The Iwaidjan or Yiwaidjan languages are a small family of non-Pama–Nyungan Australian Aboriginal languages spoken in the Cobourg Peninsula region of Western Arnhem Land.
| Iwaidjan | |
|---|---|
| Geographic distribution | Cobourg Peninsula region, Northern Territory |
| Linguistic classification | Arnhem Land?
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| Subdivisions |
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| Glottolog | iwai1246 |
Iwaidjan languages (purple), among other non-Pama-Nyungan languages (grey) | |
Closeup. Amurdag is the southern section (tan), Wurrugu the tip of the peninsula (green), the rest Iwaidjic (purple). On the grey island just offshore is Marrgu, once thought to be Iwaidjan. | |
In 1997 Nicholas Evans proposed an Arnhem Land family that includes the Iwaidjan languages, though their inclusion is not accepted in Bowern (2011).[1]
| Iwaidjan |
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Garig and Ilgar are two almost identical dialects.[2] Manangkari may be a dialect of Maung.[3]
Dixon (2002) considers Warrkbi demonstrated, but Iwaidjic (Warrkbi-Maung) and Iwaidjan to be speculative. He predicts that working out the histories of the languages will be a "profound challenge", regardless of whether they are a genealogical family or a language area.
Marrgu and Wurrugu, previously lumped in with Iwaidjan, have little in common with it and may turn out to be a separate family.
As of 1998, Iwaidja was spoken by about 150 people in the community of Minjilang on Croker Island,[4][5] alongside English, Kunwinjku and Maung.[citation needed] Maung is primarily spoken in the community of Warruwi on Goulburn Island, and it too has about 150 speakers.[4] Both languages are still being learnt by children.[4] More recent assessments of the status of Iwaidja and Maung are that both have around 200 speakers and are spoken daily by a full age range of people.[6]
All the other Iwaidjan languages are close to extinction. In 1998[update], Amurdak had three remaining speakers and Garig and Ilgar three speakers between them.[4] However, some of these languages have younger people who, while not fluent, can aid in translating old recordings in an attempt to archive or revive the language.[6]
The Iwaidjan languages have similar phoneme inventories. Exceptions are noted below the tables.
| Front | Back | |
|---|---|---|
| High | i | u |
| Low | a | |
In addition to these, Maung also has /e/ and /o/, mostly in loanwords from Kunwinjku and Kunbarlang.[7]
| Peripheral | Laminal | Apical | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bilabial | Velar | Palatal | Alveolar | Retroflex | |
| Plosive | p | k | c | t | ʈ |
| Nasal | m | ŋ | ɲ | n | ɳ |
| Approximant | w | ɰ | j | ɻ | |
| Trill | r | ||||
| Tap | ɽ | ||||
| Lateral approximant | ʎ | l | ɭ | ||
| Lateral flap | ɺ | 𝼈 | |||
Maung lacks the two flapped laterals,[7] which are quite unusual among Australian languages. Also unusual is the velar approximant /ɰ/, which is an areal feature shared with Tiwi and Kunbarlang.[8]
The vocabularies of all the Iwaidjan languages contain loanwords from Macassarese and Malay,[9] both Malayo-Polynesian languages from Indonesia. Iwaidja and Maung have also borrowed heavily from Kunwijku,[9] another Australian language of the Gunwingguan family.
While the Iwaidjan languages share a number of features with other non-Pama–Nyungan language families, it is uncertain which they are closest related to.[citation needed] Ross has proposed that they form part of an Arnhem Land family.
Capell (1940)[10] lists the following basic vocabulary items (with Amarag words from Capell 1942[11])
The following basic vocabulary terms are collated from Capell (1940),[10] Capell (1942),[11] and Evans (2000):[12]
| gloss | Maung | Iwaidja | Amarag |
|---|---|---|---|
| man | arargbi | waːrgbi | awuɭaɭu |
| woman | waramuŋbig | woraidjba | wuraidbaru |
| head | wandji | bagal | iwulja |
| eye | won | jaɽ | waliwu |
| nose | mulu | mul | wiːl |
| mouth | ilagbiridj | ɽagbiridj | wiiŋara |
| tongue | ŋaɽalg | garalg | wiŋaril |
| stomach | gɔːrag | galal | aɖigu |
| bone | ijaɣig | gilir | igada |
| blood | maniŋog | maniŋul | maniŋul |
| kangaroo | aijaŋ | jilbuwi | malaijuwar |
| opossum | wundäru | muŋarg | waŋguwu |
| emu | waramundubu | ganguɽg | |
| crow | gɔragag | gumbulag | gubula |
| fly | molg | moɭg | mulgulg |
| sun | mowan | muwar | mänjidj |
| moon | gorana | guɽana | gurana |
| fire | juŋgu | gudjäli | gudjäli |
| smoke | wuŋain | guŋain | guŋaṉ |
| water | wobaidj | wobaidj | aɖawud |
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link){{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)*Blake, Nelson Muluriny; Glenn Mitchell Wightman; Lorraine Lesley Victoria Williams (1997), Iwaidja ethnobotany: Aboriginal plant knowledge from Gurig National Park, northern Australia, Parks and Wildlife Commission of the Northern Territory, Wikidata Q109466416
Australian Aboriginal and Tasmanian languages | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Pama–Nyungan subgroups |
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| Tangkic | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Macro-Gunwinyguan ? |
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| Iwaidjan |
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| Marrku–Wurrugu ? | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Darwin Region ? |
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| Daly River Sprachbund |
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| Mirndi |
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| Jarrakan |
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| Bunuban |
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| Nyulnyulan |
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| Tasmanian family-level groups |
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Primary language families | |||||
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| New Guinea and the Pacific |
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