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C39: Wawulya

AIATSIS code: 
C39
AIATSIS reference name: 
Wawulya

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Name
Thesaurus heading language
Thesaurus heading people
ABN name
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ABS name
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Horton name
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Ethnologue name
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ISO 639-3 code
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Tindale name
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Tindale (1974)
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O'Grady et al (1966)
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Glottocode
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Other sources
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Synonyms
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Comment
Comments: 
According to Laughren et al (1996), Wawulya is the south-western dialect of Warlpiri C15. However, Nash (2007 p.c.) says that he has not heard of Wawulya as a speech variety apart from reading it in Laughren et al (1996). He has heard of it referred to as Dreaming around The Granites and suspects that the descendants of that area might identify themselves as 'Wawulya'.
References: 
  • Laughren, Mary, Robert Hoogenraad, Ken Hale, and Robin Japanangka Granites. 1996. A learner's guide to Warlpiri, tape course for beginners. Alice Springs: IAD Press.
Status: 
Potential no data
Location
State / Territory: 
NT
Location information: 
South-western Warlpiri is called Wawulya (Laughren 1996:2).
Maps: 
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Links
Programs
Activities: 
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People: 
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Indigenous organisations: 
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Speakers
Year Source Speaker numbers
1975Oates-
1984Senate-
1990Schmidt-
1996Census-
2001Census-
2004NILS1-
2005Estimate-
2006Census-
2011Census-
2014NILS2
2016Census-
2018-2019NILS3

Speaker numbers were measured differently across the censuses and various other sources listed in AUSTLANG. You are encouraged to refer to the sources.

Speaker numbers for ‘NILS 2004’ and ‘2005 estimate’ come from 'Table F.3: Numbers of speakers of Australian Indigenous languages (various surveys)' in 'Appendix F NILS endangerment and absolute number results' in McConvell, Marmion and McNicol 2005, pages 198-230 (PDF, 2.5MB).

Documentation
TypeDocumentation StatusDocumentation Score
Word listNone0
Text CollectionNone0
GrammarNone0
Audio-visualNone0
Manuscript note: 
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Grammar: 
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Dictionary: 
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Classification
SourceFamilyGroupSub-groupNameRelationship
Ethnologue (2005)
Dixon (2002)
Wurm (1994)
Walsh (1981)
Oates (1975)
Wurm (1972)
O'Grady, Voegelin and Voegelin (1966)