Warray language
| Warray | |
|---|---|
| Native to | Australia | 
| Region | Adelaide River, Northern Territory | 
| Ethnicity | Awarai, Wulwulam | 
| Extinct | c. 2000 | 
| Arnhem
 
 | |
| Dialects | 
 | 
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | wrz | 
| Glottolog | wara1290Warraywulw1234Wulwulam | 
| AIATSIS[1] | N25 | 
| ELP | Warray | 
Warray (Waray) was an Australian language spoken in the Adelaide River area of the Northern Territory.
Wulwulam may have been a dialect. Ngorrkkowo may have been another name for Wulwulam.[2]
Phonology
| Bilabial | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stop | p(ː) | t(ː) | c(ː) | k(ː) | 
| Nasal | m | n | ɲ | ŋ | 
| Lateral | l | |||
| Trill | r | |||
| Semivowel | w | j | 
| Front | Back | |
|---|---|---|
| Close | i | u | 
| Mid | ɛ | ɔ | 
| Open | a | 
Vocabulary
The following basic vocabulary items of Warray are from Tryon (1968).[4]
- no. - gloss - Warrai - 1 - head - anbam - 2 - hair - meǰa - 3 - eyes - andum - 4 - nose - ange - 5 - ear - anganïm - 6 - tooth - anlætma - 7 - tongue - anǰæn - 8 - shoulder - anmunak - 9 - elbow - angunmuŋ - 10 - hand - ænnæbæ - 11 - breasts - čœčœč - 12 - back - angibæ - 13 - belly - anmiɲ - 14 - navel - anlanǰɛrak - 15 - heart - andoy - 16 - urine - wul - 17 - excrete - ŋuk - 18 - thigh - anǰatot - 19 - leg - angaRa - 20 - knee - anbat - 21 - foot - anŋobæ - 22 - skin - anwik - 23 - fat - anli - 24 - blood - kurač - 25 - bone - anmɔ - 26 - man - naŋ - 27 - woman - alguwulbæ - 28 - father - pibi - 29 - mother - pulbul - 30 - grandmother - wæče - 31 - policeman - aǰamɔrɔ - 32 - spear - bɔkɔ - 33 - woomera - ǰon - 34 - boomerang - buran - 35 - nullanulla - waRawaRa - 36 - hair-belt - čaman - 37 - canoe - pamuɲ - 38 - axe - čočo - 39 - dilly bag - liče - 40 - fire - wæk - 41 - smoke - wudl - 42 - water - wik - 43 - cloud - pamŋul - 44 - rainbow - kulunǰe - 45 - barramundi - madukadl - 46 - sea - čænbadlk - 47 - river - popal - 48 - stone - kïre - 49 - ground - yul - 50 - track - čap - 51 - dust - luRa - 52 - sun - miradl - 53 - moon - kaRaŋ - 54 - star - mœlœbe - 55 - night - ŋečpa - 56 - tomorrow - lɔrewɔ - 57 - today - waɲelak - 58 - big - amoǰïlk - 59 - possum - wuǰa - 60 - dog - ŋire - 61 - tail - anlaɲ - 62 - meat - waŋ - 63 - snake - pælam - 64 - red kangaroo - čaniɲ - 65 - porcupine - kuwaraŋ - 66 - emu - ŋuriɲ - 67 - crow - wagæ - 68 - goanna - laliɲ - 69 - blue tongue lizard - walmadatatɔ - 70 - mosquito - ŋadl - 71 - sugar-bag - bɔk - 72 - camp - læ - 73 - black - anguǰikɔ - 74 - white - andɔrɔkɔ - 75 - red - anbikpitu - 76 - one - anǰærɛɲ - 77 - two - kɛraŋludl - 78 - when? - ambawayɛn - 79 - what? - ɲiɲaŋ - 80 - who? - abɛŋ - 81 - I - ɲæk - 82 - you - ŋuɲ - 83 - he - agala - 84 - grass - čitpam - 85 - vegetable food - moya - 86 - tree - yumbal - 87 - leaf - mala - 88 - pandanus - mæRiɲ - 89 - ironwood - læŋwalakɔ - 90 - ripe - anǰɔlɔŋ - 91 - good - anliwɔ - 92 - bad - awarɔ - 93 - blind - ǰæmiɲɔ - 94 - deaf - awuRïme - 95 - saliva - kïǰaniɲ 
References
- ^ N25 Warray at the Australian Indigenous Languages Database, Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies
- ^ Dixon, R. M. W. (2002). Australian Languages: Their Nature and Development. Cambridge University Press. p. xl.
- ^ a b Harvey, Mark (1986). The Waray Language from Adelaide River (Thesis). Australian National University. doi:10.25911/5d7638b71997b.
- ^ Tryon, Darrell T. "The Daly River Languages: A Survey". In Aguas, E.F. and Tryon, D. editors, Papers in Australian Linguistics No. 3. A-14:21-49. Pacific Linguistics, The Australian National University, 1968. doi:10.15144/PL-A14.21