Bauni language

Bauni is a language spoken in Barupu (Warapu) village (-3.07159°N, 142.05746°W) of West Aitape Rural LLG, Sandaun Province, Papua New Guinea.

The alternative name Barupu or Warapu, from the name of the Bauni village, has been applied to related languages as well, and 'Warapu' may be retained as a cover term.

Phonology
Bauni has 9 consonants and 6 vowels.

Consonants may undergo lenition, fortition, palatalization, or assimilation to produce a larger number of surface phonemes. Words belong to one of five tone classes: H, L, LH, HL, HLH.

Syllables have the following form: (C)(G)V(G)(N), where (G) represents a glide and (N) represents a nasal. There are no syllables that have the maximum possible form of CGVGN.

Morphology
Verbs belong to one of four classes that differ in terms of what morphology may be applied and how. Verbs are obligatorily marked for mood - either realis (/k-/) or irrealis (/n-/) - and for subject. Certain classes of verbs require objects to be marked as well. k-opu-jara-ni

REAL-2PL.M-see-1SG.F

You see me.

Lexicon
Bauni free pronouns are distinguished on the basis of person, gender, and number.

Syntax
Clauses in Bauni employ Agent-Patient-Verb word order. Recipients, instruments, and other oblique noun phrases typically follow the verb. Kuáni k-o-kôe

mother REAL-3SG.F-go.up

Mother went up. Kuáni aka k-o-yarâ-ká

mother father REAL-3SG.F-see-3SG.M

Mother saw father. Cha Meniri gave the dog-spirit a fish.