Information about Indigenous Australian Languages
“Australian languages” redirects here. For post-colonisation languages, see Languages of Australia.
The Indigenous Australian languages comprise several language families and isolates native to Australia and a few nearby islands, but by convention excluding Tasmania. The relationships between these languages are not clear at present, although substantial progress has been made in recent decades.
In the late 18th century, there were between 350 and 750 distinct Aboriginal social groupings, and a similar number of languages or dialects. At the start of the 21st century, fewer than 200 indigenous languages remain and all except roughly 20 are highly endangered. Of those that survive, only 10%, usually located in the most isolated areas, are being learned by children. For example of the 5 least endangered Western Australian Aboriginal languages, 4 belong to the Ngaanyatjarra grouping of the Central and Great Victoria Desert. Bilingual education is being used successfully in some communities; in one case recently near Alice Springs, white teachers were required to learn the local language, and Aboriginal parents complained that their children were not learning English at school. A couple of the most populous Australian languages, such as Warlpiri and Tiwi, have around 3000 speakers.
The Tasmanian people nearly died out early in Australia's colonial history, and their languages went extinct before much was recorded. They were separated from the mainland at the end of the last ice age, and apparently went without contact with the outside world for 10,000 years. Too little is known of their languages to be able to classify them, although they seem to have had some phonological similarities with languages of the mainland.
Common features
The Australian languages form a language area or Sprachbund, sharing much of their vocabulary and sharing many distinctive phonological features across the entire continent.A common feature of many Australian languages is that they display so-called mother-in-law languages, special speech registers used only in the presence of certain close relatives. These registers share the phonology and grammar of the standard language, but the lexicon is different and usually very restricted. There are also commonly speech taboos during extended periods of mourning or initiation that have led to a large number of Aboriginal sign languages.
In their morphosyntax, many Australian languages have ergative-absolutive case systems. These are typically split systems; a widespread pattern is for pronouns (or first and second person) to have nominative-accusative case marking and for third person to be ergative-absolutive, though splits between animate and inanimate are also found. In some languages the persons in between the accusative and ergative inflections (such as second person, or third-person human) may be tripartite: that is, marked overtly as either ergative or accusative in transitive clauses, but not marked as either in intransitive clauses. There are also a few languages which employ only nominative-accusative case marking.
Phonetics and phonology
Segmental inventory
A typical Australian phonological inventory includes just three vowels, usually [a, i, u], which may occur in both long and short variants. In a few cases the [u] has been unrounded to give [a, i, ɯ].There is almost never a voicing contrast; that is, a consonant may sound like a [p] at the beginning of a word, but like a [b] between vowels, and either symbol could be (and often is) chosen to represent it. Australia also stands out as being almost entirely free of fricatives, even of [h]. In the few cases where fricatives do occur, they developed recently through the lenition (weakening) of stops, and are therefore non-sibilants like [ğ] rather than sibilants like [s] which are so much more common elsewhere in the world. Some languages also have three rhotics (R sounds), typically a flap, a trill, and an approximant; that is, like the combined R's of English and Spanish.
A notable exception to this generalization is Kala Lagaw Ya, which has an inventory much more similar to its Papuan neighbours than to the languages of the Australian mainland. Kunjen has also developed contrasting aspirated plosives ([ph], [t̪h], [th], [ch], [kh]) not found further south.
Besides the lack of fricatives, the most striking feature of Australian speech sounds are the large number of places of articulation. Nearly every language has four places in the coronal region, either phonemically or allophonically This is accomplished through two variables: the position of the tongue (front or back), and its shape (pointed or flat). Both plosives and nasals occur at all six places, and in some languages laterals occur at all four coronal places, where laterals are possible. There are also bilabial, velar and often palatal consonants, but a complete absence of uvular or glottal consonants.
A language which displays the full range of stops and laterals is Kalkutungu, which has labial p, m; "dental" th, nh, lh; "alveolar" t, n, l; "retroflex" rt, rn, rl; "palatal" ty, ny, ly; and velar k, ng. Yanyuwa has even more contrasts, with an additional true dorso-palatal series, plus prenasalized stops at all seven places of articulation, in addition to all four laterals.
