Ngayarda languages

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The Ngayarda languages is the name given by linguists to a group of closely related languages in the Pilbara region of Western Australia.

The languages classified as members of the Ngayarda languages group are (following Dench 1995):

It should be noted that Dench (1995) says that for Yinhawangka, Nhuwala and Ngarla there is insufficient data to enable them to be confidently classified, however he places them in the Ngayarda group for convenience. Further, there are grounds for considering Yindjibarndi-Kurrama and Ngarluma-Kariyarra to be dialect pairs however the local socio-political perception is that they are separate languages.

The Ngayarda grouping is justified on the basis of lexicostatistics as well as the following grammatical features first proposed by O'Grady (1966) as diagnostic of this group:

C.G. von Brandenstein devised a classification which divided this group into a Coastal Ngayarda and an Inland Ngayarda. This is no longer considered correct, however Austin (1988) points out that von Brandenstein's errors have been reproduced by Wurm and Hattori in their map of Australian languages, which appears to be based on the same classification.

The name ngayarda comes from the word for 'man' in many of the languages of the group. The Ngayarda languages group is a member of the South-West branch of the Pama-Nyungan family.

[edit] References

  • Dench, Alan. 1995. 'Martuthunira: A language of the Pilbara region of Western Australia PL C-125. Pacific Linguistics: Canberra
  • O'Grady, G.N. 1966. 'Proto-Ngayarda Phonology'. Oceanic Linguistics 5:71-130.