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  1. Sign language. References. Mudburra language. Mudburra, also spelt Mudbura, Mudbarra and other variants, and also known as Pinkangama, is an Aboriginal language of Australia. McConvell suspects Karrangpurru was a dialect of Mudburra because people said it was similar. However, it is undocumented and thus formally unclassifiable. [1]

  2. Ngumpin–Yapa. Ngarrga languages (Yapa) Warlmanpa. Warlpiri. Ngumbin languages. Walmajarri. Djaru. Gurindji. Mudburra. Ngardi, once classified as either Ngarrga (2002) or Ngumpin (2004), has been reassigned to the Wati languages. [1] Vocabulary [ edit] Capell (1940) lists the following basic vocabulary items for the Ngumpin–Yapa languages: [2]

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  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › MudburraMudburra - Wikipedia

    The Mudburra people live in the thick scrub area near and west of the Murranji Track (the Ghost Road of the Drovers) and held in Tindale 's estimation some 10,000 square miles (26,000 km 2) of land, centered on the junction of the Armstrong River [2] and the upper Victoria River at a place called Tjambutjambulani.

  5. Jul 11, 2022 · Mudburra is similar to some other Australian aboriginal languages in that it has a signed element. Many words have their own signs, which can stand in for the spoken words or accompany them. The Mudburra dictionary, published in 2019, is the first to include physical signs alongside the words.

  6. The Mudbura has (or had) a well-developed signed form of their language. “Marnamarnda” is the name of the Mudbura sign language, which can be incorporated with speech or used by itself. Mudburra people use it when hunting or to accommodate long distance communication.

  7. Virtually nothing is known of Pinkangarna. Classification of the language: Northern Western Desert type, Ngumbin subgroup. Identification codes: Oates '73: 59.1 (Pinkangarna, 1 Cr.) AIAS: C25 (Pinkangarna, C21) Capell: C19 (Pinkangarna, C8) Present number and distribution of speakers: Elliott, Wave Hill, Katherine.

  8. Mudburra, also spelt Mudbura, Mudbarra and other variants, and also known as Pinkangama, is an Aboriginal language of Australia. McConvell suspects Karrangpurru was a dialect of Mudburra because people said it was similar. However, it is undocumented and thus formally unclassifiable. Information from the 2016 Australian census documented that there were 96 people speaking the Mudburra language ...

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