There are two voice registers in Mah Meri: Register 1: Register 1 vowels have a clear tense voice quality, shorter duration and lower pitch. Register 1 vowels also have fewer phonotactic restrictions. Register 2: Register 2 vowels are laxer, longer and higher in pitch. Register 2 vowels also have a slight breathy voicing.
In Mah Meri, modifiers and demonstratives occur after the head as shown in examples (1) and (2) while prepositions occur before the head as shown in example (3).
(1)
dṳk
house
naleʔ
old
dṳk naleʔ
house old
'old house'
(2)
lɘmɔl
man
horoʔ
old
ke
that
lɘmɔl horoʔ ke
man old that
'that old man'
(3)
haʔ
LOC
mbɘri
forest
haʔ mbɘri
LOC forest
'in the forest'
For transitive clauses, Mah Meri generally follows an Agent-Verb-Object (AVO) order as shown in example (4), but a Verb-Agent-Object (VAO) order is more common during natural discourse as shown in example (5).
(4)
hŋkiʔ
3
tomboʔ
punch
lɘmɔl
man
ke
that
hŋkiʔ tomboʔ lɘmɔl ke
3 punch man that
'He punched that man.'
(5)
lɘpas
after
ke
that
nɔŋ,
PST:PROX
ʔeʔə̤t
1SG
kɘdeʔ,
hide
kaye
see
hŋkiʔ
3
ʔeʔə̤t
1SG
lɘpas ke nɔŋ, ʔeʔə̤t kɘdeʔ, kaye hŋkiʔ ʔeʔə̤t
after that PST:PROX 1SG hide see 3 1SG
'After that, I hid, (lest) he see me.'
For intransitive clauses in Mah Meri, both Subject-Verb (SV) and Verb-Subject (VS) orders are possible as shown in examples (6) and (7) respectively.
The prefix ka- only applies to indigenous monosyllabic verbs.
Example: jɛt 'to follow' → ka-jɛt 'to follow someone or something', cɔʔ 'to go' → ka-cɔʔ 'to go to someone or a place'
3. Distributive < l > 'DISTR'
The infix < l > applies to disyllabic intransitive verbs of position or state and also some verbs of motion.
The infix is inserted into the initial syllable and a schwa replaces to well to correct syllable structure.
Example: kancɛw 'to be naked' → kɘlancɛw 'many naked (people)'.
If the penultimate syllable CV is a palatal stop plus schwa, the < la > infix is applied instead.
Example: jɘkɘʔ 'to sit motionless' → jɘ-la-kɘʔ 'many sitting motionless'
Regular productive derivations
Iterative sɘ-RDP-root 'ITER'
The prefix sɘ is attached to the initial constituent of reduplicated bases to express iteration.
Example:
sɘ-nake-nake
ITER-REDUP-that
sɘ-nake-nake
ITER-REDUP-that
'that one over and over again'
Happenstance tɘ- 'happ'
The prefix tɘ- expresses:
an inadvertent event
ability or inability when used in a negated clause.
Example: tɘ-ka-ca 'happen to eat'
Middle voice bɘ- 'MID'
The prefix bɘ- is applied to either verbal or nominal roots to express an attributive or possessive function.
Example: bɘ-dṳk 'having a house'
Language Endangerment and Vitality
According to Ethnologue,[2] the language status of Mah Meri is '6b: Threatened', referring to the situation whereby the language is used for face-to-face communications within all generations, but is losing users. This status is based on Lewis and Smino's (2010)[6]Expanded Graded Intergenerational Disruption Scale (EGIDS).
A study by Coluzzi, Riget & Wang (2017)[7] on language use and attitudes across 4 different Mah Meri villages on Carey Island suggests that while Mah Meri still holds a strong and positive status in the community, there is a possibility of a complete language shift towards Malay in the future due to lesser usage of Mah Meri amongst the younger generation.