^The -y- is attached after the initial consonant of a verb stem, so from -lo "go" is born mlyo.
Possession
West Damar has a series of possessive suffixes that are attached to nouns. There is no possessive verb. The possessive suffixes are as follows:
West Damar possessive suffixes
Person/number
Suffix
1st sg.
-cheni
2nd sg.
-mcheni
3rd sg.
-eni
1st pl. inclusive
-toni
1st pl. exclusive
-moni
2nd pl.
-mseni
3rd pl.
-roni
The possessive suffixes are built from a base suffix -ni that also appears as a lexical derivational suffix:
ulcho + -ni > ulchuni "husband"
deweya + -ni > deweyeni "wife"
ullo "month" + -ni > ulloni "moon"
Negation
The word for "no" in West Damar is kewe. When split into a circumfix, ke- -we serves as a simple negator for content words like nouns, verbs, and adjectives. The -we part of the negator comes immediately after the stem it attaches to, but before other clitics. A few examples of negation provided by Chlenova are as follows:
ke-mormorsa-we
NEG-buffalo-NEG
ke-mormorsa-we
NEG-buffalo-NEG
"not a buffalo"
Piter
Peter
ke-tucha-we-mo
NEG-old-NEG-?
odo-i
1SG-DET
Piter ke-tucha-we-mo odo-i
Peter NEG-old-NEG-? 1SG-DET
"Peter (is) not as old as I (am)"
Another negative predicative word krawui "unavailable" is also recorded.
^Mark Taber. 1993. Toward a better understanding of the Indigenous Languages of Southwestern Maluku. Oceanic Linguistics 32. 389-441.
^Aone van Engelenhoven. 2010. Tentatively locating West-Damar among the languages of Southwest Maluku. In Chlenova, Svetlana and Fedorchuk, Artem (eds.), Studia Anthropologica: a Festschrift in Honor of Michael Chlenov, 297-326. Moscow-Jerusalem: Gesharim.
^ abChlenova, Svetlana (2008). "Preliminary Grammatical Notes on Damar Batumerah or West Damar, a Language of Southwest Maluku". In Yury Lander; Alexander Ogloblin (eds.). Language and Text in the Austronesian World: Studies in honor of Ülo Sirk. München: Lincom. pp. 163–177.
Further reading
Michael Chlenov & Svetlana Chlenova, 2006. "West Damar language or Damar-Batumerah, an isolate in South-Eastern Indonesia." Tenth International Conference on Austronesian Linguistics, 17–20 January 2006, Palawan, Philippines.[1]