Coronal consonants
The coronal articulations are worth looking at more closely, since descriptions of them can be inconsistent.The "alveolar" series t, n, l (or d, n, l) is straightforward: across the continent, these sounds are alveolar (that is, pronounced by touching the tongue to the ridge just behind the gum line of the upper teeth) and apical (that is, touching that ridge with the tip of the tongue). This is very similar to English t, d, n, l, though the Australian t is not aspirated.
The other apical series is the "retroflex", rt, rn, rl (or rd, rn, rl). Here the place is further back in the mouth, in the postalveolar or prepalatal region. The articulation is actually most commonly sub-apical; that is, the tongue curls back so that the underside of the tip makes contact. That is, they are true retroflex consonants. It has been suggested that sub-apical pronunciation is characteristic of more careful speech, while these sounds tend to be apical in rapid speech.
The "dental" series th, nh, lh are always laminal (that is, pronounced by touching with the surface of the tongue just above the tip, called the blade of the tongue), but may be formed in one of three different ways, depending on the language, on the speaker, and on how carefully the speaker pronounces the sound. These are interdental with the tip of the tongue visible between the teeth, as in th in American English; interdental with the tip of the tongue down behind the lower teeth, so that the blade is visible between the teeth; and denti-alveolar, that is, with both the tip and the blade making contact with the back of the upper teeth and alveolar ridge, as in French t, d, n, l. The first tends to be used in careful enunciation, and the last in more rapid speech, while the tongue-down articulation is less common.
Finally, the "palatal" series ty, ny, ly. (The stop is often spelled dj, tj, or j.) Here the contact is also laminal, but further back, spanning the alveolar to postalveolar, or the postalveolar to prepalatal regions. The tip of the tongue is typically down behind the lower teeth. This is similar to the "closed" articulation of some Circassian fricatives (see Postalveolar consonant). The body of the tongue is raised towards the palate. This is similar to the "domed" English postalveolar fricative sh. Because the tongue is "peeled" from the roof of the mouth from back to front during the release of these stops, there is a fair amount of frication, giving the ty something of the impression of the English palato-alveolar affricate ch or the Polish alveolo-palatal affricate ć. That is, these consonants are not palatal in the IPA sense of the term, and indeed they contrast with true palatals in Yanyuwa.
These descriptions do not apply exactly to all Australian languages. However, they do describe most of them, and are the expected norm against which languages are compared.
Orthography
- Main article: Transcription of Australian Aboriginal languages
| Language | Example | Translation | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pitjantjatjara | pana | 'earth, dirt, ground; land' | diacritic (underline) indicates retroflex 'n' |
| Wajarri | nhanha | 'this, this one' | digraph indicating 'n' with dental articulation |
| Gupapuyŋu | yolŋu | 'person, man' | 'ŋ' (from IPA) for velar nasal |
Classification
[[Image:Australian languages.png|thumb|300px|A language map, different colours represent different language families: Greater Pama-Nyungan Laragiya Tiwi Bunaban Daly Limilngan Djeragan Nyulnyulan Wororan Djamindjungan West Barkly Yiwaidjan Giimbiyu Umbugarla Gunwinyguan Garawa]] Most Australian languages are commonly held to belong to the Pama-Nyungan family, a family by no means unproblematic but still accepted by most linguists (with R.M.W. Dixon as a noted exception). For convenience, the rest of the languages, all spoken in the far north, are commonly lumped together as "Non-Pama Nyungan" despite not constituting a genetic family. Dixon has argued that after perhaps 40,000 years of mutual influence, it is no longer possible to distinguish deep genealogical relationships from areal features in Australia, and that not even Pama-Nyungan is a valid language family. However, few other linguists, Australian or otherwise, accept Dixon's thesis.Traditionally, Australian languages have been divided into about two dozen families. What follows is a tentative classification of genealogical relationships among the Australian families, following the work of Nick Evans and associates at the University of Melbourne. Although not all subgroupings are mentioned, there is enough detail to fill in the rest using a standard reference such as Ethnologue: Languages of the World. Note when cross-referencing that most language names have multiple spellings: rr=r, b=p, d=t, g=k, dj=j=tj=c, j=y, y=i, w=u, u=oo, e=a, and so on. A range is given for the number of languages in each family, as sources count languages differently.
- Language isolates:
- Enindhilyagwa (Andilyaugwa)
- Laragiya (extinct?)
