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词条 Tongan language
释义

  1. Related languages

  2. Alphabet

  3. Syllabification

  4. Articles

  5. Registers

  6. Pronouns

     Subjective and objective  Cardinal pronouns  Possessive pronouns  Other pronouns 

  7. Counting

  8. Literature

  9. Calendar

  10. Notes

  11. References

  12. External links

{{About|the Polynesian language of the kingdom of Tonga|unrelated languages with similar names|Tonga language (disambiguation){{!}}Tonga language|and|Dungan language}}{{Infobox language
|name=Tongan
|nativename= {{lang|to|lea faka-Tonga}}
|states= Tonga;
significant immigrant community in New Zealand and the United States
|speakers={{sigfig|96,300|2}} in Tonga
|speakers2={{sigfig|72,820|2}} elsewhere (no date), primarily in NZ, US, and Australia[1]
|date=1998
|ref=e18
|familycolor=Austronesian
|fam2=Malayo-Polynesian
|fam3=Oceanic
|fam4=Polynesian
|fam5=Tongic
|script=Latin-based
|nation= {{flag|Tonga}}
|iso1=to
|iso2=ton
|iso3=ton
|glotto=tong1325
|glottorefname=Tonga (Tonga Islands)
|notice=IPA
}}

Tongan {{IPAc-en|ˈ|t|ɒ|ŋ|ən}}[2] ({{lang|to|lea fakatonga}}) is an Austronesian language of the Polynesian branch spoken in Tonga. It has around 180,000 speakers[3] and is a national language of Tonga. It is a VSO (verb–subject–object) language.

Related languages

Tongan is one of the multiple languages in the Polynesian branch of the Austronesian languages, along with Hawaiian, Maori, Samoan and Tahitian, for example. Together with Niuean, it forms the Tongic subgroup of Polynesian.

Tongan is unusual among Polynesian languages in that it has a so-called definitive accent. As with all Polynesian languages, Tongan has adapted the phonological system of proto-Polynesian.

  1. Tongan has retained the original proto-Polynesian *h, but has merged it with the original *s as {{IPA|/h/}}. (The {{IPA|/s/}} found in modern Tongan derives from *t before high front vowels). Most Polynesian languages have lost the original proto-Polynesian glottal stop {{IPA|/q/}}; however, it has been retained in Tongan and a few other languages including Rapa Nui.&91;4&93;
  2. In proto-Polynesian, *r and *l were distinct phonemes, but in most Polynesian languages they have merged, represented orthographically as r in most East Polynesian languages, and as l in most West Polynesian languages. However, the distinction can be reconstructed because Tongan kept the *l but lost the *r.&91;5&93;
Polynesian sound correspondences
PhonemeProto-PolynesianTonganNiueanSāmoanRapa NuiTahitianMāoriCook Is. MāoriHawaiianEnglish
/ŋ/*taŋatatangatatagatatagatatangatata{{okina}}atatangatatangatakanakaperson
/s/*sinahinahinasinahinahinahinahina{{okina}}inahinagrey-haired
/h/*kanahekanahekanahe{{okina}}anae{{okina}}anaekanaekanae{{okina}}anaemullet (fish)
/ti/*tialesialetialetialetiaretiaretīaretiarekielegardenia
/k/*wakavakavakava{{okina}}avakava{{okina}}awakavakawa{{okina}}acanoe
/f/*fafinefefinefifinefafinevahinevahinewahineva{{okina}}inewahinewoman
/ʔ/*matuqa[6]matu{{okina}}amatuamatuamatu{{okina}}ametuamatuametua, matuamakuaparent
/r/*ruauaualuaruarua[7]ruarua'eluatwo
/l/*tolutolutolutolutorutorutorutoru'ekoluthree

Alphabet

Tongan is written in a subset of the Latin script. In the old, "missionary" alphabet, the order of the letters was modified: the vowels were put first and then followed by the consonants: a, e, i, o, u, etc. That was still so as of the Privy Council decision of 1943 on the orthography of the Tongan language. However, C. M. Churchward's grammar and dictionary favoured the standard European alphabetical order, which, since his time, has been in use exclusively:

