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Indigenous Languages of Australia

Indigenous Languages of Australia

Aboriginal languages are spoken by the native people of Australia and Torres Strait Islands which are located between North Queensland and Papua New Guinea. Linguists believe that most Aboriginal languages share a common ancestor. The exact timing of the arrival of the ancestral language in Australia has been a matter of dispute but the most common view is that they came from Southeast Asia 40,000 to 50,000 years ago. However, no relationship has been established between the Aboriginal languages of Australia and Austronesian languages.

The number of Aboriginal languages spoken by native Australians at the time of European contact is difficult to establish because it is often impossible to distinguish between dialect and language and because many varieties became extinct before they could be recorded and analyzed since the Aboriginal people were forced to give up their languages and learn English. In addition, the great length of time over which the Aboriginal languages have developed makes the reconstruction of their common ancestor extremely difficult.

It is estimated that today there are 170,000 Australians of Aboriginal descent, of whom about 50,000 have some knowledge of one of the surviving Aboriginal languages. Population estimates are hampered by the fact that Aboriginal people often live in isolated areas and that most of them are bilingual with varying degrees of proficiency in their Aboriginal languages.

There is a basic division between Aboriginal languages of the north and northwest of Australia and the languages spoken in the rest of the continent, based on whether the languages use prefixes or suffixes. The overwhelming majority of Aboriginal languages are thought to belong to the Pama-Nyungan language family which uses suffixes. It covers 90% of the continent with some 50 surviving languages. Non-Pama-Nyungan languages are though to belong to 20-30 language families. Below is a listing of Australian Aboriginal languages with the largest numbers of speakers. Some of the numbers are based on 1983 data (Ethnologue). Thus, the number of speakers may be even smaller today.

1,000-4,000
500-1,000
under 500
Kala Lagaw Ya
Mabuyag
Warlpiri
Arrarnta (Eastern)
Pitjantjatjara
Tiwi
Gunwinggu
Ngaanyatjarra
Walmajarri
Arrarnta (Western)
Anindilyakwa
Murrinh-Patha
Burarra
Anmatyerre
Pintupi-Luritja
Kuku Yalanji
Martu Wangka
Yindjibarndi
Nyangumarta
Dhuwal
Nyangumarta
Gupapuyngu
Djambarrpuyngu
Meriam
Wik-Mungkan
Dhangu
Gumatj
Kukatja
Nunggubuyu
Jaru

Gurinji
Nangikurrunggurr
Pintini
Yankunytjatjara
Dayi
Garawa
Kaytetye
Maung
Warrumungu
Ritarungu
Iwaidja
Ngarinman
Rembarunga
Thayore

 

Status

The future of the Aboriginal languages is uncertain since most of them are endangered or on the brink of extinction, but the good news is that the Aboriginal people as well as Australian society as a whole are concerned about the loss of these languages. The influence of English is so strong that the very existence of languages is being threatened. An effort to record and analyze the surviving Aboriginal languages was initiated in the early 1970s so that grammars or grammatical sketches of some 100 languages are available today. This has provided an incentive for Aboriginal groups across Australia to have their languages taught to children in school.

 

Structure

Sound systems

There is considerable similarity among the sound systems of Aboriginal Australian languages. These similarities may be due to geographical proximity and language contact, rather than to common ancestry. For instance, consonant clusters are restricted, and most syllables end in a vowel.

 

Vowels

Most Australian languages have three vowel phonemes, i.e., sounds that make a difference in word meaning. The vowels are typically /i/, /a/, /u/. They can be short or long. Vowel length makes a difference in word meaning. Long vowels are usually represented in writing by double letters. e.g., in Warlpiri, mirnta means ‘flu’ while miirnta means ‘hardwood shield’. Most languages have progressive and regressive vowel harmony, i.e., assimilation of the first vowel to the following vowel and vice versa, e.g., in Warlpiri, karli ‘boomerang’ + –ngku ‘ergative’ = karlingki.

 

Consonants

Below are some features typical of many, but not all, Aboriginal Australian languages:

 

Grammar

There is also great similarity among the grammar systems of Aboriginal languages. For instance, all Australian languages are ergative, i.e., the subjects of transitive verbs are marked with the ergative case, while the subjects of intransitive verbs and objects of transitive verbs are marked with the absolutive case or are unmarked. Below is an example from

 

Nouns and pronouns

Nouns in Australian languages have the following distinguishing features:

 

Verbs

Enclitics
Indigenous languages have numerous enclitics, i.e., grammatically independent but phonologically dependent words, that belong to different classes and express different meanings.

Registers
One of the most unusual aspects of Australian languages is the influence of kinship on speech registers, i.e., language varieties used for particular purposes or in particular social settings.

 

Word order

An unusual feature of all Australian languages is their free word order made possible by the fact that verbs incorporate all syntactic information that is necessary for the interpretation of sentences. Word order is influenced by pragmatic considerations, such as topic (known, or old information) and focus (new or important information).

 

Vocabulary

The Aboriginal languages show a great diversity in their vocabularies. Some linguists attribute this to vocabulary replacement, i.e., taboos on certain words, as well as borrowing. However, all Aboriginal languages are rich in ritual vocabulary, words that deal with spirituality, and those that refer to kinship and the physical environment. Australian languages, for examples, have many more kinship terms than English. The principal sources of word formation in Aboriginal languages are derivation, reduplication, and compounding.

 

Writing

The Aboriginal languages have been unwritten prior to the arrival of English settlers. Alphabets for these languages were eventually developed by individuals with no linguistic training who were working in the absence of phonemic analyses of the sound systems of these languages. As a result, early writing systems were reflections of English spelling conventions rather than accurate representations of the meaningful sound contrasts of Aboriginal languages. Linguists working with Australian languages today are attempting to rectify the situation by developing practical orthographies that more accurately represent the sound systems of Aboriginal languages. For example, Warlpiri which has been written with the Latin alphabet since the1950s, has had its alphabet revised since then. Pitjantjatjara has been written with the Latin alphabet since the 1940s. Its spelling system was standarized in 1987 with the publication of a Pitjantjatjara–English dictionary. However, most Aboriginal languages do not yet have standardized orthographies.

Below is a sample text in Warlpiri.

Warlpiri
Nganimpa karnalu-jana kurdu-kurdu ngukurrdurr–nyina pina jarrinjaku wangkanjaku Warlpiriki manu English-ki Warlpirji ngulaju karnalu kamparru-wana jaru wangka manu jinta-kari English ngulaju kardiya-kurlangu jaru kalu wangka. Ngampurrpa karnalu-jana kurdu-kurduku nyina wangkanjaku jirramaku jaruku Warlpiri-ki manu English-ki.
We, the elders and people of Lajamanu community like our children in the school to learn both ways, Warlpiri and English. Warlpiri is our first language. We want the children in school to learn Warlpiri as their first language and English as their second.

 

Difficulty

Language Difficulty

How difficult is it to learn Indigenous Languages of Australia?
There is no data on the difficulty of Australian indigenous languages for speakers of English.