The Anêm language is a language isolate spoken in five main villages along the northwestern coast of New Britain, Papua New Guinea: Malasoŋo (where it is spoken alongside Bariai), Karaiai, Mosiliki, Pudêlîŋ, Atiatu (where it is spoken alongside Lusi) and Bolo (where it is spoken alongside a version of Aria). It is also spoken by small numbers of people, mostly of Anêm descent, scattered among the surrounding villages. There are two main dialects.
Akiblîk, the dialect of Bolo was near functional extinction in 1982, the youngest speaker then being about 35 years old. The main dialect is spoken in the other villages named above. There are about 800 speakers.
Anêm has been restructured under the influence of Lusi, the local intercommunity language.
Anêm is notable for having at least 20 possessive classes.[3][4]
Anêm is an accusative language with unmarked subject–verb–object word order in plain statements. Yes/no questions are indicated with an intonation contour rather than alterations in word order. Negation (not, not yet, don't) and completive aspect (already) are indicated by modality markers which occur in clause-final position. Tense is not indicated directly. There are three distinctions of mood (realis, irrealis and hortative). Realis refers to something that has happened or is happening; irrealis refers to future tense and hypotheticals; and hortative (only in third persons) is used in commands.
Anêm nouns are distinguished syntactically for gender, masculine or feminine. Masculine nouns are followed by demonstratives or relative pronouns that begin with /l/ while feminine nouns are followed by demonstratives or relative pronouns that begin with /s/. In addition, both subject prefixes and some object suffixes agree in gender with the noun they refer to:
Masculine and feminine gender forms of demonstratives:
Anêm sentences
Doxa
lê
u-ko-lo.
explanation
person
the.m
realis.he-see-him
Translation
'The man saw him.'
Anêm sentences
Doxa
sê
i-ko-lo.
explanation
person
the.f
realis.she-see-him.
Translation
'The woman saw him.'
Gender agreement by subject prefix and object suffix:
^Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Anem". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.