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Gunwinggu language

Kunwinjku
Gunwinygu
Bininj Gun-Wok
Native to Australia
Region Northern Territory
Native speakers
1,200 (2006 census)
to 2,000 (2003)
Arnhem
Dialects
  • Kune
  • Mayali
  • Kunwinjku
  • Kuninjku
  • Kundjeyhmi
  • Kundedjnjenghmi
Language codes
ISO 639-3
Glottolog gunw1252
AIATSIS N186* Bininj Gun-wok

Kunwinjku (Gunwinggu or Gunwinjgu), also known by the cover term Bininj Gunwok or Mayali, is an Australian Aboriginal language in northern Australia. The Bininj Gun-Wok peoples live primarily in western Arnhem Land. There are perhaps two thousand fluent speakers in an area roughly bounded by Kakadu National Park to the west, the Arafura Sea to the north, the Blyth River to the east, and the Katherine region to the south.

Kunwinjku is spoken in the largest population centre, the township of Gunbalanya and is the most widespread, with an ethnic population of around 900, almost all of whom speak Kunwinjku in spite of increasing exposure to English.

Evans identifies six dialects: Kunwinjku, Kuninjku, Gundjeihmi, Manyallaluk Mayali, Kundedjnjenghmi, and two varieties of Kune most commonly known as Kune Dulerayek and Kune Narayek; based on the fact that

He introduced the cover term Bininj Gunwok for all dialects.

As of June 2015, the Gundjeihmi dialect group officially adopted standard Kunwinjku orthography, meaning it will now be spelt "Kundjeyhmi".

Kunwinjku is typical of the languages of central Arnhem Land (and contrasts with most other Australian languages) in having a phonemic glottal stop, two stop series (short and long), five vowels without a length contrast, relatively complex consonant clusters in codas (though only single-consonant onsets) and no essential distinction between word and syllable phonotactics.

Kunwinjku is polysynthetic, with grammatical relations largely encoded within the complex verb. The verb carries obligatory polypersonal agreement, a number of derivational affixes (including benefactive, comitative, reflexive/reciprocal and TAM-morphology) and has an impressive potential for incorporation of both nouns and verbs.

Nominals seem to have a lesser role in the grammar. Kunwinjku dialect preserved four noun classes, but lost the core case marking on the nouns, and a handful of semantic cases are optional. Kune and Manyallaluk Mayali dialects have an optional ergative marker -yih. Nominals have extensive derivational morphology and compounding.


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