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Malak-Malak language

Malak-Malak (also spelt Mullukmulluk, Malagmalag), also known as Ngolak-Wonga (Nguluwongga), is an Australian Aboriginal language spoken by the Mulluk-Mulluk people. Malakmalak is nearly extinct, with children growing up speaking Kriol or English instead. The language is spoken in the Daly River area around Woolianna and Nauiyu. The Kuwema or Tyaraity (Tyeraty) variety is distinct.

Malak-Malak
Mullukmulluk
Nguluk Wanggarr
RegionNorthern Territory
EthnicityMulluk-Mulluk, Ngolokwangga, Djerait
Native speakers
10 Malak-Malak (2016 census)[1]
5 Tyeraity (2005)[2]
Dialects
  • Malak-Malak
  • Djerait (Kuwema)
Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-3Either:
mpb – Malak-Malak
woa – Kuwema (Tyaraity)
Glottolognort1547
AIATSIS[2]N22 Malak Malak, N10 Kuwema (Tyaraity)
ELPMalak Malak
 Kuwema[3]
Malak Malak is classified as Severely Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Classification edit

Malakmalak was formerly classified as an independent member of the Northern Daly languages and is considered a language isolate. Along with the "Anson Bay" group of Wagaydy (Patjtjamalh, Wadjiginy, Kandjerramalh) and the unattested Giyug. Green concluded that Wagaydy and Malakmalak were two separate language families.[4] Some later classifications have linked them such as Bowern (2011).[5] However, the Wagaydy people are recent arrivals in the area, and their language may only similar due to borrowing.[6] AIATSIS and Glottolog both treat Wagaydy as an isolate and Giyug as unclassifiable.

In contemporary usage, "Northern Daly" (e.g. Harvey 2003,[7] Cahir 2006,[8] Nordlinger 2017[9]) most often refers specifically to the group of languages which includes Malakmalak and Tyerraty[10] (also known as Guwema), a variety with which MalakMalak differs significantly in vocabulary (65% according to Tryon's 200 word list), but is very close to morphologically.[11]

Phonology edit

Vowels[12] edit

Consonants[12] edit

Plosives /p t c k/ may be heard as voiced as [b d ɟ ɡ] when intervocalic.[13]

Typological classification edit

MalakMalak, is an ergative-absolutive language with constituent order mainly determined by information structure and prosody, but syntactically free. Marking of core-cases is optional. The language is mostly dependent-marking (1), but also has no marking (2) and head-marking features (3).[14]

(1)
dependent-marking: possession

Doro-ngayi

name-3SG.F

muyiny

dog

Doro-ngayi muyiny

name-3SG.F dog

"Doro's dog"

(2)
no marking: noun-adjective

meldaty

trip

ada

1SG.EXCL.go.PST

tjung

stick

yintjerrik

small.M

meldaty ada tjung yintjerrik

trip 1SG.EXCL.go.PST stick small.M

"I tripped on the little stick"

(3)
head-marking: noun-adposition

ngatj

EMPH

yunu

3SG.M.sit.PST

tjinang

stay.give

pak-ma

sit-CONT

nende

thing/person

wag

water

puyunduk-nana

underneath-LOC

ngatj yunu tjinang pak-ma nende wag puyunduk-nana

EMPH 3SG.M.sit.PST stay.give sit-CONT thing/person water underneath-LOC

"he sits down underneath the water"

Morphosyntactic properties edit

MalakMalak's verb phrase uses complex predicates. These consist of an inflecting verb that has properties of person, number and tense. MalakMalak only has six such verbs. In example (4), yuyu and vida are inflecting verbs. Additionally, there are coverbs which have aspectual properties, but do not inflect for number, tense or person. They occur with inflecting verbs. They are unlimited in number and new verbs are also borrowed into this class. In (4), kubuk-karrarr, dat-tyed, and ka are coverbs. They can also form serial verbs (kubuk-karrarr, dat-tyed).[15]