Tongan alphabet
Letter a e f h i k l m n ng o p s t u v {{okina}} (fakau{{okina}}a)
Pronunciation/a/}}/e/}} /f/}}/h/}}/i/}}/k/}}/l/}}/m/}}/n/}}/ŋ/}}1/o/}}/p/}}2/s/}}3/t/}}/u/}}/v/}}/ʔ/}}4

Notes:

  1. written as g but still pronounced as {{IPA|[ŋ]}} (as in Samoan) before 1943
  2. unaspirated; written as b before 1943
  3. sometimes written as j before 1943 (see below)
  4. the glottal stop. It should be written with the modifier letter turned comma (Unicode 0x02BB) and not with the single quote open or with a mixture of quotes open and quotes close. See also {{okina}}okina.

Note that the above order is strictly followed in proper dictionaries. Therefore, ngatu follows nusi, {{okina}}a follows vunga and it also follows z if foreign words occur. Words with long vowels come directly after those with short vowels. Improper wordlists may or may not follow these rules. (For example, the Tonga telephone directory for years now ignores all rules.{{citation needed|date=July 2014}})

The original j, used for {{IPA|/tʃ/}}, disappeared in the beginning of the 20th century, merging with {{IPA|/s/}}. By 1943, j was no longer used. Consequently, many words written with s in Tongan are cognate to those with t in other Polynesian languages. For example, Masisi (a star name) in Tongan is cognate with Matiti in Tokelauan; siale (Gardenia taitensis) in Tongan and tiare in Tahitian. This seems to be a natural development, as {{IPA|/tʃ/}} in many Polynesian languages derived from Proto-Polynesian {{IPA|/ti/}}.

Syllabification

  • Each syllable has exactly one vowel. The number of syllables in a word is exactly equal to the number of vowels it has.
  • Long vowels, indicated with a toloi (macron), count as one, but may in some circumstances be split up in two short ones, in which case, they are both written. Toloi are supposed to be written where needed, in practice this may be seldom done.
  • Each syllable may have no more than one consonant.
  • Consonant combinations are not permitted. The ng is not a consonant combination, since it represents a single sound. As such it can never be split, the proper hyphenation of {{lang|to|fakatonga}} (Tongan) therefore is fa-ka-to-nga.
  • Each syllable must end in a vowel. All vowels are pronounced, but an i at the end of an utterance is usually unvoiced.
  • The fakau{{okina}}a is a consonant. It must be followed (and, except at the beginning of a word, preceded) by a vowel. Unlike the glottal stops in many other Polynesian languages texts, the fakau{{okina}}a is always written. (Only sometimes before 1943.)
  • Stress normally falls on the next to last syllable of a word with two or more syllables; example: {{lang|to|móhe}} (sleep), {{lang|to|mohénga}} (bed). If, however, the last vowel is long, it takes the stress; example: {{lang|to|kumā}} (mouse) (stress on the long ā). The stress also shifts to the last vowel if the next word is an enclitic; example: {{lang|to|fále}} (house), {{lang|to|falé ni}} (this house). Finally the stress can shift to the last syllable, including an enclitic, in case of the definitive accent; example: {{lang|to|mohengá}} ((that) particular bed), {{lang|to|fale ní}} (this particular house). It is also here that a long vowel can be split into two short ones; example: pō (night), poó ni (this night), pō ní (this particular night). Or the opposite: {{lang|to|maáma}} (light), {{lang|to|māmá ni}} (this light), {{lang|to|maama ní}} (this particular light). Of course, there are some exceptions to the above general rules. The stress accent is normally not written, except where it is to indicate the definitive accent or fakamamafa. But here, too, people often neglect to write it, only using it when the proper stress cannot be easily derived from the context.

