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Warlpiri

Warlpiri

Sign language
Welcome

Warlpiri (Elpira, Ilpara, Ngaliya, Ngardilpa, Wailbri, Walbiri, Walmama, Walpiri) belongs to the South-West Ngarga branch of the Pama-Nyungan language family, the largest of the Indigenous Australian language families. It is spoken by about 2,500 Warlpiri people in Australia’s Northern Territory (Ethnologue). It is one of the largest Aboriginal languages in Australia in terms of number of speakers.

 

Status

Warlpiri has no official status in Australia. The language is endangered in spite of efforts to teach it to children in Warlpiri settlements.
In some Warlpiri communities, children and young adults use “Light Warlpiri”, a variety of speech that combines elements of Warlpiri, Australian Aboriginal Kriol (an English-based creole) and Australian English.

 

Dialects

Warlpiri has several dialects identified by their geographical locale within the Warlpiri-speaking area:

 

Structure

Sound system

Warlpiri has a relatively simple sound system an inventory of 21 phonemes. Consonant clusters are restricted.

 

Vowels

Warlpiri has three vowels. Vowels can long long or short. Vowel length makes a difference in word meaning, e.g., mirnta ‘flu’ and miirnta ‘hardwood shield’. There is progressive and a regressive vowel harmony, i.e., assimilation of the first vowel to the following vowel and vice versa, e.g., karli ‘boomerang’ + –ngku‘ergative’ becomes karlingki;

Front Central Back
Close
i
u
Open
a

 

Consonants

Warlpiri has 18 consonant phonemes. They are given below with their orthographic representations indicated in parentheses. There are several distinguishing features of Warlpiri consonants:

 

Bilabial Apico-Alveolar Retroflex Palatal Velar
Stops
p
t
ʈ
c
k
Nasals
m
n
ɳ
ɲ
ŋ
Laterals
l
ɭ
ʎ
Trill
r
Flap
ɽ
Approximant
w (w)
ɻ
j

 

Stress

Stress normally falls on the first syllable of Warlpiri words, including enclitics.

Grammar

Warlpiri is an Ergative-Absolutive language, i.e., it treats subjects of transitive verbs distinctly from subjects of intransitive verbs. It treats subjects of intransitive verbs in the same way as objects of transitive verbs.

Nouns

 

Verbs

 

Auxiliary words

All Warlpiri clauses contain an auxiliary word, which together with the verb suffix identifies tense and relationship between main and dependent clauses. The auxiliary word is usually the second word in a clause. Common auxiliaries include ka (present tense), kapi (future tense), kaji (conditional). For example,

kurdu-ngku
wita-ngku
ka
maliki
wajilipi-nyi
yalumpu-rlu
child – Ergative
small-Ergative
Auxiliary -Present
dog
chase – Present
that
‘That small child is chasing the dog.’

 

Auxiliary words also specify the person and number of the subject and object, unlike Indo-European languages where these markers are placed on verbs. For instance, kapirnangku nyanyi ‘I will see you’ consists of kapi– ‘future tense’ + rna ‘first person singular of the subject’ + ngku ‘second person singular of object ‘you + nyanyi ‘nonpast of see (Wikipedia).

 

Enclitics

Warlpiri has numerous enclitics, i.e., grammatically independent but phonologically dependent words. There are several classes of enclitics.

 

Word order

The order of major sentence constituents is not determined by their grammatical function, but rather by pragmatic considerations, such as topic (known or old information) and focus (new or important information).

 

Vocabulary

The most common mechanisms of word formation in Warlpiri are derivation, compounding, and reduplication. For instance, noun stems can be formed by adding suffixes, e.g., puru ‘theft’ — purunjunju ‘thief’, by compounding, e.g., yarla karlangu ‘yam digger’ (yarla ‘yam’ + karlangu ‘digger’), or by reduplication, e.g., rdaka ‘finger’ — rdakardaka ‘sign language’. Sometimes, reduplicated words do not have a corresponding nonreduplicated form, e.g., kuntukuntu ‘fat’.

Warlpiri has no special words for numerals.

Registers

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

 

Sign language

Warlpiri has a well developed and widely used sign language. It may have arisen from the tradition that bans widows from speaking during a long mourning period during which they communicate exclusively by signing.

 

Writing

Warlpiri orthography has been standardized in the mid 1970s. Many primary textbooks and readers and a dictionary of Warlpiri have been published since then.

 

Difficulty

Language Difficulty

How difficult is it to learn Warlpiri?
There is no data on the difficulty of Warlpiri for speakers of English.