Nyawaygi language
Nyawaygi | |
---|---|
Native to | Australia |
Region | Queensland |
Ethnicity | Nyawaygi |
Extinct | 2009, with the death of Willie Seaton[1] |
Pama–Nyungan
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | nyt |
Glottolog | nyaw1247 |
AIATSIS[2] | Y129 |
ELP | Nyawaygi |
The Nyawaygi language, also spelt Nyawaygi, Nywaigi, or Nawagi, is an extinct Australian Aboriginal language that was spoken in northeast Queensland, on the east coast of Australia.
Nyawaygi had the smallest number of consonants, 12, of any Australian language. It had 7 conjugations,[clarification needed] 3 open and 4 closed, the latter including monosyllabic roots, and, in this regard, conserved a feature of proto-Pama–Nyungan lost from contiguous languages.[3]
Notes[]
- ^ Dixon, R. M. W. (10 December 2010). I Am a Linguist: With a Foreword by Peter Matthews. ISBN 978-9004192355.
- ^ Y129 Nyawaygi at the Australian Indigenous Languages Database, Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies
- ^ Dixon, R. M. W. (1983). "Nyawagyi". In Dixon, Robert M. W.; Blake, Barry J. (eds.). Handbook of Australian Languages. Vol. 3. John Benjamins Publishing. pp. 431–523. ISBN 978-9-027-27353-6.
Categories:
- Dyirbalic languages
- Extinct languages of Queensland
- Languages extinct in the 2000s
- 2009 disestablishments in Australia
- Indigenous Australian language stubs