Although the acute accent has been available on most personal computers from their early days onwards, when Tongan newspapers started to use computers around 1990 to produce their papers, they were unable to find, or failed to enter, the proper keystrokes, and it grew into a habit to put the accent after the vowel instead of on it: not {{lang|to|á}} but {{lang|to|a´}}. But as this distance seemed to be too big, a demand arose for Tongan fonts where the acute accent was shifted to the right, a position halfway in between the two extremes above. Most papers still follow this practice.

Articles

English, like most European languages, uses only two articles:

  • indefinite a
  • definite the

By contrast, Tongan has three articles, and possessives also have a three-level definiteness distinction:

  • indefinite ha. Example: ko ha pālangi ('a white person', or any other person from somewhere other than Tonga)
  • semi-definite (h)e. Example: ko e pālangi ('the white person' in the sense that the person does not belong to some other race, but still rather 'a white person' if there are several of them)
  • definite (h)e with the shifted ultimate stress. Example: ko e pālangí ('the white person', that particular person there and no one else).

Registers

There are three registers which consist of

  • ordinary words (the normal language)
  • honorific words (the language for the chiefs)
  • regal words (the language for the king)

There are also further distinctions between

  • polite words (used for more formal contexts)
  • derogatory words (used for informal contexts, or to indicate humility)

For example, the phrase "Come and eat!" translates to:

  • ordinary: ha{{okina}}u {{okina}}o kai (come and eat!); Friends, family members and so forth may say this to each other when invited for dinner.
  • honorific: me{{okina}}a mai pea {{okina}}ilo (come and eat!); The proper used towards chiefs, particularly the nobles, but it may also be used by an employee towards his boss, or in other similar situations. When talking about chiefs, however, it is always used, even if they are not actually present, but in other situations only on formal occasions. A complication to the beginning student of Tongan is that such words very often also have an alternative meaning in the ordinary register: me{{okina}}a (thing) and {{okina}}ilo (know, find).
  • regal: hā{{okina}}ele mai pea taumafa (come and eat!); Used towards the king or God. The same considerations as for the honorific register apply. Hā{{okina}}ele is one of the regal words which have become the normal word in other Polynesian languages.

Pronouns

The Tongan language distinguishes three numbers: singular, dual, and plural. They appear as the three major columns in the tables below.

The Tongan language distinguishes four persons: First person exclusive, first person inclusive, second person and third person. They appear as the four major rows in the tables below. This gives us 12 main groups.

Subjective and objective

In addition, possessive pronouns are either alienable (reddish) or inalienable (greenish), which Churchward termed subjective and objective. This marks a distinction that has been referred to, in some analyses of other Polynesian languages, as a-possession versus o-possession, respectively,[8] though more Tongan-appropriate version would be {{okina}}e-possession and ho-possession.

Subjective and objective are fitting labels when dealing with verbs: {{okina}}eku taki "my leading" vs. hoku taki "my being led". However, this is less apt when used on nouns. Indeed, in most contexts hoku taki would be interpreted as "my leader", as a noun rather than a verb. What then of nouns that have no real verb interpretation, such as fale "house"?

Churchward himself laid out the distinction thus:[9]

But what about those innumerable cases in which the possessive can hardly be said to correspond either to the subject or to the object of a verb? What, for example, is the rule or the guiding principle, which lies behind the fact that a Tongan says {{okina}}eku pa{{okina}}anga for ' my money' but hoku fale for 'my house'?

It may be stated as follows: the use of {{okina}}eku for 'my' implies that I am active, influential, or formative, &c., towards the thing mentioned, whereas the use of hoku for 'my' implies that the thing mentioned is active, influential, or formative, &c., towards me. Or, provided that we give a sufficiently wide meaning to the word 'impress', we may say, perhaps, that {{okina}}eku is used in reference to things upon which I impress myself, while hoku is used in reference to things which impress themselves upon me.

