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  2. 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.

  3. 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.

  4. Languages of Australia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languages_of_Australia

    Humans arrived in Australia 50,000 to 65,000 years ago [20] [21] but it is possible that the ancestor language of existing Indigenous languages is as recent as 12,000 years old. [22] Over 250 Australian Aboriginal languages are thought to have existed at the time of first European contact. [ 1 ]

  5. Australian Aboriginal sign languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_Aboriginal_sign...

    Many Australian Aboriginal cultures have or traditionally had a manually coded language, a signed counterpart of their oral language. This appears to be connected with various speech taboos between certain kin or at particular times, such as during a mourning period for women or during initiation ceremonies for men, as was also the case with Caucasian Sign Language but not Plains Indian Sign ...

  6. South Australian Pidgin English - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Australian_Pidgin...

    South Australian Pidgin English is an English-based pidgin contact language used between European settlers and Australian aborigines. It began some time around or before 1820 on Kangaroo Island, a sealing and whaling base, between the sealers and whalers and their aboriginal wives while being influenced by Nautical Jargon and Port Jackson Pidgin English (PJPE).

  7. Aboriginal Australians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aboriginal_Australians

    They contributed DNA to Aboriginal Australians and to present-day New Guineans and an indigenous tribe in the Philippines known as Mamanwa. This study confirms Aboriginal Australians as one of the oldest living populations in the world. They are possibly the oldest outside Africa, and they may have the oldest continuous culture on the planet. [28]

  8. Yugambeh people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yugambeh_people

    In the early 1980s a number of Yugambeh, sitting around a dining room table, discussed an idea that lead them to found the Kombumerri Aboriginal Corporation for Culture which grew into one of Australia's most successful Aboriginal-owned language organisations, and is a major contributor to the indigenous cultural landscape of south east ...

  9. Warlpiri language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warlpiri_language

    It is one of the Ngarrkic languages of the large Pama–Nyungan family and is one of the largest Aboriginal languages in Australia in terms of number of speakers. One of the most well-known terms for The Dreaming (an Aboriginal spiritual belief), Jukurrpa, derives from Warlpiri. [6] [7]