Warlmanpa
[también conocido como Wolperi, Wolpirra, Albura]Clasificación: Pama-Nyungan
·en grave peligro de extinción
Clasificación: Pama-Nyungan
·en grave peligro de extinción
Wolperi, Wolpirra, Albura, Alpira, Alpiri, Elpira, Ilpara, Ilpira, Ilpirra, Nam-bulatji, Njambalatji, Ulperra, Wailbri, Walbiri, Walbrai, Wal-bri, Waljbiri, Waljpiri, Walmala, Walmanba, Walpari, Wanaeka, Wanajaga., Wanajaka, Wanajeka, Waneiga, Waringari, Warrabri |
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Pama-Nyungan, Ngumpin-Yapa |
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ISO 639-3 |
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wrl |
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Como csv |
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La información está incompleta “A Lexicographic Study of Some Australian Languages: Project Descriptions” (71-107) . Kenneth Hale (1983) , Peter Austin · Pacific Linguistics
"The remaining Warlmanpa speakers are few, amounting to a handful of (extended) families...Others, perhaps a few dozen, know a good deal of the language but are more at home in one or more other Australian languages...The number of Warlmanpa speakers is set at 36 by Miliken 1976, but this figure is based more on volunteered tribal affiliation than on the langues commanded by the individual, and is liable to be an under-estimate."
Banka Banka, Ali-Curung, Tennant Creek
La información está incompleta “Australasia and the Pacific” (425-577) . Stephen Wurm (2007) , Christopher Moseley · Routledge
"In 1981, perhaps fifty speakers were reported. The number of speakers is lower today."
Kriol
"The people generally speak the English-based pidgin lingua franca Kriol to which speakers are shifting."
La información está incompleta “Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009)” . M. Paul Lewis · SIL International
Speaker number data: (Wurm and Hattori 1981)
Northern Territory, Mount Leichhardt area
La información está incompleta “How many languages were spoken in Australia?” . Claire Bowern (2011)