Cognate in Indonesian and Berau Language
Comparative Linguistics Study
Dike Febianti, Nuny Sulistiany I and Sri Wiyanti
Indonesian Language Education And Literature Department, Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia
dikefebianti@yahoo.co.id, {nuny, sriwiyanti7903}@upi.edu
Keywords: Cognate Level, Root Word, Comparative Linguistics.
Abstract: Indonesian language (IL) and Berau language (BL) are classified into Austronesia family, sub-family of
Malay-Polynesia. Based on the classification, this study was conducted to validate the statement above. The
aims of this study were to describe the similarity, resemblance, and distinction of the root word in
Indonesian and Berau language based on correspondence analysis; and to clarify the cognate level between
Indonesian and Berau language based on lexicostatistic extrapolation. The study used descriptive,
comparative, and observation methods, based on lexicostatistic and correspondence theory. The findings
revealed that out of 200 root words analyzed, 75 of them to be the similar, 72 are alike, and 53 to be
different. Findings also revealed that several formulas namely, “each phoneme /h/ in IL will always
correspond with zero in BL”; “each phoneme /ə/ in IL will always correspond with phoneme /a/ in BL”; and
“each phoneme /o/ in IL will always correspond with phoneme /u/ in BL”. These happen because of the lack
of phonemes /ə/, /h/, and /o/ in BL. Several consonants cluster in BL were found, i.e. /bb/, /dd/, /jj/, /ll/, /pp/,
/rr/, /ss/, and /tt/. New consonants in BL were also found such as [l], [m], [ñ], [ŋ], and [p]. Cognates which
were successfully identified were 73. Lastly, these findings proved that IL and BL are at the level of family
classification.
1 INTRODUCTION
Austronesia Family Language commonly classified
into two categories namely (1) East Irian languages
and Melanesia an (2) Malay-Polynesia languages.
Malay-Polynesia languages are divided into three
sub-categories. One of which is Hesperonesia
languages (West Indonesian languages). Indonesian
language (IL) and Berau language (BL) are included
in the sub-categories of Malay languages. Sudarno
(1992) also states that IL is Austronesia language. In
addition, the classification is also reinforced by SIL
in Ethnologue (2007) who also claims that IL is also
contained within Austronesia Family. However,
Existing research only focused on separate
classification such as in Sudarno (1992), and SIL in
Ethnologue (2007; 2010) which have been
elaborated before. Therefore, the similar research
was conducted to see cognate level or the kinship of
both of the languages.
2 LITERATURE REVIEW
Linguistic comparative is a branch of linguistics that
studies the phonological, grammatical, and lexical
equivalence of the related languages or from the
historical periods of a language (Kridalaksana,
2011).
Theory included is correspondence and
lexicostatistic theory. Wiyanti (2016) suggests that
correspondence is an alignment or commensuration
of sound in the same position of languages in terms
of horizontal characteristic. The alignment or
commensuration is compared to each other. In terms
of correspondence stages namely registering words
from language under scrutiny and associating
phoneme by phoneme in the same position.
Lexicostatistic is a technique in language
classification which tends to underline word
observation (lexicon) statistically, to try to determine
the classification based on the percentage of
similarity and difference in a language with other
language (Keraf, 1996).
716
Febianti, D., I., N. and Wiyanti, S.
Cognate in Indonesian and Berau Language - Comparative Linguistics Study.
DOI: 10.5220/0007173807160719
In Proceedings of the Tenth Conference on Applied Linguistics and the Second English Language Teaching and Technology Conference in collaboration with the First International Conference
on Language, Literature, Culture, and Education (CONAPLIN and ICOLLITE 2017) - Literacy, Culture, and Technology in Language Pedagogy and Use, pages 716-719
ISBN: 978-989-758-332-2
Copyright © 2018 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
3 METHODOLOGY
The research methodology employed in the study is
descriptive. Descriptive method is a method used to
unmask actual problem with gathering some data,
organizing the data, classifying the data, analysing
the data and interpreting the data based on actual
phenomenon at hand.
The research methodology employed in the study
is comparative method. Comparative method is a
method that is more prone to depend on sound and
meaning correspondence, therefore the primary
attention should be given at how a systematic sound
comparison is done. The first step is to conduct a
comparison based on sound system e.g. as studied in
sound classification phonologically. Initially,
consonant sounds should be compared to homogeny
sounds (Parera, 1991). Comparative method is
characterized as qualitative. Data transcription is
collected through this method. Data analysis by
means of corresponding each word is done through
the transcription result, and then the classification
result of the root word to be the similar, same, and
different will be retrieved.
4 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Keraf (1996) states that correspondence is alignment
or commensuration of sound in the same position of
languages in terms of horizontal characteristic. The
alignment or commensuration is seen at the
similarity or sameness of form and meaning. The
corresponding pair is compared to each other. As for
the correspondence stages which are registering
words from language under scrutiny and associating
phoneme by phoneme in the same position.
