Wikipedia:WikiProject Languages/Retired language articles/Borneo–Philippine languages
Borneo–Philippines | |
---|---|
Outer Hesperonesian Outer Western Malayo-Polynesian | |
Geographic distribution | Borneo, Philippines, and Madagascar |
Linguistic classification | Austronesian
|
Subdivisions | |
Language codes | |
Glottolog | None |
The Borneo–Philippines languages (red). Not shown: Yami in Taiwan. |
The Borneo–Philippines languages[citation needed] (also known as Outer Hesperonesian[citation needed] or Outer Western Malayo-Polynesian languages[citation needed]) are a paraphyletic group of the Austronesian languages which includes the languages of the Philippines, much of Borneo, the northern peninsula of Sulawesi, and Madagascar. They can be divided into the Bornean languages and the Philippine languages.
In this classification, the previously posited clade of Western Malayo-Polynesian, also known as Hesperonesian, has been broken up into "outer" (Borneo–Philippines) and "inner" (Sunda–Sulawesi) clades and Western Malayo-Polynesian is considered merely a geographic term (Wouk and Ross 2002). These are both remnant groups: the Borneo–Philippine languages are those Malayo-Polynesian languages which are not included in Nuclear Malayo-Polynesian and the Sunda–Sulawesi languages are those Nuclear Malayo-Polynesian languages which are not included in Central–Eastern Malayo-Polynesian. Indeed, a 2008 analysis of the Austronesian Basic Vocabulary Database supported at a 98% confidence level that the Bornean languages, regardless of whether they themselves are a valid unit, form an exclusive unit with Nuclear Malayo-Polynesian, whereas Sama–Bajaw is more closely related to the Philippine languages.
Classification
- Borneo–Philippine Malayo-Polynesian languages, or Outer Western MP languages
- Philippine languages
- Bornean languages
- Batanic languages: might belong to the Northern Philippine languages
References
- Austronesian Basic Vocabulary Database
- Fay Wouk and Malcolm Ross (ed.), The history and typology of western Austronesian voice systems. Australian National University, 2002.
- K. Alexander Adelaar and Nikolaus Himmelmann, The Austronesian languages of Asia and Madagascar. Routledge, 2005.