Adjora language

Last updated
Adjora
Abu
Native toPapua New Guinea
Region East Sepik Province
Native speakers
4,200 (2000 census) [1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3 ado
Glottolog abuu1241
ELP Abu

Adjora (Adjoria, Azao) a.k.a. Abu is a Ramu language of Papua New Guinea.

Contents

A supposed dialect, Auwa, apparently with few speakers, may be a distinct language.

Sociolinguistics

Many Adjora words have been borrowed by Tayap, a nearby language isolate that is spoken just to the west of the Adjora area. [2] :350

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Abu language may refer to:

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Gapun is a village in Marienberg Rural LLG, East Sepik Province, Papua New Guinea, located near the mouth of the Sepik River. The language isolate Tayap is traditionally spoken in Gapun by the Tayap people. Gapun village is the sole Tayap settlement, while all other neighboring villages are inhabited by non-related ethnic groups. The sociolinguistic history of the village has been presented in textbooks as a case study on how and why language shift and language death occur.

References

  1. Adjora at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. Kulick, Don; Terrill, Angela (2019). A Grammar and Dictionary of Tayap: The Life and Death of a Papuan Language. Pacific Linguistics 661. Boston/Berlin: Walter de Gruyter Inc. ISBN   9781501512209.