(4)
Complex Predicates and Serial Coverbs

kubuk-karrarr

swim-move.up

dat-tjed

look-stand

yuyu

3SG.M.stand.PST

yanak

one

ka

come

yida=ke

3SG.M.go.PST=FOC

kubuk-karrarr dat-tjed yuyu yanak ka yida=ke

swim-move.up look-stand 3SG.M.stand.PST one come 3SG.M.go.PST=FOC

"he crossed the river and looked once, then he came here"

Spatial Language edit

MalakMalak employs all three "classic" types of spatial Frames of Reference: intrinsic, relative and absolute. Additionally, the language uses place names and body-part orientation to talk about space.[16][17] The intrinsic Frame requires some kind of portioning of the ground object or landmark into named facets from which search domains can be projected.[18] In English this would be, for example, the tree is in front of the man. And in MalakMalak it would be (5).

(5)
intrinsic Frame of Reference

tjung

tree

angundu-na

behind-LOC

muyu

3SG.N*.stand.PST

tjung angundu-na muyu

tree behind-LOC 3SG.N*.stand.PST

"the tree was behind (the man)"

The relative Frame of Reference involves mapping from the observer's own axes (front, back, left, right) onto the ground object.[18] An English example is the ball is on the right. In MalakMalak it would be (6)

(6)
relative Frame of Reference

yerra

now

tjalmiyiny

right

dek

place

kantjuk

up/upwards

purrat-ma

jump-CONT

wuta

3SG.N.go.PST

yerra tjalmiyiny dek kantjuk purrat-ma wuta

now right place up/upwards jump-CONT 3SG.N.go.PST

"now the ball was on the right, jumping up (lit. jumping in an upward place on the right)"

The absolute Frame of Reference requires xed bearings that are instantly available to all members of the community.[18] An English example is the opera is west of here. In MalakMalak, three different types of absolute frames can be used. Those based on the course of the sun (east/west) (7a), on prevailing winds (northwesterly/southeasterly) (7b), and on two sides of the prominent Daly River (northeastern/southwestern bank) (7c).

(7a)
absolute Frame of Reference (sun)

miri

sun

tjalk-ma

go.down-CONT

yina,

this

yina

this

miri

sun

paiga-ma

go.up-CONT

miri tjalk-ma yina, yina miri paiga-ma

sun go.down-CONT this this sun go.up-CONT

"this one is west and this one is east"

(7b)
absolute Frame of Reference (wind)

Waliwali-nen

Daly.River-DIR

pudang

face.towards

tjedali

stand.PART

yuyu

3SG.M.stand.PRS

nul-yen

northwesterly-DIR

pudang

face.towards

tjedali

stand.part

yuyu

3SG.M.stand.PRS

Waliwali-nen pudang tjedali yuyu nul-yen pudang tjedali yuyu

Daly.River-DIR face.towards stand.PART 3SG.M.stand.PRS northwesterly-DIR face.towards stand.part 3SG.M.stand.PRS

"one is facing the river and the other one is facing northwest" Unknown glossing abbreviation(s) (help);

(7c)
absolute Frame of Reference (riverbank)

duk

place

puyunduk

underneath

kinangga

north.eastern.bank/this.side

yide

3SG.M.go/be.PRS

chair=we

chair=FOC

duk puyunduk kinangga yide chair=we

place underneath north.eastern.bank/this.side 3SG.M.go/be.PRS chair=FOC

"it is underneath, on the northeastern bank's side, of the chair"

Vocabulary edit

Tryon (1968) edit

The following basic vocabulary items of Northern Daly language varieties, including Malak-Malak (or Mullukmulluk), are from Tryon (1968).[19]

