Ngunnawal language

Last updated

Burragorang
Ngunawal-Gundungurra
Onerwal
Northern Inland Yuin
Region New South Wales & ACT, Australia
Ethnicity Ngunnawal, Gandangara
Dialects
  • Ngunawal/Ngunnawal
  • Gundungurra
Language codes
ISO 639-3 Either:
xul   Ngunawal
xrd   Gundungurra
Glottolog nort2760
AIATSIS [1] D3  Ngunawal/Ngunnawal, S60  Gundungurra
ELP

Ngunnawal/Ngunawal and Gundungurra is Australian Aboriginal language, and the traditional language of the Ngunnawal and Gandangarra. Ngunnawal and Gundungurra are very closely related and the two were most likely highly mutually intelligible. As such they can be considered dialects of a single unnamed language, but this is the technical linguistic usage of these terms and Ngunnawal and Gundungurra peoples prefer to describe their individual varieties as separate languages in their own right. [2]

Contents

Classification

Gundungurra/Ngunawal is generally classified to fall within the tentative (and perhaps geographic) Yuin–Kuric group of the Pama–Nyungan family. [3]

Location

The traditional country of the Ngunnawal is generally thought to have extended from near Goulburn, west to Boorowa, south through Canberra, perhaps to Queanbeyan, and extending west to around the Goodradigbee River. [2]

Sounds

Ngunawal consonants [4] [5]
Labial Apico-
alveolar
Lamino-
dental
Lamino-
palatal
Dorso-
velar
Stop bdɟg
Nasal mnɲŋ
Trill r
Lateral lʎ
Approximant wɹj
Ngunawal vowels [4] [5]
FrontCentralBack
Highi, iːu, uː
Lowa, aː

Current status

The Ngunnawal community has for some years been engaged in work to revive the language with the aim being to bring it back into daily use within the community. They have been working with AIATSIS linguists to assist them with this work, and with identifying historical records that can be used for this work. [6]

Ngunawal words

Ngunawal words and phrases and English translations
NgunawalEnglishRef.
BalboKangaroo rat [7]
BamirLong [8]
Bargang Yellow box [9] [10]
Berra Boomerang [11]
BimbiBird [10]
BimbiangShield [12]
BinduganMussel [13]
BirrigaiTo laugh [14] [15]
BudyanBirds [16]
BunburungSmall lizard [17]
Bunduluk Rosella [18]
BunimaBlow (as wind) [13]
BurraiQuick [19]
Burrum-bahWhere the kangaroo, the wallaby, bounces over the rocks [20]
BuralDay [21]
BurinStringybark [22]
DhangarnFood [23]
DaramoolenDreaming [13]
DarwaA transition for ceremony [20]
Dulwa Casuarina trees [10]
DyindanRing-tail possum [13]
GaluCrane [24]
GamburraFlowers [25]
Gang-gang Gang-gang cockatoo [26] [4]
Gilirukpee wee [27]
GinninderraSparkling light [28]
Ginin-ginin-derrySparkling, throwing out little rays of light
(possibly a description of a waterfall)
[29]
GubbityPipeclay [13]
Gubur DhauraRed ochre ground [30]
GudaliTo hunt [31]
Guginya Kookaburra [31]
GulaKoala [31]
GulwanYounger sister [13]
GummiukBulrushes [10]
GunyanSlow [32]
JedbinbillaA place where boys become men [14] [20] [33]
GurubunKoala [34]
KubbadangMoon [13]
Karrugang Magpie [35]
KudyeraFighting club [36]
KanbarraMeeting Place[ citation needed ]
MadiVery [13]
Mulleun Eagle [37]
MulunggangPlatypus [38]
MundangCanoe [39]
Mundawari Bandicoot [40]
MunjuwaTracks, Foot [13]
MuraPathway [31] [41]
Mura gadiPathways for searching [42]
Murra Bidgee MullangariKeeping the pathway to our ancestors alive [43]
MurrungLizard [44]
NangiTo see or look [45]
NarragunnawaliAlive/well-being/coming together [46]
Nengi BamirSee far (view) [10]
NgadyungWater [39]
Ngunna yerrabi yangguYou're welcome to leave your footprints on our land [47]
NguruCamp [39]
PajongNgunnawal clan group [13]
TuggeranongCold place [48]
UmbagongAxe [49] [50]
WalgaHawk [51]
WallabalooaNgunnawal clan group [13]
WarabinCurlew [52]
WarrumbulYouth [53]
Weereewa Lake George
(translates roughly to "bad water")
[20] [54] [55]
WimbaliriDrink [13]
Winnunga nimmityjahStrong health [56]
WinyuSun [57]
WirriaTree goanna [58]
WoggabaliriPlay [59]
WolwayWaterfall [60]
YarrhRunning water [61]
Yeal-am-bid-gie Molonglo River [62]
YerraSwim, [10] to fly like a bird [63]
YerrabiTo walk [64]
YerradhangEucalyptus Tree [13]
YukkumbrukBlack Crow
YumbaEel [65]
YuyuMopoke [13]

More words are compiled online in The Wiradyuri and Other Languages of New South Wales, [4] an article by Robert H. Mathews first published in the Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute in 1904.

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References

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https://aiatsis.gov.au/research/research-themes/ngunawal-language-revival-project