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  2. Kundjeyhmi dialect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kundjeyhmi_dialect

    Kundjeyhmi (spelt Gundjeihmi until 2015) [3] is a dialect of Bininj Kunwok, an Australian Aboriginal language. [4] The Aboriginal people who speak Kundjeyhmi are Bininj people, who live primarily in Kakadu National Park. Kundjeyhmi is considered an endangered dialect, with young speakers increasingly switching to English, Aboriginal English ...

  3. Australian Aboriginal English - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_Aboriginal_English

    Acrolectal Aboriginal accents tend to have a smaller vowel space compared to Standard Australian English. The Aboriginal English vowel space tends to share the same lower boundary as Indigenous language vowel spaces, but shares an upper boundary with Standard Australian English, thus representing an expansion upwards from the Indigenous vowel ...

  4. List of English words of Australian Aboriginal origin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_English_words_of...

    This is a list of English words derived from Australian Aboriginal languages. Some are restricted to Australian English as a whole or to certain regions of the country. Others, such as kangaroo and boomerang, have become widely used in other varieties of English, and some have been borrowed into other languages beyond English.

  5. List of Australian Aboriginal languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Australian...

    Australian Aboriginal Pidgin English language: Few Nearly extinct Pidgin. Developed post-contact. Has been mostly creolized. Australian Kriol language: Creole, Pidgin English, Roper-Bamyili Creole 4,200 Vigorous WA, NT & Qld developed post-contact. 10, 000 second language speakers. Awabakal language: Awabakal 9 Dormant NSW. Being revived.

  6. Australian Aboriginal languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Australian_Aboriginal_languages

    The first Aboriginal people to use Australian Aboriginal languages in the Australian parliament were Aden Ridgeway on 25 August 1999 in the Senate when he said "On this special occasion, I make my presence known as an Aborigine and to this chamber I say, perhaps for the first time: Nyandi baaliga Jaingatti. Nyandi mimiga Gumbayynggir.

  7. Pintupi dialect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pintupi_dialect

    Pintupi (/ ˈ p ɪ n t ə p i, ˈ p ɪ n ə-,-b i /) [3] is an Australian Aboriginal language. It is one of the Wati languages of the large Pama–Nyungan family.It is one of the varieties of the Western Desert Language (WDL).

  8. Margaret Sharpe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Sharpe

    Sharpe completed her doctoral dissertation on the language of the Alawa people at the University of Queensland in 1965. [1] After a further stint of fieldwork between June 1966 and May 1968, this was updated and issued as a monograph under the imprint of the Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies in 1972. [2]

  9. Kokatha dialect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kokatha_dialect

    The Kokatha language, also written Kukatha, Kokata, Gugada, and other variants, and also referred to as Madutara, Maduwonga, Nganitjidi, Wanggamadu, and Yallingarra and variant spellings of these, is an Australian Aboriginal language of the Western Desert group traditionally spoken by the Kokatha people, whose traditional lands are in the western part of the state of South Australia, north of ...