Gloss used in the study amounts 200 glosses (in
Keraf, 1996) with each being compared between
Indonesian language and Berau language. 200
glosses are deemed universal and used to
comparative research (Comparative Linguistics or
Comparative Historical Linguistics).
In the category of similarity, root word within
the category is the root word which writing,
pronunciation, and meaning are the same. The gloss
that is included in the same category namely: abu,
air, aku, anak, angin, api, awan, baik, banyak, baru,
batu, binatang, bintang, bulan, bulu, buruk, burung,
cium, daging, danau, datang, daun, di dalam,
di/pada, di mana, di sini, dua, garam, garuk, gigi,
gigit, gosok, gunung, ikat, ini, jalan, jantung, kami,
kanan, kiri, kuku, kulit, kuning, kutu, lain, langit,
laut, licin, lima, lutut, makan, malam, mata,
matahari, mati, minum, napas, panas, panjang,
punggung, rambut, rumput, satu, siang, siapa,
sungai, tajam, takut, tali, tangan, tarik, tidur, tiga,
tua, dan tumpul. The total of the root words is 75.
In the category of different, root words which are
included is the root words that have the same
meaning with extremely different writing and
pronunciation. During the correspondence, phoneme
comparison of the gloss can be dominantly different
as to conclude that the phoneme is within different
root word. Gloss included in different category
namely: akar, anjing, apung, asap, bagaimana,
bakar, balik, bapak, benar, bengkak, cacing, cuci,
dekat, dingin, dorong, ekor, hisap, gali, hantam, ia,
ibu, ikan, istri, jatuh, kabut, kaki, kalau, berkata,
kecil, kotor, lebar, leher, lelaki, lempar, lidah, lihat,
lurus, mereka, nyanyi, pasir, pegang, perempuan,
pohon, potong, sayap, sedikit, semua, suami, tetek,
tidak, tikam, dan ular. The total of the different root
word is 53.
In the category of almost similar, root words
which are within the category are those which the
writing and pronunciation are almost similar on each
phoneme and its comparison. It can be said that each
pair of the phoneme in a gloss is dominantly related.
The category can be seen during the inference of
determining gloss in the same root word category
due to the phoneme comparison 50:50. Gloss
included in this category namely: mengalir, apa,
baring, beberapa, belah, benih, berenang, berjalan,
berat, beri, besar, buah, bunga, bunuh, berburu,
busuk, dan, darah, debu, dengan, dengar, berdiri,
duduk, engkau, empat, gemuk, hapus, hati, hidung,
hidup, hijau, hitam, hitung, hujan, hutan, itu, jahit,
jauh, kamu, karena, berkelahi, kepala, kering,
berludah, main, merah, mulut, muntah, nama,
orang, pendek, peras, perut, pikir, pusar, putih,
sempit, tahu, tahun, tanah, tebal, telinga, telur,
terbang, tertawa, tipis, tiup, tongkat, tulang, usus, di
situ, dan basah. The total of the root words in the
category of sameness is 72.
Below are several correspondences from each
category of similarity, distinction, and sameness.
The correspondences are as follows.
4.1 Abu
Either in IL or BL, the gloss of abu uses the word
[abu]. Phoneme /a/ in IL corresponds with phoneme
/a/ in BL. Both of those phonemes posit the initial
place. Both of those phonemes are found to be
related. Phoneme /b/ in IL corresponds with
phoneme /b/ in BL. Both of these phonemes are
flanked by VCV (Vowel-Consonant-Vowel). These
Cognate in Indonesian and Berau Language - Comparative Linguistics Study
717
phonemes are related to each other. Phoneme /u/ in
IL corresponds with phoneme /u/ in BL. Both of
these phonemes posit the last place. These phonemes
are related to each other. Based on the
correspondence above, both of the root words are
categorized as the same. This correspondence is as
depicted below.
IL BL
[abu] [abu]
a ~ a / #-- ; #-- +
b ~ b /VCV ; VCV +
u~ u /--# ; --# +
4.2 Akar
The term akar is used in IL whereas the term
burakat is used in BL. Phoneme /b/ in BL which
posits initial place corresponds with zero in IL.