no. gloss Mullukmulluk Djeraity
1 head pundɔ pundu
2 hair pundɔmæk pundumæR
3 eyes numɔrɔ numɔrɔ
4 nose yinïn yinun
5 ear čawœr muninǰawœr
6 tooth dit diR
7 tongue ŋændɛl ŋændulk
8 shoulder mœndœl mændœm
9 elbow pimïle pimilu
10 hand naɲïl naɲulk
11 breasts wiyœ wiŋ
12 back payak daɲ
13 belly pœɲ pœɲ
14 navel čœčœt čœčuruk
15 heart mændulma mændulma
16 urine wurɔ wurɔ
17 excrete wœn wœn
18 thigh čæt čæR
19 leg wilit dulk
20 knee pœŋgœl pœŋgœl
21 foot maǰan mæl
22 skin ŋæčïdl karala
23 fat milyœ laɲ
24 blood dawut padawɔ
25 bone nœrœt murɔ
26 man yiɲa lœlambœr
27 woman alawaR alœrguR
28 father baŋa papaŋa
29 mother wiyaŋa kalaŋa
30 grandmother æǰæŋa ŋeyæčɔ
31 policeman čæyæčman čayačdiɲ
32 spear čaŋar čaŋal
33 woomera yarawa maduR
34 boomerang čïmbičïmbič čïmbičïmbič
35 nullanulla warawara čændæɲ
36 hair-belt pudur purur
37 canoe wænde wændɔ
38 axe walyïmba ličpuRp
39 dilly bag karɛr pæmbuR
40 fire čœŋ čuŋɔ
41 smoke wæn wæn
42 water wak wak
43 cloud durɔ pæRk
44 rainbow dæpulɔlɔy pulɔlɔy
45 barramundi
46 sea ŋambač ŋambač
47 river wakwurɔ wurɔ
48 stone wadlk wulɔ
49 ground pawuRk wœnǰœ
50 track yære æRɔ
51 dust pulɔ pulɔ
52 sun mïre mirɔ
53 moon yædlk yœlk
54 star nœmœrœl numurudl
55 night puwaR poyædɔ
56 tomorrow nœyænœ nuŋɔyɔ
57 today æmæn æɲika
58 big wunædle wudælɔ
59 possum wœyœ wœyœ
60 dog moyiɲ moweyiɲ
61 tail wœmœ wumɔ
62 meat
63 snake ŋunǰul čalala
64 red kangaroo čæyœt manduRk
65 porcupine mænɛŋɛč manɛŋɛč
66 emu čïnburat ŋœrœɲ
67 crow waŋgïr waŋguR
68 goanna čæriɲ čæɲ
69 blue tongue lizard kumugut pɛrɛt
70 mosquito wænŋɛn wænŋun
71 sugar-bag piǰak ŋœčœn
72 camp dæk dæk
73 black eyïkeyïk eyukeyuk
74 white puŋma tamalma
75 red widma witma
76 one yanakŋa yawunuka
77 two wæræna wærunuka
78 when? amanæle ŋædekælædiɲ
79 what? nïgidæ nïgidæ
80 who? eyɛn aŋon
81 I ŋa ŋa
82 you waŋare niɲ
83 he yœndœn yœndœn
84 grass wæne wænœ
85 vegetable food mi miyɔ
86 tree čœŋ čuŋɔ
87 leaf dæmbæl wœR
88 pandanus murɔmurɔ narɔ
89 ironwood pawit æluRk
90 ripe moeŋœɲ damberæmæ
91 good yunbayan munbayɛn
92 bad yinat munætɔ
93 blind wuɲak wuɲ
94 deaf ɲabɔ ŋamama
95 saliva čalïlk čalulk

Blake (1981) edit

Below is a basic vocabulary list from Blake (1981).[20]

English Malak-Malak
man yinya
woman alawar
mother wiyanga
father panga
head puntu
eye numuru
nose yinin
ear tyewör
mouth ari
tongue ngentilk
tooth tit
hand nenyilk
breast wiyi
stomach pöny
urine wuru
faeces wön
thigh tyat
foot matyan
bone mörröt
blood tawut
dog muyiny
snake te nguntyul
kangaroo tyeyöt
possum wöyö
mosquito wenngin
emu tyinpurrat
eaglehawk waruk
crow wangkirr
sun mirri
moon yelk
star nömöröl
stone walk
water wak
camp tek
fire työng
smoke wen
food mi
meat te
stand wurrma
sit pak
see tat
go pi
get tap
hit taty
I nga
you wangarri
one yanaknga
two werrena

