Kanyara languages explained

Kanyara
Familycolor:Australian
Glotto:kany1246
Glottorefname:Kanyara
Map:Kanyara languages.png
Mapcaption:Kanyara languages (green) among other Pama–Nyungan (tan).

The Kanyara languages are a pair of closely related languages in the southern Pilbara region of Western Australia.

According to Dixon, languages classified as members of the Kanyara languages group are (with the varieties in parentheses sometimes considered separate languages):[1]

However, according to Peter Austin, Binigura/Pinikura, Thalanyji, Payungu and Purdana (all classified as separate languages in AUSTLANG) "should probably be classified as belonging to the Kanyara subgroup".[2]

The languages are spoken in the region between the mouths of the Gascoyne River and the Ashburton River, along the coast and extending inland.

The name kanyara comes from the word for "man" in Burdana and Thalanyji. The Kanyara languages form a branch of the Pama–Nyungan family. The Kanyara group was first proposed by Austin based on lexical, morphological and syntactic criteria.[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Dixon, R. M. W. . R. M. W. Dixon . Australian Languages: Their Nature and Development . Cambridge University Press . 2002 . xxxviii.
  2. Austin, Peter. 2008. The classification of Pinikura, Western Australia. In Morphology and language history, Current Issues in Linguistic Theory, 298
  3. Book: Austin, Peter. Peter Austin (linguist). Papers in Australian Linguistics, no. 17. 1988. Classification of Southern Pilbara languages. 1–17; PL A-71. Pacific Linguistics. Canberra. Dunn. L.. Geytenbeek. H.. Glasgow. K.. McGregor. W.. Oates. L.. Swartz. S.. 10.15144/PL-A71.1. Online edition licensed 2015 CC BY-SA 4.0, with permission of PL.