Ibanic languages
Ibanic | |
---|---|
Malayic Dayak | |
Geographic distribution | western Borneo |
Linguistic classification | Austronesian
|
Glottolog | iban1263 (Ibanic) |
The Ibanic languages are a branch of the Malayic languages indigenous to western Borneo. They are spoken by the Ibans and related groups in East Malaysia and the Indonesian province of West Kalimantan. Other Dayak languages, called Land Dayak, which are not Ibanic, are found in the northwest corner of Kalimantan, between Ibanic and non-Ibanic Malayic languages such as Kendayan and the Malay dialects of Sarawak and Pontianak.
The term Ibanic is coined by Alfred B. Hudson, who was among the first to investigate the genetic affiliation of various languages lumped together under the name Dayak in West Borneo.[1] Ibanic has been variously classified as belonging to a larger "Malayic Dayak"[1] or "West Bornean Malayic"[2] subgroup along with Kendayan and related varieties, or as a part of the "Nuclear Malayic" subgroup alongside other Malay dialects.[3]
Languages
[edit]According to Ethnologue, four languages belong to the Ibanic subgroup: Iban, Remun (or Milikin), Mualang and Seberuang.[4]
West Kalimantan groups
[edit]List of Ibanic-speaking Dayak ethnic subgroups and their respective languages in West Kalimantan province, Indonesia:[5][6]
Group Subgroup Language Regency Bugau Benadai Sekadau, Sintang Desa [dəsa] Desa Sekadau, Sintang Ensilat Ensilat Kapuas Hulu Iban Iban (Benaday) Kapuas Hulu, Sanggau Inggar Silat Inggar Silat Sintang Kantu' Kantu' Kapuas Hulu Ketungau Ketungau Air Tabun Benadai Sintang Ketungau Ketungau Banjur Benadai Sintang Ketungau Ketungau Begelang Benadai Sintang Ketungau Ketungau Demam Benadai Sintang Ketungau Ketungau Embarak Benadai Sintang Ketungau Ketungau Kumpang Benadai Sintang Ketungau Ketungau Mandau Benadai Sintang Ketungau Ketungau Merakai Benadai Sintang Ketungau Ketungau Sebaru' Benadai Sintang Ketungau Ketungau Sekalau Benadai Sintang Ketungau Ketungau Sekapat Benadai Sintang Ketungau Ketungau Senangan Benadai Sintang Ketungau Sesae' Ketungau Sesae' Sekadau Mualang Mualang Sekadau, Sintang Rembay Rembay Kapuas Hulu Sebaru' Sebaru' Kapuas Hulu Seberuang Seberuang Kapuas Hulu, Sintang Sekapat Sekapat Kapuas Hulu Sekujam Sekujam Sekadau, Sintang
References
[edit]- ^ a b Hudson, Alfred B. (1970). "A Note on Selako: Malayic Dayak and Land Dayak Languages in Western Borneo". Sarawak Museum Journal. 18: 301–318.
- ^ Smith, Alexander D. (2017). The Languages of Borneo: A Comprehensive Classification (PDF) (PhD Dissertation). University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa.
- ^ Ross, Malcolm D. (2004). "Notes on the Prehistory and Internal Subgrouping of Malayic". In Bowden, John; Himmelmann, Nikolaus (eds.). Papers in Austronesian Subgrouping and Dialectology. Pacific Linguistics 563. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics. pp. 97–109. doi:10.15144/PL-563.97. hdl:1885/146183.
- ^ "Ibanic". Ethnologue. Retrieved 2022-06-12.
- ^ Bamba, John, ed. (2008). Mozaik Dayak Keberagaman Subsuku dan Bahasa Dayak di Kalimantan Barat (in Indonesian). Pontianak: Institut Dayakologi. ISBN 978-979-97788-5-7.
- ^ Istiyani, Chatarina Pancer (2008). Memahami Peta Keberagaman Subsuku dan Bahasa Dayak di Kalimantan Barat (in Indonesian). Pontianak: Institut Dayakologi.
Further reading
[edit]- Herpanus; Collins, James T. (2018). "The Sekujam Language of West Kalimantan (Indonesia)". Wacana. 19 (2): 425–458. doi:10.17510/wacana.v19i2.702. S2CID 158209664.