These phonemes are found to be unrelated. Phoneme
/u/ in BL is edged by CVC (Consonant-Vowel-
Consonant) corresponds with zero in IL. These
phonemes are found to be unrelated. Phoneme /r/ in
BL is flanked by VCV (Vowel-Consonant-Vowel)
corresponds with zero in IL. Phoneme /a/ in IL
posits the initial position and corresponds with
phoneme /a/ in BL which flanked by CVC
(Consonant-Vowel-Consonant). These phonemes are
found to be related to each other. Phoneme /k/ in IL
edged by VCV (Vowel-Consonant-Vowel)
corresponds with phoneme /k/ in BL also flanked by
VCV (Vowel-Consonant-Vowel). These two
phonemes are related to each other. Phoneme /a/ in
IL edged by CVC (Consonant-Vowel-Consonant)
corresponds with phoneme /a/ in BL edged by CVC
(Consonant-Vowel-Consonant). Both of these
phonemes are related to each other. Finally,
phoneme /t/ in IL corresponds with phoneme /t/ in
BL which both posit last position. These phonemes
are found to be related to each other. Based on the
correspondence above, both of those words are
under the same category of different. This can be
seen as follows.
IL BL
[akar] [burakat]
Ø ~ b/#-- ; #-- -
Ø ~ u /CVC; CVC -
Ø ~ r /VCV; VCV -
a ~ a/#--; CVC +
k ~ k/ VCV; VCV +
a ~ a/ CVC; CVC +
r ~ t /--#; --# -
4.3 Basah
In IL, the word basah is used whereas the word basa
is used in BL. Phoneme /b/ in IL corresponds with
phoneme /b/ in BL. Both of them are located in the
beginning. These two phonemes are related to each
other. Phoneme /a/ in IL corresponds with phoneme
/a/ in BL. Both of these phonemes are lined with
CVC (Consonant-Vowel-Consonant). These two
phonemes are found to be related to each other.
Phoneme /s/ in IL corresponds with phoneme /s/ in
BL. Both of these two phonemes are flanked by
VCV (Vowel-Consonant-Vowel) and also are found
to be related to each other. Phoneme /a/ in IL edged
by CVC (Consonant-Vowel-Consonant) corresponds
with phoneme /a/ in BL which is located in the end.
These two phonemes are related to each other.
Phoneme /h/ in IL which is located in the end
corresponds with zero BL. These two phonemes are
found to be unrelated. Based on the correspondence
above, both of those words are under the same
categorization which is the category of sameness.
This is as depicted below.
IL BL
[basah] [basa]
b ~ b /#-- ; #-- +
a ~ a /CVC; CVC +
s ~ s / VCV; VCV +
a ~ a/CVC ; --# +
h ~ Ø /--# -
After the formula of lexico-statistic is employed,
similar words (72 root words) adds with same words
(75 root words) divided by the total words under
scrutiny (200 root words) times 100, the cognate
level retrieved is 73. The result demonstrates that IL
and BL are included in the family classification with
the cognate percentage between 36-81. Based on the
result analysis conducted, it was found several
formulas. The formula is “each phoneme /h/ in IL
will always correspond with zero in BL”. The
second formula namely, “each phoneme /ə/ in IL
will always correspond with the phoneme /a/ in BL”.
The next formula is that “each phoneme /o/ in IL
will always correspond with phoneme /u/ in BL.This
is because in BL phonemes /ə/, /h/, and /o/ are not
present. In BL consonant clusters that are found
namely /bb/, /dd/, /jj/, /ll/, /pp/, /rr/, /ss/, and /tt/.
Consonant cluster /bb/ is found in the words
[dabbu], [tabbal], and [tarabbang]. Consonant cluster
/dd/ is found in the word [duddUk]. Consonant
cluster /jj/ is found in the word [ijjaw]. Consonant
cluster /ll/ is found in the word [tallUr] and [tullaŋ].
Consonant cluster /nn/ is found in the word [banni].
Consonant cluster /pp/ is found in the word [nippis].
CONAPLIN and ICOLLITE 2017 - Tenth Conference on Applied Linguistics and the Second English Language Teaching and Technology
Conference in collaboration with the First International Conference on Language, Literature, Culture, and Education
718
Consonant cluster /rr/ is found the words [barranaŋ],
[barrat], [barri], [karrIŋ], and [parrUt]. Consonant
cluster /ss/ is found the word [bassar]. Consonant
cluster /tt/ is found in the word [ittam] and [attu].
Based on the data analysis above, new consonant
in BL namely [l], [m], [ñ], [ŋ], and [p] are found.
Consonant [l] is found in the words [gallaŋ-gallaŋ],
[maliyur], [laup], [balImpaŋ], [bala], [bajalan],
[pabila], [bulan], [bulu], [pijammIl], [jalan], [gallap],
[lamUn], [alUs], [bakalai], [kapala], [kulIt], [lain],
[laŋit], [laut], [laki-laki], [licIn], [ilat], [maliyat],
[lima], [baluja], [lutUt], [malam], [paŋgal], [laki],
[tali], [tabbal], [talIŋa], [tallUr], [tullang], and
[tUmpUl]. The new discovery amounts 36 root
words.
