'Are'are language
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'Are'are | ||
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Spoken in: | southern Malaita, Solomon Islands | |
Total speakers: | 17,800 (1999) | |
Language family: | Austronesian Malayo-Polynesian (MP) Central-Eastern MP Eastern MP Oceanic Central-Eastern Oceanic Southeast Solomonic Malaita-San Cristobal Malaita Southern Malaita 'Are'are |
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Writing system: | the writing system(s) used to represent the language | |
Language codes | ||
ISO 639-1: | none | |
ISO 639-2: | – | |
ISO 639-3: | alu
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The 'Are'are language is a language that is spoken by the 'Are'are people, who live mainly on the Solomon Islands. It is spoken by 17,800[1], which makes them the second largest language in the Solomons after the Kwara'ae (also from Malaita). According to Ethnologue, the literacy rate is somewhere between 30-60%.
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[edit] Classification
The language belongs to the larger Austronesian family of languages as do all other ten dialects on of Malaita.
[edit] Geographic Distribution
The language is spoken mainly by the 'Are'are people, on the southern part of Malaita island, as well as nearby South Malaita Island and the eastern shore of Guadalcanal (the Marau Sound, 60 km away), in the Solomon Islands archipelago.
[edit] Dialects
The language is divided into two dialects, 'Are'are proper, and Marau (spoken in eastern part of Guadalcanal, Marau Sound). The language also spoken in the northern part of the Makira Island known as Arosi.
[edit] Grammar
The language uses a subject-verb-object word order.