References edit

  1. ^ "Census 2016, Language spoken at home by Sex (SA2+)". stat.data.abs.gov.au. Australian Bureau of Statistics. Retrieved 2017-10-29.
  2. ^ a b N22 Malak Malak at the Australian Indigenous Languages Database, Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies  (see the info box for additional links)
  3. ^ Endangered Languages Project data for Kuwema.
  4. ^ Green, I. "The Genetic Status of Murrinh-patha" in Evans, N., ed. "The Non-Pama-Nyungan Languages of Northern Australia: comparative studies of the continent’s most linguistically complex region". Studies in Language Change, 552. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics, 2003.
  5. ^ Bowern, Claire. 2011. "How Many Languages Were Spoken in Australia?", Anggarrgoon: Australian languages on the web, December 23, 2011 (corrected February 6, 2012)
  6. ^ N31 Patjtjamalh at the Australian Indigenous Languages Database, Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies
  7. ^ Harvey, M. (2003). "The evolution of verb systems in the Eastern Daly language family." In N. Evans ed. The Non-Pama Nyungan languages of Northern Australia. Canberra, Pacific Linguistics. pp. 159-184.
  8. ^ Cahir, P. (2006). "Verb functions and Argument Structure in MalakMalak: a Northern daly Language of the Daly River Region, Northern Territory." Honours Thesis. University of Melbourne.
  9. ^ Nordlinger, Rachel (2017). "Chapter 37: The languages of the Daly region (Northern Australia)". In Fortescue, Michael; Mithun, Marianne; Evans, Nicholas (eds.). Oxford Handbook of Polysynthesis. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 782–807.
  10. ^ "The Daly Languages".
  11. ^ Tryon, D. T. (1974). Daly family languages, Australia. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics. pp. 24–41.
  12. ^ a b Hoffmann, Dorothea (in prep), MalakMalak Sketch Grammar
  13. ^ Birk (1976).
  14. ^ "Collection Items". wurin.lis.soas.ac.uk. Retrieved 2016-05-10.
  15. ^ Hoffmann, Dorothea. "Dorothea Hoffmann: "Complex Predicates and Serialization in the Daly River Languages (and beyond?)"". www.academia.edu. Retrieved 2016-05-10.
  16. ^ "Dorothea Hoffmann. (MUR). "Mapping Worlds: Frames of Reference in MalakMalak". In Proceedings to the 39th Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistic Society 2013. University of California: Berkeley". www.academia.edu. Retrieved 2016-05-11.
  17. ^ Hoffmann, Dorothea. "Dorothea Hoffmann. (in prep). "Usage Patterns of Spatial Frames of Reference and Orientation: Evidence from three Australian languages"". www.academia.edu. Retrieved 2016-05-11.
  18. ^ a b c Levinson, Stephen; Wilkins, David (2006). Grammars of Space: Explorations in cognitive diversity. Cambridge University Press. pp. 20–21.
  19. ^ Tryon, Darrell T. "The Daly River Languages: A Survey". In Aguas, E.F. and Tryon, D. editors, Papers in Australian Linguistics No. 3. A-14:21-49. Pacific Linguistics, The Australian National University, 1968. doi:10.15144/PL-A14.21
  20. ^ Blake, Barry J. (1981). Australian Aboriginal languages: a general introduction. London: Angus & Robertson Publishers. ISBN 0-207-14044-8.
  • Birk, D. B. W. (1976). The MalakMalak language, Daly River (Western Arnhem Land). Canberra: Pacific Linguistics.
  • Ray, Sidney H. (Jan–Jun 1909). "The Ngolok-Wanggar Language, Daly River, North Australia". The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. 39. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute: 137–141. doi:10.2307/2843287. JSTOR 2843287.
  • Hoffmann, Dorothea. http://drdorotheahoffmann.wordpress.com
  • Hoffmann, Dorothea (2015). “Moving through space and (not?) time: North Australian dreamtime narratives,” Narratives from the South Pacific: Sociocultural explorations, ed. by F. Gounder. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 15-35
  • Hoffmann, Dorothea (2014). “Mapping the Language: How a dying language loses its place in the world”, Endangered Words, Signs of Revival, ed. by Ghil'ad Zuckermann, J. Miller, and J. Morley, Adelaide: Australex, 1-18