{{okina}}E possessives are generally used for:
  • Goods, money, tools, utensils, instruments, weapons, vehicles, and other possessions which the subject owns or uses ({{okina}}eku pa{{okina}}anga, "my money")
  • Animals or birds which the subjects owns or uses ({{okina}}eku fanga puaka, "my pigs")
  • Things which the subject eats, drinks, or smokes ({{okina}}eku me{{okina}}akai, "my food")
  • Things which the subject originates, makes, mends, carries, or otherwise deals with ({{okina}}eku kavenga, "my burden")
  • Persons in the subject's employ, under their control, or in their care ({{okina}}eku tamaio{{okina}}eiki "my male servant")

Ho possessives are generally used for

  • Things which are a part of the subject or 'unalienable' from the subject, such as body parts (hoku sino, "my body")
  • Persons or things which represent the subject (hoku hingoa, "my name")
  • The subject's relatives, friends, associates, or enemies (hoku hoa, "my companion (spouse)")
  • Things which are provided for the subject or devolve to them or fall to their lot (hoku tofi{{okina}}a, "my inheritance")
  • In general, persons or things which surround, support, or control the subject, or on which the subject depends (hoku kolo, "my village/town")

There are plenty of exceptions which do not fall under the guidelines above, for instance, {{okina}}eku tamai, "my father". The number of exceptions is large enough to make the alienable and inalienable distinction appear on the surface to be as arbitrary as the grammatical gender distinction for Romance languages, but by and large the above guidelines hold true.

Cardinal pronouns

The cardinal pronouns are the main personal pronouns which in Tongan can either be preposed (before the verb, light colour) or postposed (after the verb, dark colour). The first are the normal alienable possessive pronouns, the latter the stressed alienable pronouns, which are sometimes uses as reflexive pronouns, or with kia te in front the inalienable possessive forms. (There is no possession involved in the cardinal pronouns and therefore no alienable or inalienable forms).

Cardinal pronouns
PositionSingularDualPlural
1st personexclusive
(I, we, us)
preposedu, ou, kumamau
postposedaukimauakimautolu
inclusive
(one, we, us)
preposedtetatau
postposedkitakitauakitautolu
2nd personpreposedkemomou
postposedkoekimouakimoutolu
3rd personpreposednenanau
postposediakinauakinautolu

Remember:

  • all the preposed pronouns of one syllable only (ku, u, ma, te, ta, ke, mo, ne, na) are enclitics which never can take the stress, but put it on the vowel in front of them. Example: ʻoku naú versus ʻokú na (not: ʻoku ná).
  • first person singular, I uses u after kuo, te, ne, and also ka (becomes kau), pea, mo and ʻo; but uses ou after ʻoku; and uses ku after naʻa.
  • first person inclusive (I and you) is of course somewhat a misnomer, at least in the singular. The meanings of te and kita can often rendered as one, that is the modesty I.

Examples of use.

  • Naʻa ku fehuʻi: I asked
  • Naʻe fehuʻi (ʻe) au: I(!) asked (stressed)
  • ʻOku ou fehuʻi au: I ask myself
  • Te u fehuʻi kiate koe: I shall ask you
  • Te ke tali kiate au: You will answer me
  • Kapau te te fehuʻi: If one would ask
  • Tau ō ki he hulohula?: Are we (all) going to the ball?
  • Sinitalela, mau ō ki he hulohula: Cinderella, we go to the ball (... said the evil stepmother, and she went with two of her daughters, but not Cinderella)

Another archaic aspect of Tongan is the retention of preposed pronouns.{{Citation needed|date=May 2007}} They are used much less frequently in Sāmoan and have completely disappeared in East Polynesian languages, where the pronouns are cognate with the Tongan postposed form minus ki-. (We love you: ʻOku ʻofa kimautolu kia te kimoutolu; Māori: e aroha nei mātou i a koutou).

Possessive pronouns

The possessives for every person and number (1st person plural, 3rd person dual, etc.) can be further divided into normal or ordinary (light colour), emotional (medium colour) and emphatic (bright colour) forms. The latter is rarely used, but the two former are common and further subdivided in definite (saturated colour) and indefinite (greyish colour) forms.

