Adnyamathanha language explained

Adnyamathanha; Kuyani
Nativename:yura ngarwala
Region:South Australia
Ethnicity:Adnyamathanha, Kuyani, Wailpi
Speakers:262
Date:2021 census
Ref:[1]
Familycolor:Australian
Fam1:Pama–Nyungan
Fam2:Thura-Yura
Fam3:Yura
Lc1:adt
Ld1:Adnyamathanha
Lc2:gvy
Ld2:Guyani
Aiatsis:L10
Aiatsisname:Adnyamathanha
Aiatsis2:L9
Aiatsisname2:Kuyani
Glotto:adny1235
Glottoname:Adnyamathanha
Glotto2:guya1249
Glottoname2:Guyani
Elp2:6664
Elpname2:Kuyani
Map:Aboriginal Tribes near Adelaide.png
Map2:Lang Status 40-SE.svg
Notice:IPA

The Adnyamathanha language (pronounced), also known as yura ngarwala and other names, and Kuyani, also known as Guyani and other variants, are two closely related Australian Aboriginal languages. They are traditional languages of the Adnyamathanha of and the Kuyani peoples, of the Flinders Ranges and to the west of the Flinders respectively, in South Australia.

As of the 2016 Australian census, there were around 140 speakers of Adnyamathanha, making it an endangered language; there have been no speakers of Kuyani recorded since 1975. The first bilingual dictionary of the language was published in November 2020.

The name of the witchetty grub comes from Adnyamathanha.

Classification

While R. M. W. Dixon classifies Adnyamathanha and Guyani as a single language, Ethnologue, Glottolog and AIATSIS treats them as separate languages, L10: Adnyamathanha and L9: Kuyani.

Speakers

Estimates of the number of people who speak Adnyamathanha are variable, though it is a severely endangered language. According to Oates (1973) there were only 30 speakers, around 20 according to Schmidt in 1990, 127 in the 1996 Australian census, and about 140 counted in the 2016 census.

Grammar

Adnyamathanha has a complex system of personal pronouns. There are 10 different ways of saying we "you and I" (first person dual), depending on the relationship between the speaker and the addressee.

First dictionary (2020)

The linguist Bernhard Schebeck travelled to the Nepabunna region in the 1970s, and wrote An Adnyamathanha-English Research Dictionary in 2000, which was "For private, or internal, use only – not for publication". Dorothy Tunbridge, a linguist from Canberra and author of[2] Flinders Ranges Dreaming visited the area in the 1980s. Both contributed much to knowledge of the language, but neither recorded all of the words that were known to local speakers.[3]

In November 2020 the first-ever bilingual Adnyamathanha/English dictionary and grammar was published, with translations from and to each language. Compiled by Terrence Coulthard and his wife Josephine, the 400-page Adnyamathanha Culture Guide and Language Book[4] includes descriptions of cultural practices, songlines (muda), the Adnyamathanha kinship system and social history.[5] Terrence, an Adnyamathanha speaker, had been collecting information on the culture and language for 40 years, building on the earlier work by Schebeck and Tunbridge.[3] Linguists and others from the University of Adelaide's Mobile Language Team helped the couple to finalise work on the book in the 18 months to two years before publication.[5] [3]

The Coulthards run Iga Warta, a cultural tourism enterprise, located near Nepabunna in the Gammon Ranges, the site of a mission where Terrence grew up.[3] Iga Warta means "native orange",[6] named by 19th-century English botanist John Lindley as Capparis mitchelii.[7] [8]

Words

Names

This language has been known by many names and variant spellings of names, including:

Yura ngarwala is a widely used term for the Adnyamathanha language. It translates literally to 'people speak'. However, in modern times yura has come to mean 'Adnyamathanha person', rather than 'person' generally, and thus the term translates to 'Adnyamathanha person speak'.

Guyani is also spelled Kijani, Kuyani, Kwiani.

Phonology

Adjnjamathanha and Guyani have the same phonemic inventory.

Vowels

FrontBack
Highpronounced as /i iː/pronounced as /u uː/
Lowpronounced as /a aː/

Consonants

Most of the nasals and laterals are allophonically prestopped.[10]

PeripheralLaminalApical
LabialVelarPalatalDentalAlveolarRetroflexGlottal
Plosivevoicelesspronounced as /p/pronounced as /k/pronounced as /c/pronounced as /t̪/pronounced as /t/pronounced as /ʈ/pronounced as /(ʔ)/
voicedpronounced as /(ɖ )/
Fricativevoicedpronounced as /(v)/
Nasalpronounced as /m ~ bm/pronounced as /ŋ/pronounced as /ɲ ~ ɟɲ/pronounced as /n̪ ~ d̪n̪/pronounced as /n ~ dn/pronounced as /ɳ ~ ɖɳ/
Lateralpronounced as /ʎ ~ ɟʎ/pronounced as /l̪ ~ d̪l̪/pronounced as /l ~ dl/pronounced as /ɭ ~ ɖɭ/
Flappronounced as /ɾ/pronounced as /ɽ/
Trillpronounced as /r/
Approximantpronounced as /w/pronounced as /j/pronounced as /ɻ/
pronounced as /[v]/ may be an allophone of pronounced as //p//.

History

While the closely related Guyani retains word-initial stops, Adnyamathanha has undergone systematic lenition of stops in this position. Former pronounced as /

/ has become pronounced as /[v]/, former pronounced as / / and probably also pronounced as / / have become pronounced as //j//, and former pronounced as / / has disappeared entirely.

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cultural diversity: Census. Australian Bureau of Statistics. 13 October 2022. 2021.
  2. Web site: Austlit . Dorothy Tunbridge . AustLit. 18 February 2011 . 12 November 2020.
  3. Web site: The first Adnyamathanha dictionary, 40 years in the making. Angela . Skujins . CityMag . 9 November 2020 . 12 November 2020.
  4. Book: Coulthard . Terrence . Coulthard . Josephine . Adnyamathanha: A Culture Guide and Language Book . Iga Warta . 2020 . 978-0-646-82427-7 . 15 November 2020 .
  5. Web site: Adnyamathanha Dictionary Launched in Adelaide . Mobile Language Team . 6 November 2020 . 12 November 2020.
  6. Web site: Iga Warta: The Place of the Native Orange. Iga Warta. 12 November 2020.
  7. Book: Clarke, Philip A. . Aboriginal Plant Collectors: Botanists and Australian Aboriginal People in the Nineteenth Century . Rosenberg Pub. . 2008 . 978-1-877058-68-4 . 12 November 2020 . 44.
  8. Web site: Plants Used by the Adnjamathanha . Australian Plants Society . 12 November 2020.
  9. Web site: Witchetty grubs . . David . Bock . Brendan . Atkins. 11 Nov 2018. 12 November 2020.
  10. Jeff Mielke, 2008. The emergence of distinctive features, p 135