Southern Cook Islands Māori
[também conhecido como Māori, Kuki Airani, Te Reo Māori o te ...]Classificação: Austronesian
·em risco
Classificação: Austronesian
·em risco
Māori, Kuki Airani, Te Reo Māori o te Pae Tonga o te Kuki Airani |
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Austronesian, Malayo-Polynesian, Oceanic, East Polynesian |
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19th century orthography developed by the London Missionary Society |
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Glottolog |
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raro1241 |
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Como csv |
As informações estão incompletas “Language Contexts: Te Reo Maori o te Pae Tonga o te Kuki Airani also known as Southern Cook Islands Maori” (36-64) . Sally Akevai Nicholas (2018) , Peter K. Austin & Lauren Gawne · EL Publishing
EGIDS 7-8a;
90% of Cook Islands people live abroad. In New Zealand, 68% of Cook Islands people under 65 years of age and 80% under 30 years of age are monolingual English speakers. In the Cook Islands, increasing numbers of young people are monolingual in English or passive bilinguals, though the language is used in all domains including online. (Numbers unavailable for Australia). Cook Islands Māori is used by older speakers in some religious contexts and particular media programs as well as in welcoming ceremonies.
English
New Zealand Māori
Advanced shift to English. Many older people also speak New Zealand Māori, Tahitian, and other regional indigenous languages due to having attended school away from the Southern Cook Islands. There is a lack of qualified Cook Islands Māori grade-school instructors in the diaspora, though some community courses are offered. The language is still prevalent in the performing arts.
While English literacy is high, it is common to have functional or low literacy in Cook Islands Māori. Though most written material is liturgical, there is a broad representation across other genres as well as bilingual dictionaries and grammars. The unclear orthography impedes motivation to read aloud.
Also spoken amongst diaspora populations in New Zealand and Australia
As informações estão incompletas “Australia and the Pacific” (424-557) . Stephen A Wurm (2007) Routledge
Speakers were reported as totaling 43,000 one to two decades ago
Language use and speaker numbers are rapidly decreasing, especially in the diaspora.
English
English is the preferred language of members of the young generation.
Wide literacy
More than half the speakers live in New Zealand
As informações estão incompletas “Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009)” . M. Paul Lewis · SIL International
7,300 in Cook Islands (2008). Population total all countries: 33,220