four lects: the unified berawan orthography
publisher Institute of Borneo Studies (IBS), Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
publishDate 2020
url http://eprints.sunway.edu.my/1334/
http://publisher.unimas.my/ojs/index.php/BJK/issue/view/160
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