- Ngurmbur (extinct? perhaps a member of Macro-Pama-Nyungan)
- Tiwi
- Established families:
- Bunaban (2 languages in two branches)
- Daly (11-19 languages in four branches, including Murrinh-Patha)
- Limilngan (2 languages, extinct?)
- Djeragan (3-5 languages in two branches)
- Nyulnyulan (8 languages in two branches)
- Wororan (7-12 languages in three branches)
- Newly proposed families:
- Mindi, consisting of
- Djamindjungan (2-4 languages)
- West Barkly (3 languages in two branches)
- Arnhem Land macrofamily, consisting of
- Burarran (4 languages in three subfamilies, including [N]djeebbana and Nakkara)
- Yiwaidjan (4-8 languages in three-four branches)
- Giimbiyu (2-3 languages in two branches)
- the Kakadu (Gaagudju) isolate (extinct?)
- the Umbugarla isolate (extinct?)
- Macro-Pama Nyungan, consisting of
- (Perhaps) the Ngurmbur isolate
- Gunwinyguan (15-17 languages in six branches, including the Maran languages and the Kungarakany isolate)
- Greater Pama-Nyungan:
- Tankic (4 languages in two branches)
- the Garawa isolate (1 or 2 languages)
- Pama-Nyungan proper (approximately 175 languages in 14 extant and numerous extinct branches)
Languages
See also
- Australian Aboriginal sign languages
- Gunwinyguan languages
- Australian Aborigines
- List of Indigenous Australian group names
- List of Australian place names of Aboriginal origin
- Macro-Pama-Nyungan languages
- Southwest Pama-Nyungan languages
References
- Dixon, R. M. W. 2002. Australian Languages: Their Nature and Development.
- Evans, Nicholas (ed.). 2003. The non-Pama-Nyungan languages of northern Australia: comparative studies of the continent's most linguistically complex region. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics.
- McConvell, Patrick and Nicholas Evans. (eds.) 1997. Archaeology and Linguistics: Global Perspectives on Ancient Australia. Melbourne: Oxford University Press
External links
- Aboriginal Languages of Australia
- The Horton map of Australian indigenous languages
- Languages of Australia, as listed by Ethnologue
- National Indigenous Languages Survey Report 2005 PDF format, size 2.6 MB http://www.dcita.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/35637/NILS_Repport_2005.pdf
- AIATSIS Language guide
- AIATSIS clickable map
- Ethnolog report on all languages by alphabetical order
Although Australia has no official language, it is largely monolingual with English being the de facto national language. It is also home to over 200 indigenous languages, as well as relatively recent arrivals besides English.
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Indigenous Australians are descendants of the first known human inhabitants of the Australian continent and its nearby islands. The term includes both the Torres Strait Islanders and the Aboriginal People, who together make up about 2.5% of Australia's population.
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A language family is a group of languages related by descent from a common ancestor, called the proto-language. As with biological families, the evidence of relationship is observable shared characteristics.
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A language isolate, in the absolute sense, is a natural language with no demonstrable genealogical (or "genetic") relationship with other living languages; that is, one that has not been demonstrated to descend from an ancestor common to any other language.
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Anthem
Advance Australia Fair [1]
Capital Canberra
Largest city Sydney
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Advance Australia Fair [1]
Capital Canberra
Largest city Sydney
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Tasmania
Flag Coat of Arms
Slogan or Nickname: Island of Inspiration; The Apple Isle; Holiday Isle
Motto(s): "Ubertas et Fidelitas" (Fertility and Faithfulness)
Other Australian states and territories
Capital Hobart
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Flag Coat of Arms
Slogan or Nickname: Island of Inspiration; The Apple Isle; Holiday Isle
Motto(s): "Ubertas et Fidelitas" (Fertility and Faithfulness)
Other Australian states and territories
Capital Hobart
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The 18th Century lasted from 1701 through 1800 in the Gregorian calendar.
Historians sometimes specifically define the 18th Century otherwise for the purposes of their work.
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Historians sometimes specifically define the 18th Century otherwise for the purposes of their work.
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For dialects of programming languages, see .
A dialect (from the Greek word διάλεκτος, dialektos) is a variety of a language characteristic of a particular group of the language's speakers.