External links edit

  • MalakMalak at the Dalylanguages.org website.

malak, malak, language, malak, malak, also, spelt, mullukmulluk, malagmalag, also, known, ngolak, wonga, nguluwongga, australian, aboriginal, language, spoken, mulluk, mulluk, people, malakmalak, nearly, extinct, with, children, growing, speaking, kriol, engli. Malak Malak also spelt Mullukmulluk Malagmalag also known as Ngolak Wonga Nguluwongga is an Australian Aboriginal language spoken by the Mulluk Mulluk people Malakmalak is nearly extinct with children growing up speaking Kriol or English instead The language is spoken in the Daly River area around Woolianna and Nauiyu The Kuwema or Tyaraity Tyeraty variety is distinct Malak MalakMullukmullukNguluk WanggarrRegionNorthern TerritoryEthnicityMulluk Mulluk Ngolokwangga DjeraitNative speakers10 Malak Malak 2016 census 1 5 Tyeraity 2005 2 Language familyLanguage isolateDialectsMalak Malak Djerait Kuwema Writing systemLatinLanguage codesISO 639 3Either a href https iso639 3 sil org code mpb class extiw title iso639 3 mpb mpb a Malak Malak a href https iso639 3 sil org code woa class extiw title iso639 3 woa woa a Kuwema Tyaraity Glottolognort1547AIATSIS 2 N22 Malak Malak N10 Kuwema Tyaraity ELPMalak Malak Kuwema 3 Malak Malak is classified as Severely Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World s Languages in DangerThis article contains IPA phonetic symbols Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Unicode characters For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA Contents 1 Classification 2 Phonology 2 1 Vowels 12 2 2 Consonants 12 3 Typological classification 4 Morphosyntactic properties 5 Spatial Language 6 Vocabulary 6 1 Tryon 1968 6 2 Blake 1981 7 References 8 External linksClassification editMalakmalak was formerly classified as an independent member of the Northern Daly languages and is considered a language isolate Along with the Anson Bay group of Wagaydy Patjtjamalh Wadjiginy Kandjerramalh and the unattested Giyug Green concluded that Wagaydy and Malakmalak were two separate language families 4 Some later classifications have linked them such as Bowern 2011 5 However the Wagaydy people are recent arrivals in the area and their language may only similar due to borrowing 6 AIATSIS and Glottolog both treat Wagaydy as an isolate and Giyug as unclassifiable In contemporary usage Northern Daly e g Harvey 2003 7 Cahir 2006 8 Nordlinger 2017 9 most often refers specifically to the group of languages which includes Malakmalak and Tyerraty 10 also known as Guwema a variety with which MalakMalak differs significantly in vocabulary 65 according to Tryon s 200 word list but is very close to morphologically 11 Phonology editVowels 12 edit Front Central Back Close i ɨ ɯ u Mid ɛ ɜ Open ɐ Consonants 12 edit Bilabial Alveolar Retroflex Palatal Velar Nasal m n ɲ ŋ Stop voiceless p t c k voiced b d g Rhotic ɾ ɻ Lateral l ʎ Semivowel w j Plosives p t c k may be heard as voiced as b d ɟ ɡ when intervocalic 13 Typological classification editMalakMalak is an ergative absolutive language with constituent order mainly determined by information structure and prosody but syntactically free Marking of core cases is optional The language is mostly dependent marking 1 but also has no marking 2 and head marking features 3 14 1 dependent marking possessionDoro ngayiname 3SG FmuyinydogDoro ngayi muyinyname 3SG F dog Doro s dog 2 no marking noun adjectivemeldatytripada1SG EXCL go PSTtjungstickyintjerriksmall Mmeldaty ada tjung yintjerriktrip 