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1-10 of 52 matches of 32810 nodes total

Match 1
ID a & Name b 06-DAA-ab Orig
Attributes
Zone f pdf
Page g 73
LSName h orig
LSType i inner language
IsNotional k no
Notes l turjuk, turjok ⊕ Turjok village
Relatives
GeoEntity C 1 Sudan
Match 2
ID a & Name b 12-AAC-i Jakatī
Attributes
Zone f pdf
Page g 92
LSName h Jakatī
LSType i outer language
IsNotional k yes
Notes l jat; jati; jatu, kayani, musali; jakati semi-nomadic community ¶ apparently originating in Afghanistan, Pakistan or India, but all information on this community and their language remains to be confirmed # name perhaps related to that of [59=] Jad-gali (Jat) in Pakistan
Scale o 5
Statistics
2 InnerLanguages
Relatives
ISO-639 A 1 ISO-639-3-Language-jat Jakati
GeoEntity C 1 Moldova | Ukraine | Russia | Afghanistan | Uzbekistan | Tajikistan
Match 3
ID a & Name b 20-PAD Morigi
Attributes
Zone f pdf
Page g 129
LSName h MORIGI
LSType i net
IsNotional k no
Statistics
1 OuterLanguage • 1 InnerLanguage
Match 4
ID a & Name b 20-PAD-a Morigi
Attributes
Zone f pdf
Page g 129
LSName h Morigi
LSType i outer language
IsNotional k no
Notes l ⊕ Morigio island... Turama estuary
Scale o 2
Statistics
1 InnerLanguage
Relatives
GeoEntity C 1 Papua New Guinea
Match 5
ID a & Name b 20-PAD-aa Morigi
Attributes
Zone f pdf
Page g 129
LSName h morigi
LSType i inner language
IsNotional k no
Notes l wariadai, turama-river kiwai, dabura
Scale o 2
Relatives
GeoEntity C 1 Papua New Guinea
Match 6
ID a & Name b 22-QDA-aa Urigina
Attributes
Zone f pdf
Page g 145
LSName h urigina
LSType i inner language
IsNotional k no
Notes l uriginau, origanau ⊕ Urigini... Korigina
Scale o 3
Relatives
GeoEntity C 1 Papua New Guinea
Match 7
ID a & Name b 23-KBA-ad Kanasi-SW.
Attributes
Zone f pdf
Page g 153
LSName h kanasi-SW.
LSType i inner language
IsNotional k no
Notes l Origuna valley: Kuru
Relatives
GeoEntity C 1 Papua New Guinea
Match 8
ID a & Name b 29-Y Marrawah + Kaoota
Attributes
Zone f pdf
Page g 224
LSName h MARRAWAH + KAOOTA
LSType i set
IsNotional k yes
Notes l TASMANIAN notional set ¶ The total ethnic clearance of Tasmania was undertaken between 1805 and 1830, by speakers of [52=] English. The last 200 survivors were deported in 1829-34 to Flinders and other small offshore islands, and the last Tasmanian languages were effectively extinct before 1900 ➤ The only data are a few poorly recorded wordlists from 19th cent. and recordings of the last partial speakers in the early 20th . Degrees of relationship among Tasmanian languages and their affinities to languages of mainland Australia cannot be accurately judged, and the following classification is largely notional (and certainly simplified). It provides a framework to be checked and amplified against every surviving scrap of information on the peoples and languages of Tasmania # Reconstructed linguistic divisions have hitherto been labelled by points of the compass and foreign place-names. They are here renamed with place-names of apparent local origin.
Statistics
2 Chains • 2 Nets • 5 OuterLanguages • 18 InnerLanguages
Relatives
GeoEntity C 1 Australia
Match 9
ID a & Name b 29= TRANSAUSTRALIA geozone
Attributes
Zone f pdf
Page g 205
LSName h TRANSAUSTRALIA
LSType i zone
Grouping j geo
IsNotional k no
Notes l covers the "Transaustralia" reference area, composed of the "Pama-Nyungan" hypothesis (sets 29-A to 29-X, within the wider "Australian" hypothesis) plus the "Tasmanian" notional set of extinct languages (29-Y); together comprising a total of 25 sets of languages (213 outer languages) spoken or formerly spoken by small hunter-gatherer communities, originally occupying the whole of Australia and Tasmania (except the far-north, covered by geozone 28=): 29-A DJAMBARR+ DJINANG 29-B WARLPIRI+ PITJANTJA 29-C ARABANA+ YARLI 29-D MURUWARI 29-E BAAGANDJI+ MARAWARA* 29-F NGARINYERI+ YITHAYITHA 29-G WUURONG+ KOLAKNGAT 29-H NULIT+ THANG 29-I DHUDOROA 29-J PALLANGAN-MIDDANG 29-K YOTA+ YABULA 29-L WIRADHURI+ GAMILA 29-M THAWA+ WORIMI 29-N GUMBAYNGGIR+ YAYGIR 29-O BANDJALANG+ YUGUM 29-P YAGARA+GOWAR 29-Q WAGA+ GABI 29-R MARGANY+ MUNGKAN 29-S GALIBAMU 29-T LARDIL+ JAKULA 29-U KALKUTUNG+ YALARNNGA 29-V WAGAYA+ WARLUWARA 29-W WARUMUNGU 29-X ARANDA+ GAIDIDJ 29-Y MARRAWAH+ KAOOTA* The scantily documented languages of Tasmania (29-Y) were effectively extinct before 1900, and this set is therefore excluded from totals of languages spoken during the 20th cent. the Australian mainland languages covered by phylozone 29= (sets 29-A to 29-X) account for approximately one third of all outer languages which have become extinct throughout the world during the 20th century. This destruction of indigenous speech-communities has resulted from the occupation and ethnic-clearance of their traditional space, primarily by sea-borne speakers of [52=] English. Traditional speech communities in Australia were always small, and only 14 among 298 surviving outer-languages in zones 28= and 29= (marked ✓ in column 2) are likely to have totalled 1,000 or more voices each in the year 1999. The intensified study, development and teaching of those languages would appear to be an educational, scientific and cultural priority in the 21st century. Most surviving speech-communities of this zone are bilingual, with primary fluency – especially among younger speakers - in [52=] Australian creole and/or English.
Scale o 4
Statistics
25 Sets • 56 Chains • 113 Nets • 218 OuterLanguages • 547 InnerLanguages • 29 Dialects
Relatives
ISO-639 A 1 ISO-639-5-Collective-aus Australian
GeoEntity C 1 Australia
Match 10
ID a & Name b 31-MFF Temuan + Seletar
Attributes
Zone f pdf
Page g 258
LSName h TEMUAN + SELETAR
LSType i net
IsNotional k no
Notes l jakun, "island aboriginal" malay, part of "para-malay"
Statistics
4 OuterLanguages • 11 InnerLanguages • 5 ISO-639-Relatives
Relatives
ISO-639 A 1 ISO-639-3-Language-jak Jakun

1-10 of 52 matches of 32810 nodes total

Requested by 3.131.110.169 at 2024-04-26 19:23:20 Europe/Berlin.

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