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21st Century is the present century of the Common Era, in accordance with the Gregorian calendar. It began on January 1, 2001 and is due to end December 31, 2100. However, more modern methods of dating begin the century in the year 2000.
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Ngaanyatjarra is an Aboriginal Australian dialectal group of the Western Desert cultural bloc. Ngaanya literally means "this" and "tjarra" means with, the name meanining: "those that use ngaanya to say 'this'".
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Great Victoria Desert is a barren, arid and sparsely populated desert ecoregion in southern Australia. It falls inside the states of South Australia and Western Australia and consists of many small sandhills, grasslands and salt lakes.
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worldwide view of the subject.
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Bilingual education involves teaching all subjects in school through two different languages - in the United States, instruction occurs in English and a
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The Tasmanian languages are the indigenous languages of the island of Tasmania, Australia. The Tasmanian languages are believed to have became extinct in 1905, with the death of the last known speaker, Fanny Cochrane Smith.
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A sprachbund (pronounced /ˈʃpraːxˌbʊnt/ plural sprachbünde /ˈʃpraːxˌbʏndə
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For the journal, see .
Phonology (Greek φωνή (phōnē), voice, sound + λόγος (lógos), word, speech, subject of discussion), is a subfield of linguistics which studies the sound system of a..... Click the link for more information.
Avoidance speech, or "mother-in-law languages", is a feature of many Australian Aboriginal languages, some North American languages and Bantu languages (called ukuhlonipa
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Grammar is the study of the rules governing the use of a given natural language, and as such a field of linguistics. Traditionally, grammar included morphology and syntax, in modern linguistics commonly expanded by the subfields of phonetics, phonology, orthography, semantics, and
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lexicon of a language is its vocabulary, including its words and expressions. More formally, it is a language's inventory of lexemes.
The lexicon includes the lexemes used to actualize words. Lexemes are formed according to morpho-syntactic rules and express sememes.
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The lexicon includes the lexemes used to actualize words. Lexemes are formed according to morpho-syntactic rules and express sememes.
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taboo is a strong social prohibition (or ban) against words, objects, actions, discussions, or people that are considered undesirable or offensive by a group, culture, or society. Breaking a taboo is usually considered objectionable or abhorrent.
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Many Australian Aboriginal cultures have or traditionally had a sign language counterpart to their spoken language. This appears to be connected with various taboos on speech between certain people within the community or at particular times, such as during a mourning period for women or
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For other uses, see Morphology.
Morphology is the field within linguistics that studies the internal structure of words. (Words as units in the lexicon are the subject matter of lexicology...... Click the link for more information.
The ergative case is the grammatical case that identifies the subject of a transitive verb in ergative-absolutive languages.
In such languages, the ergative case is typically marked (most salient), while the absolutive case is unmarked.
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In such languages, the ergative case is typically marked (most salient), while the absolutive case is unmarked.
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In ergative-absolutive languages, the absolutive (abbreviated ABS ) is the grammatical case used to mark both the subject of an intransitive verb and the object of a transitive verb. It contrasts with the ergative case, which marks the subject of transitive verbs.
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The nominative case is a grammatical case for a noun, which generally marks the subject of a verb, as opposed to its object or other verb arguments. (Basically, it is a noun that is doing something, usually joined (such as in Latin) with the accusative case.
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The accusative case (abbreviated ACC ) of a noun is the grammatical case used to mark the direct object of a transitive verb. The same case is used in many languages for the objects of (some or all) prepositions.
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Animate (株式会社アニメイト) is the retailing arm of MOVIC and is the largest retailer of
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Founded 1983
Headquarters Tokyo, Japan
Industry Retail
Website Official Website (Japanese)
Animate (株式会社アニメイト) is the retailing arm of MOVIC and is the largest retailer of
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The term transitivity may refer to:
In grammar
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In grammar
- Transitivity (grammatical category)
- transitive verb, when a verb takes an object
- Transitive relation, a binary relation
- Intransitivity
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intransitive verb is a verb that does have a subject and does not have an object. In more technical terms, an intransitive verb has only one argument (its subject), and hence has a valency of one.
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Near‑close
Close‑mid
Mid
Open‑mid
Near‑open
Open
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In phonetics, voice or voicing is one of the three major parameters used to describe a sound. It is usually treated as a binary parameter with sounds being described as either voiceless (unvoiced) or voiced
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