The discovery of new consonant [m] is found in
the words [maliyur], [amma], [balImpaŋ], [ciyum],
[manappas], [di dalam], [di mana], [pijammIl],
[mañurUŋ], [ampat], [maŋakay], [garam], [gamUk],
[maŋapUs], [ittam], [manjait], [lamUn], [kami],
[cammar], [maliyat], [lima], [bamain], [makan],
[malam], [mata], [matahari], [mati], [mira],
[minUm], [muta], [gaman], [rambUt], [rumpUt],
[sampIt], [tajam], [mañucUk], [maniyup], dan
[tUmpUl]. The words are as much as 38 root words.
The discovery of new consonant [ñ] is found in the
words [bañak], [mañurUŋ], [babuñi], [ñama], and
[mañucUk]. It amounts to 5 root words.
The discovery of new consonant [ŋ] is found in
the words [aŋin], [tutUŋ], [bapanIŋ], [balImpaŋ],
[barranaŋ], [binataŋ], [bintaŋ], [gallaŋ-gallaŋ],
[dagIŋ], [daŋan], [dataŋ], [daŋar], [mañurUŋ],
[ikkUŋ], [maŋakay], [gunUŋ], [aŋkUp], [ma
ŋapUs],
[idUŋ], itUŋ], [jantUŋ], [karrIŋ], [kunIŋ], [laŋit],
[bataŋ], [sUŋut], [badIndaŋ], [uraŋ], [panjaŋ],
[paŋgal], [pUŋgUŋ], [siyaŋ], [suŋay], [taŋan],
[talIŋa], [tarabbaŋ], [tUŋkat], [tullaŋ], and [taddUŋ].
It amounts to 38 root words.
The discovery of new consonant [p] is found in
the words [api], [biniyapa], [bapanIŋ], [balImpaŋ],
[barapa], [pabila], [manappas], [di, pada],
[pijammIl], [ampat], [angkUp], [maŋapUs], [idUp],
[irUp], [gallap], [kapala], [napas], [panas], [panjaŋ],
[pandak], [para], [parrUt], [bapikIr], [puun],
[paŋgal], [pUŋgUŋ], [pusat], [puti], [rUmpUt],
[kapay], [siyapa], [sampIt], [kaparais], [nippIs],
[maniyup], and [tUmpUl].
This study conducted in 2017 which classifies IL
and BL into Austronesia family. This is
demonstrated by comparing both of languages and
extrapolating the cognate level. After lexicostatistic
formula is employed, cognate level retrieved is 73.
The result shows that IL and BL are included in the
family classification with cognate percentage
between 36-81.
5 CONCLUSIONS
After attempting correspondence analysis towards
Indonesian language and Berau language in
Comparative Linguistics study, it can be inferred
that 75 of the root words in both languages are
similar, 72 are almost similar, and 53 are different.
Based on the result analysis, several formulas are
found namely “each phoneme /h/ in IL will always
correspond with zero in BL, each phoneme /ə/ in IL
will always correspond with phoneme /a/ in BL, and
each phoneme /o/ in IL will always correspond with
phoneme /u/ in BL”. This is because in BL
phonemes /ə/, /h/, and /o/ do not exist. Several
consonant clusters in BL are found, i.e. /bb/, /dd/,
/jj/, /ll/, /pp/, /rr/, /ss/, and /tt/. Moreover, discovery
of new consonants in BL are also identified namely
[l], [m], [ñ], [ŋ], and [p].
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Thanks to all Berau’s correspondents who have
taken the time to be interviewed for this research
data retrieval. The precious time that you give is
very useful for this research. Thanks also to the
ranks of government in Berau district that has
allowed researchers to conduct research in Berau
district.
REFERENCES
Ethnologue, 2007. Malay, Berau. Retrieved from
https://www.ethnologue.com/language/bve.
Ethnologue, 2016. Indonesian. Retrieved from
https://www.ethnologue.com/language/ind.
Keraf, G., 1996. Linguistik Bandingan Historis. Jakarta:
PT.Gramedia.
Kridalaksana, H., 2011. Kamus Linguistik. Jakarta: PT.
Gramedia Pustaka Utama
Parera, J. D., 1991. Kajian Linguistik Umum Historis
Komparatif dan Tipologi Struktural. Jakarta: Erlangga
Sudarno, 1992. Perbandingan Bahasa Nusantara. Jakarta:
Arikha Media Cipta.
Wiyanti, S., 2016. Taraf Kognat Bahasa Sunda dan Bahasa
Rejang dalam Kajian Linguistik Komparatif.
Proceeding Seminar Nusantara Pedagogi Bahasa
Melayu, Bahasa Indonesia dan Bahasa-bahasa Lain,
pp. 224-234.
Cognate in Indonesian and Berau Language - Comparative Linguistics Study
719