Possessive
pronouns
definite
or not
typesingulardualplural
alienable2,5inalienable2,5alienable2,5inalienable2,5alienable2,5inalienable2,5
1st person
(exclusive)
(my, our)
definiteordinaryheʻeku1hokuheʻema1homaheʻemau1homau
indefinitehaʻakuhakuhaʻamahamahaʻamauhamau
definiteemotionalsiʻekusiʻokusiʻemasiʻomasiʻemausiʻomau
indefinitesiʻakusiʻakusiʻamasiʻamasiʻamausiʻamau
emphatic3haʻakuhoʻokuhaʻamauahoʻomauahaʻamautoluhoʻomautolu
1st person
(inclusive)4
(my, our)
definiteordinaryheʻete1hotoheʻeta1hotaheʻetau1hotau
indefinitehaʻatehatohaʻatahatahaʻatauhatau
definiteemotionalsiʻetesiʻotosiʻetasiʻotasiʻetausiʻotau
indefinitesiʻatesiʻatosiʻatasiʻatasiʻatausiʻatau
emphatic3haʻatahoʻotahaʻatauahoʻotauahaʻatautoluhoʻotautolu
2nd person
(your)
definiteordinaryhoʻohohoʻomohomohoʻomouhomou
indefinitehaʻohaohaʻamohamohaʻamouhamou
definiteemotionalsiʻosiʻosiʻomosiʻomosiʻomousiʻomou
indefinitesiʻaosiʻaosiʻamosiʻamosiʻamousiʻamou
emphatic3haʻauhoʻouhaʻamouahoʻomouahaʻamoutoluhoʻomoutolu
3rd person
(his, her, its, their)
definiteordinaryheʻene1honoheʻena1honaheʻenau1honau
indefinitehaʻanehanohaʻanahanahaʻanauhanau
definiteemotionalsiʻenesiʻonosiʻenasiʻonasiʻenausiʻonau
indefinitesiʻanesiʻanosiʻanasiʻanasiʻanausiʻanau
emphatic3haʻanahoʻonahaʻanauahoʻonauahaʻanautoluhoʻonautolu

Notes:

  1. the ordinary definite possessives starting with he (in italics) drop this prefix after any word except ʻi, ki, mei, ʻe. Example: ko ʻeku tohi, my book; ʻi heʻeku tohi, in my book.
  2. all ordinary alienable possessive forms contain a fakauʻa, the inalienable forms do not.
  3. the emphatic forms are not often used, but if they are, they take the definitive accent from the following words (see below)
  4. first person inclusive (me and you) is of course somewhat a misnomer. The meanings of heʻete, hoto, etc. can often rendered as one's, that is the modesty me.
  5. the choice between an alienable or inalienable possessive is determined by the word or phrase it refers to. For example: ko ho fale '(it is) your house' (inalienable), ko ho'o tohi, '(it is) your book' (alienable). *Ko ho tohi, ko hoʻo fale* are wrong. Some words can take either, but with a difference in meaning: ko ʻene taki 'his/her leadership'; ko hono taki 'his/her leader'.

Examples of use.

  • ko haʻaku/haku kahoa: my garland (any garland from or for me)
  • ko ʻeku/hoku kahoa: my garland (it is my garland)
  • ko ʻeku/hoku kahoá: my garland, that particular one and no other
  • ko heʻete/hoto kahoa: one's garland {mine in fact, but that is not important}
  • ko siʻaku kahoa: my cherished garland (any cherished garland from or for me)
  • ko siʻeku/siʻoku kahoa: my cherished garland (it is my cherished garland)
  • ko haʻakú/hoʻokú kahoa: garland (emphatically mine) – that particular garland is mine and not someone else's
  • ko homa kahoa: our garlands (exclusive: you and I are wearing them, but not the person we are talking to)
  • ko hota kahoa: our garlands (inclusive: you and I are wearing them, and I am talking to you)

Other pronouns

These are the remainders: the pronominal adjectives (mine), indirect object pronouns or pronominal adverbs (for me) and the adverbial possessives (as me).