1SG EXCL go PST stick small M I tripped on the little stick 3 head marking noun adpositionngatjEMPHyunu3SG M sit PSTtjinangstay givepak masit CONTnendething personwagwaterpuyunduk nanaunderneath LOCngatj yunu tjinang pak ma nende wag puyunduk nanaEMPH 3SG M sit PST stay give sit CONT thing person water underneath LOC he sits down underneath the water Morphosyntactic properties editMalakMalak s verb phrase uses complex predicates These consist of an inflecting verb that has properties of person number and tense MalakMalak only has six such verbs In example 4 yuyu and vida are inflecting verbs Additionally there are coverbs which have aspectual properties but do not inflect for number tense or person They occur with inflecting verbs They are unlimited in number and new verbs are also borrowed into this class In 4 kubuk karrarr dat tyed and ka are coverbs They can also form serial verbs kubuk karrarr dat tyed 15 4 Complex Predicates and Serial Coverbskubuk karrarrswim move updat tjedlook standyuyu3SG M stand PSTyanakonekacomeyida ke3SG M go PST FOCkubuk karrarr dat tjed yuyu yanak ka yida keswim move up look stand 3SG M stand PST one come 3SG M go PST FOC he crossed the river and looked once then he came here Spatial Language editMalakMalak employs all three classic types of spatial Frames of Reference intrinsic relative and absolute Additionally the language uses place names and body part orientation to talk about space 16 17 The intrinsic Frame requires some kind of portioning of the ground object or landmark into named facets from which search domains can be projected 18 In English this would be for example the tree is in front of the man And in MalakMalak it would be 5 5 intrinsic Frame of Referencetjungtreeangundu nabehind LOCmuyu3SG N stand PSTtjung angundu na muyutree behind LOC 3SG N stand PST the tree was behind the man The relative Frame of Reference involves mapping from the observer s own axes front back left right onto the ground object 18 An English example is the ball is on the right In MalakMalak it would be 6 6 relative Frame of Referenceyerranowtjalmiyinyrightdekplacekantjukup upwardspurrat majump CONTwuta3SG N go PSTyerra tjalmiyiny dek kantjuk purrat ma wutanow right place up upwards jump CONT 3SG N go PST now the ball was on the right jumping up lit jumping in an upward place on the right The absolute Frame of Reference requires xed bearings that are instantly available to all members of the community 18 An English example is the opera is west of here In MalakMalak three different types of absolute frames can be used Those based on the course of the sun east west 7a on prevailing winds northwesterly southeasterly 7b and on two sides of the prominent Daly River northeastern southwestern bank 7c 7a absolute Frame of Reference sun mirisuntjalk mago down CONTyina thisyinathismirisunpaiga mago up CONTmiri tjalk ma yina yina miri paiga masun go down CONT this this sun go up CONT this one is west and this one is east 7b absolute Frame of Reference wind Waliwali nenDaly River DIRpudangface towardstjedalistand PARTyuyu3SG M stand PRSnul yennorthwesterly DIRpudangface towardstjedalistand partyuyu3SG M stand PRSWaliwali nen pudang tjedali yuyu nul yen pudang tjedali yuyuDaly River DIR face towards stand PART 3SG M stand PRS northwesterly DIR face towards stand part 3SG M stand PRS one is facing the river and the other one is facing northwest Unknown glossing abbreviation s help 7c absolute Frame of Reference riverbank dukplacepuyundukunderneathkinangganorth eastern