Gumawana language

Gumawana (sometimes also referred to by the exonym Gumasi) is an Austronesian language spoken by people living on the Amphlett Islands of the Milne Bay Province of Papua New Guinea.

Classification
Gumawana is an Austronesian language of the North Papuan Mainland-D'Entrecasteaux branch.

Geographic distribution
Gumawana is spoken by some 470 people in the small Amphlett Islands of Papua New Guinea's Milne Bay Province. The language is spoken on the four inhabited islands of the archipelago: Nubogeta, Gumawana, Omea, and Bituma. Gumawama has been influenced by the nearby Dobu language, and speakers of Gumawana often have knowledge of other neighboring Papuan Tip languages.

Dialects
Gumawana had three dialects: Nubogeta, Omea, and Bituma. The last speaker of the Omea dialect died in April 1988. The Bituma dialect is very different from the Nubogeta dialect of Nubogeta and Gumawana islands in both syntax and lexicon.

Phonology
Gumawana has 11 consonant phonemes and 5 vowel phonemes. Olson represents the labio-dental consonant as bilabial  in later works, and also includes the palatal approximant. Syllables have a (C)V structure.

Grammar
Clauses in Gumawana have a basic order of SOV. Oblique noun phrases occur between the direct object and the verb. Koloto-ya-di weniya si-duduwe

man-REF-3PL dog 3PL-call.TR

'The men called the dog.'