Mand
[también conocido como Atemble, Atemple-Apris, Atemple]Clasificación: Trans-New Guinea
·en peligro crítico de extinción
Clasificación: Trans-New Guinea
·en peligro crítico de extinción
Atemble, Atemple-Apris, Atemple, Apris |
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Trans-New Guinea, Madang |
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ISO 639-3 |
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ate |
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Como csv |
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La información está incompleta “Personal Communication” . Don Daniels (2014)
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Speakers are older people. No children learn the language.
The number of speakers is declining rapidly.
La información está incompleta “Australasia and the Pacific” (425-577) . Stephen Wurm (2007) , Christopher Moseley · Routledge
In 1981, sixty-five speakers were reported. Today it is still close to that figure, but it is under pressure from large related languages such as Angaua, and from Tok Pisin.
Angaua
Tok Pisin
No literacy
Madang Province. Spoken on the right side of the Ramu River, northwest of Aiome and upstream from Annaberg.
La información está incompleta “Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009)” . M. Paul Lewis · SIL International
Data for the number of native speakers comes from S. Wurm (2000).