Bidhawal language

Last updated
Bidhawal
Birrdhawal, Bidwell
mŭk-dhang
Native to Australia
Region Gippsland
Ethnicity Bidhawal
Extinct (date missing)
Latin transcription
Language codes
ISO 639-3 ihw
Glottolog gana1268
AIATSIS [1] S49
Map Victoria Aboriginal tribes (colourmap).jpg
Aboriginal Victorian language territories. Bidhawal (labeled Bidwell) is at the right, in green.

The Bidawal language was an Australian Aboriginal language, either a dialect of or closely related to the Kurnai language, [2] which was spoken by the Kurnai tribes to the west. However, the Bidawal dialect had borrowed a number of words referring to mammals, birds and celestial bodies from Ngarigo, as well as a smaller number of words from Thawa and Dhudhuroa. [2] The Bidawal called their own dialect mŭk-dhang (or muk-thang) ("good speech"), and that of the neighbouring Kurnai gūnggala-dhang. The Kurnai, however, called their own dialect mŭk-dhang, and that of the Bidawal kwai-thang ("rough speech"). [3] [a] According to Alfred William Howitt, Bidhawal is a mixture of Kurnai, Ngarigo and Yuin. [4]

Contents

Phonology

Bidhawal consonants [5]
Labial Dental Alveolar Retroflex Palatal Velar
Plosive p ~ b ~ dh, th t / d ʈ / ɖ c ~ ɟ ty, dy k ~ ɡ
Nasal m nh n ɳ ɲ ny, ñ ŋ ng
Rhotic r
Lateral l
Approximant w ɻ ~ r ~ ɾ r j y

Grammar

Pronouns

Pronouns are inflected for person, number, and case. There are no gendered pronouns.

Bidhawal pronouns [6]
SingularDualPlural
Nominative
1st personinclusiveNgaiuNgalluNgangun
exclusiveNgallungNgangunnang
2nd personNginduNgindubulNgindigan
3rd personMindhaMindhabullongMindhagullang
Possesive
1st personinclusiveNgaindya
exclusive
2nd personNgingunna
3rd personNgaianga

The pronouns for Kurnai (Gūnggaladhang) are vary similar to those for Bidhawal.

Notes

  1. Tindale's "dhang" has been written as "thang" in accordance with Dixon. [2]

References

  1. S49 Bidhawal at the Australian Indigenous Languages Database, Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies
  2. 1 2 3 Dixon 2002, p. 44..
  3. Tindale 1974.
  4. Howitt, A. W. (July 1907). "The Native Tribes of South-East Australia". The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. 37: 268. doi:10.2307/2843319.
  5. Mathews 1907, pp. 347–349.
  6. Mathews 1907, p. 358.

Sources