other
pronouns
typesingular1dualplural
alienableinalienablealienableinalienablealienableinalienable
1st person
(exclusive)
(my, our)
pronominal adjectiveʻaʻakuʻoʻokuʻamauaʻomauaʻamautoluʻomautolu
pronominal adverbmaʻakumoʻokumaʻamauamoʻomauamaʻamautolumoʻomautolu
adverbial possessivemaʻakumoʻokumaʻamamoʻomamaʻamaumoʻomau
1st person
(inclusive)
(my, our)
pronominal adjectiveʻaʻataʻoʻotaʻatauaʻotauaʻatautoluʻotautolu
pronominal adverbmaʻatamoʻotamaʻatauamoʻotauamaʻatautolumoʻotautolu
adverbial possessivemaʻatemoʻotomaʻatamoʻotamaʻataumoʻotau
2nd person
(your)
pronominal adjectiveʻaʻauʻoʻouʻamouaʻomouaʻamoutoluʻomoutolu
pronominal adverbmaʻaumoʻoumaʻamouamoʻomouamaʻamoutolumoʻomoutolu
adverbial possessivemaʻomoʻomaʻamomoʻomomaʻamoumoʻomou
3rd person
(his, her, its, their)
pronominal adjectiveʻaʻanaʻoʻonaʻanauaʻonauaʻanautoluʻonautolu
pronominal adverbmaʻanamoʻonamaʻanauamoʻonauamaʻanautolumoʻonautolu
adverbial possessivemaʻanemoʻonomaʻanamoʻonamaʻanaumoʻonau

Notes:

  1. the first syllable in all singular pronominal adjectives (in italics) is reduplicated and can be dropped for somewhat less emphasis
    • the pronominal adjectives put a stronger emphasis on the possessor than the possessive pronouns do
    • the use of the adverbial possessives is rare

Examples of use:

  • ko hono valá: it is his/her/its clothing/dress
  • ko e vala ʻona: it is his/her/its (!) clothing/dress
  • ko e vala ʻoʻona: it is his/her/its (!!!) clothing/dress
  • ko hono valá ʻona: it is his/her/its own clothing/dress
  • ko hono vala ʻoná: it is his/her/its own clothing/dress; same as previous
  • ko hono vala ʻoʻoná: it is his/her/its very own clothing/dress
  • ʻoku ʻoʻona ʻa e valá ni: this clothing is his/hers/its
  • ʻoku moʻona ʻa e valá: the clothing is for him/her/it
  • ʻoange ia moʻono valá: give it (to him/her/it) as his/hers/its clothing

Counting

0-9
0noa
1 taha 2 ua 3 tolu
4 5 nima 6 ono
7 fitu 8 valu 9 hiva

For 'simple' two-digit multiples of ten both the 'full-style' and 'telephone-style' numbers are in equally common use, while

for other two-digit numbers the 'telephone-style' numbers are almost exclusively in use:

10-90 'tens'
# 'full-style' 'telephone-style'
10 hongofulu taha-noa
20 ungofulu/uofulu ua-noa
30 tolungofulu tolu-noa
...
11-99
# 'full-style' 'telephone-style'
11 hongofulu ma taha taha-taha
24 ungofulu ma fā ua-fā
...
exceptions
# Tongan
22 uo-ua
55 nime-nima
99 hive-hiva
100-999 'simple'
# Tongan
100 teau
101 teau taha
110 teau hongofulu
120 teau-ua-noa
200 uongeau
300 tolungeau
...
100-999 'complex'
# Tongan
111 taha-taha-taha
222 uo-uo-ua
482 fā-valu-ua
...
1000-
# Tongan
1000 taha-afe
2000 ua-afe
...
10000 mano
100000 kilu
1000000 miliona
...

ʻOku fiha ia? (how much (does it cost)?) Paʻanga ʻe ua-nima-noa (T$2.50)

In addition there are special, traditional counting systems for fish, coconuts, yams, etc.[10]

Literature

{{Refimprove section|date=January 2010}}

Tongan is primarily a spoken, rather than written, language. The Bible and the Book of Mormon were translated into Tongan and few other books were written in it.{{Citation needed|date=October 2010}}

There are several weekly and monthly magazines in Tongan, but there are no daily newspapers.