bank this sideyide3SG M go be PRSchair wechair FOCduk puyunduk kinangga yide chair weplace underneath north eastern bank this side 3SG M go be PRS chair FOC it is underneath on the northeastern bank s side of the chair Vocabulary editTryon 1968 edit The following basic vocabulary items of Northern Daly language varieties including Malak Malak or Mullukmulluk are from Tryon 1968 19 no gloss Mullukmulluk Djeraity 1 head pundɔ pundu 2 hair pundɔmaek pundumaeR 3 eyes numɔrɔ numɔrɔ 4 nose yinin yinun 5 ear cawœr muninǰawœr 6 tooth dit diR 7 tongue ŋaendɛl ŋaendulk 8 shoulder mœndœl maendœm 9 elbow pimile pimilu 10 hand naɲil naɲulk 11 breasts wiyœ wiŋ 12 back payak daɲ 13 belly pœɲ pœɲ 14 navel cœcœt cœcuruk 15 heart maendulma maendulma 16 urine wurɔ wurɔ 17 excrete wœn wœn 18 thigh caet caeR 19 leg wilit dulk 20 knee pœŋgœl pœŋgœl 21 foot maǰan mael 22 skin ŋaecidl karala 23 fat milyœ laɲ 24 blood dawut padawɔ 25 bone nœrœt murɔ 26 man yiɲa lœlambœr 27 woman alawaR alœrguR 28 father baŋa papaŋa 29 mother wiyaŋa kalaŋa 30 grandmother aeǰaeŋa ŋeyaecɔ 31 policeman caeyaecman cayacdiɲ 32 spear caŋar caŋal 33 woomera yarawa maduR 34 boomerang cimbicimbic cimbicimbic 35 nullanulla warawara caendaeɲ 36 hair belt pudur purur 37 canoe waende waendɔ 38 axe walyimba licpuRp 39 dilly bag karɛr paembuR 40 fire cœŋ cuŋɔ 41 smoke waen waen 42 water wak wak 43 cloud durɔ paeRk 44 rainbow daepulɔlɔy pulɔlɔy 45 barramundi wɔ wɔ 46 sea ŋambac ŋambac 47 river wakwurɔ wurɔ 48 stone wadlk wulɔ 49 ground pawuRk wœnǰœ 50 track yaere aeRɔ 51 dust pulɔ pulɔ 52 sun mire mirɔ 53 moon yaedlk yœlk 54 star nœmœrœl numurudl 55 night puwaR poyaedɔ 56 tomorrow nœyaenœ nuŋɔyɔ 57 today aemaen aeɲika 58 big wunaedle wudaelɔ 59 possum wœyœ wœyœ 60 dog moyiɲ moweyiɲ 61 tail wœmœ wumɔ 62 meat dae dae 63 snake ŋunǰul calala 64 red kangaroo caeyœt manduRk 65 porcupine maenɛŋɛc manɛŋɛc 66 emu cinburat ŋœrœɲ 67 crow waŋgir waŋguR 68 goanna caeriɲ caeɲ 69 blue tongue lizard kumugut pɛrɛt 70 mosquito waenŋɛn waenŋun 71 sugar bag piǰak ŋœcœn 72 camp daek daek 73 black eyikeyik eyukeyuk 74 white puŋma tamalma 75 red widma witma 76 one yanakŋa yawunuka 77 two waeraena waerunuka 78 when amanaele ŋaedekaelaediɲ 79 what nigidae nigidae 80 who eyɛn aŋon 81 I ŋa ŋa 82 you waŋare niɲ 83 he yœndœn yœndœn 84 grass waene waenœ 85 vegetable food mi miyɔ 86 tree cœŋ cuŋɔ 87 leaf daembael wœR 88 pandanus murɔmurɔ narɔ 89 ironwood pawit aeluRk 90 ripe moeŋœɲ damberaemae 91 good yunbayan munbayɛn 92 bad yinat munaetɔ 93 blind wuɲak wuɲ 94 deaf ɲabɔ ŋamama 95 saliva calilk calulk Blake 1981 edit Below is a basic vocabulary list from Blake 1981 20 English Malak Malak man yinya woman alawar mother wiyanga father panga head puntu eye numuru nose yinin ear tyewor mouth ari tongue ngentilk tooth tit hand nenyilk breast wiyi stomach pony urine wuru faeces won thigh tyat foot matyan bone morrot blood tawut dog muyiny snake te nguntyul kangaroo tyeyot possum woyo mosquito wenngin emu tyinpurrat eaglehawk waruk crow wangkirr sun mirri moon yelk star nomorol stone walk water wak camp tek fire tyong smoke wen food mi meat te stand wurrma sit pak see tat go pi get tap hit taty I nga you wangarri one yanaknga two werrenaReferences edit Census 2016 Language spoken at home by Sex SA2 stat data abs gov au Australian Bureau of Statistics Retrieved 2017 10 29 a b N22 Malak Malak at the Australian Indigenous Languages Database Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies see the info box for additional links Endangered Languages Project data