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The Nalik language is spoken by 5,000 or so people, based in 17 villages in Kavieng District, New Ireland, Papua New Guinea. It is an Austronesian language and member of the New Ireland group of languages with an SVO phrase structure. New Ireland languages are among the first Papua New Guinea languages recorded by Westerners.

Laxudumau, spoken in the village of Lakudumau, may be a transitional dialect to Kara or a separate language.

Speakers
Speakers of Nalik reside in a series of villages in northern central New Ireland. The Nalik speaking region is an approximately thirty kilometer long band of the island that spans approximately ten kilometers wide and is flanked on it's north by the Kara speaking region and to it's south by speakers of Kuot, the only non-Austornesian language on New Ireland.

In the past, Lugagon, Fesoa, and Fessoa have been used to reference Nalik which are all names of villages in the region.

Consonants
A Nalik Phonology analysis developed by Clive H. Beaumont

Nalik Consonant System
In West Coast and Southern East Coast dialects and when preceded by vowels, /p/ and /k/, two non-coronal voiceless stops are transformed into fricatives. Additionally the voiceless fricatives become voiced.

When immediately preceded by a vowel the following consonants change their voicing:

/f/ and /p/ become [β] (written as v)

/s/ becomes [z]

/k/ becomes [γ] (writen as x)

The following are examples of these characteristics:

Nouns
Nouns in Nalik are categorized as being an uncountable noun, or a countable noun. Nouns can be part of a noun phrase or can be an independent subject referenced in a verbal complex. When used as subjects, some uncountable nouns are co-referential with plural subject markers however those are the exceptions and are usually marked with singular subject markers. With uncountable nouns, numerical markers cannot be used. Countable nouns, however, can be singular or plural and can be modified by numerical markers.

Personal Pronouns
Variations in the third person non-singular pronouns are attributed to rapid-speech and regional variants. In rapid speech naande often becomes nande. In the Northern Eastern Coast naande is the variant used. In the South East Coast naandi is the variant used. Naanda is used primarily by younger speakers from all areas.

Personal pronouns can notably be utilized in the same way as related nouns such as "a woman" (a ravin) being replaced with "she" (naan).


 * A raivin ka na wut. (The woman will come.)
 * Naan ka na wut. (She will come.)

Numbers
The Nalik counting system is reflective of using one's hand to count and indicative of the style in which they do so. They begin with an open palm and bring individual fingers down per digit counted and the action of doing so is shown in their counting system. As such the Nalik counting system contains elements of a base five counting system however when proceeding past ten, the counting system uses elements of base ten.

The word for the number five kavitmit can be analyzed as the phrase ka vit mit. Ka being a third person indicator, vit being a negation particle, and mit meaning hand. It can therefore be translated to "no hand" as all fingers have been lowered.

The nubmers six through nine are also representative of this pattern as the way they are referenced is in a similar fashion to five in that it is a phrase describing something. In these numbers the phrase describes the act of lowering even more fingers than five.

Past ten, the counting system starts to use combinations of ten in multiples of a number one to nine. Higher numbers in the hundreds use "ten squared" as it's base.

Word Order
The Nalik language features an SVO sentence structure that is common to the languages of the New Ireland-Tolai languages.