Weekly newspapers, some of them twice per week:

Monthly or two-monthly papers, mostly church publications:

Calendar

The Tongan calendar was based on the phases of the moon and had 13 months. The main purpose of the calendar, for Tongans, was to determine the time for the planting and cultivation of yams, which were Tonga's most important staple food.

Name Compared to Modern Calendar
Lihamu'a mid-November to early December
Lihamui mid-December to early January
Vaimu'a mid-January to early February
Vaimui mid-February to early March
Fakaafu Mo'ui mid-March to early April
Fakaaafu Mate mid-April to early May
Hilingakelekele mid-May to early June
Hilingamea'a mid-June to early July
'Ao'aokimasisiva mid-July to early August
Fu'ufu'unekinanga mid-August to early September
'Uluenga mid-September to early October
Tanumanga early October to late October
'O'oamofanongo late October to early November.
[12]
DayTongan Term
Monday Mōnite
Tuesday Tūsite
Wednesday Pulelulu
Thursday Tu'apulelulu
Friday Falaite
Saturday Tokonaki
Sunday Sāpate
MonthTransliteration
January Sanuali
February Fepueli
March Ma'asi
April 'Epeleli
May
June Siune
July Siulai
August 'Aokosi
September Sepitema
October 'Okatopa
November Nōvema
December Tīsema

Notes

1. ^{{e17|ton}}
2. ^Laurie Bauer, 2007, The Linguistics Student’s Handbook, Edinburgh
3. ^{{Cite news|url=https://www.ethnologue.com/language/ton|title=Tongan|work=Ethnologue|access-date=2017-12-13}}
4. ^The glottal stop in most other Polynesian languages are the reflexes of other consonants of proto-Polynesian; for example, the glottal stop of Samoan and Hawaiian is a reflex of the original *k; the glottal stop of Cook Islands Māori represents a merger of the original *f and *s. Tongan does not show changes such as the *t to {{IPA|/k/}} and {{IPA|*ŋ}} to {{IPA|/n/}} of Hawaiian; nor has Tongan shifted *f to {{IPA|/h/}}. Although Tongan, Samoan and other Western Polynesian languages are not affected by a change in Central Eastern Polynesian languages (such as New Zealand Māori) involving the dissimilation of {{IPA|/faf/}} to {{IPA|/wah/}}, Tongan has vowel changes (as seen in monumanu from original manumanu) which are not a feature of other languages.
5. ^This loss may be quite recent. The word "lua", meaning "two", is still found in some placenames and archaic texts. "Marama" (light) thus became "maama", and the two successive "a"s are still pronounced separately, not yet contracted to "māma". On the other hand "toro" (sugarcane) already has become "tō" (still "tolo" in Sāmoan).
6. ^Glottal stop is represented as 'q' in reconstructed Proto-Polynesian words.
7. ^Archaic: the usual word in today's Tahitian is 'piti'.
8. ^These a and o refer to the characteristic vowel used in those pronouns. In Tongan, however, this distinction is much less clear, and rather a characteristic for the indefinite and definite forms respectively. Use of the a & o terms therefore is not favoured.
9. ^{{cite book | last = Churchward | first = C.M. | title = Tongan Grammar | publisher = Vava'u Press Limited | date = 1999 | pages = 81 | isbn = 982-213-007-4}}
10. ^{{cite book | last = Churchward | first = C.M. | title = Tongan Grammar | publisher = Vava'u Press Limited | date = 1999 | pages = 184–189 | isbn = 982-213-007-4}}
11. ^Online Tongan edition of Liahona, lds.org
12. ^  {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111027182528/http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~jamel/1%20Taimi%20Ta%27u.htm |date=October 27, 2011 }}

References

External links

{{interwiki|code=to}}{{Polynesian languages}}{{Oceania topic|Languages of}}{{Authority control}}

4 : Languages of Tonga|Tongic languages|Polynesian languages|Verb–subject–object languages

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