for Kuwema Green I The Genetic Status of Murrinh patha in Evans N ed The Non Pama Nyungan Languages of Northern Australia comparative studies of the continent s most linguistically complex region Studies in Language Change 552 Canberra Pacific Linguistics 2003 Bowern Claire 2011 How Many Languages Were Spoken in Australia Anggarrgoon Australian languages on the web December 23 2011 corrected February 6 2012 N31 Patjtjamalh at the Australian Indigenous Languages Database Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies Harvey M 2003 The evolution of verb systems in the Eastern Daly language family In N Evans ed The Non Pama Nyungan languages of Northern Australia Canberra Pacific Linguistics pp 159 184 Cahir P 2006 Verb functions and Argument Structure in MalakMalak a Northern daly Language of the Daly River Region Northern Territory Honours Thesis University of Melbourne Nordlinger Rachel 2017 Chapter 37 The languages of the Daly region Northern Australia In Fortescue Michael Mithun Marianne Evans Nicholas eds Oxford Handbook of Polysynthesis Oxford Oxford University Press pp 782 807 The Daly Languages Tryon D T 1974 Daly family languages Australia Canberra Pacific Linguistics pp 24 41 a b Hoffmann Dorothea in prep MalakMalak Sketch Grammar Birk 1976 Collection Items wurin lis soas ac uk Retrieved 2016 05 10 Hoffmann Dorothea Dorothea Hoffmann Complex Predicates and Serialization in the Daly River Languages and beyond www academia edu Retrieved 2016 05 10 Dorothea Hoffmann MUR Mapping Worlds Frames of Reference in MalakMalak In Proceedings to the 39th Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistic Society 2013 University of California Berkeley www academia edu Retrieved 2016 05 11 Hoffmann Dorothea Dorothea Hoffmann in prep Usage Patterns of Spatial Frames of Reference and Orientation Evidence from three Australian languages www academia edu Retrieved 2016 05 11 a b c Levinson Stephen Wilkins David 2006 Grammars of Space Explorations in cognitive diversity Cambridge University Press pp 20 21 Tryon Darrell T The Daly River Languages A Survey In Aguas E F and Tryon D editors Papers in Australian Linguistics No 3 A 14 21 49 Pacific Linguistics The Australian National University 1968 doi 10 15144 PL A14 21 Blake Barry J 1981 Australian Aboriginal languages a general introduction London Angus amp Robertson Publishers ISBN 0 207 14044 8 Birk D B W 1976 The MalakMalak language Daly River Western Arnhem Land Canberra Pacific Linguistics Ray Sidney H Jan Jun 1909 The Ngolok Wanggar Language Daly River North Australia The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 39 Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 137 141 doi 10 2307 2843287 JSTOR 2843287 Hoffmann Dorothea http drdorotheahoffmann wordpress com Hoffmann Dorothea 2015 Moving through space and not time North Australian dreamtime narratives Narratives from the South Pacific Sociocultural explorations ed by F Gounder Amsterdam John Benjamins Publishing Company 15 35 Hoffmann Dorothea 2014 Mapping the Language How a dying language loses its place in the world Endangered Words Signs of Revival ed by Ghil ad Zuckermann J Miller and J Morley Adelaide Australex 1 18External links edit nbsp Wiktionary has a word list at Appendix Malak Malak word list MalakMalak at the Dalylanguages org website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Malak Malak language amp oldid 1224231856, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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