Mbariman-Gudhinma | |
---|---|
Gugu Warra | |
Wurangung | |
Native to | Australia |
Region | Queensland |
Ethnicity | Lamalama, Kokowara = Laia, Yadaneru (Wurangung) |
Extinct | likely by 2003 |
Pama–Nyungan
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | Either:zmv – Mbariman-Gudhinmawrw – Gugu Warra |
Glottolog | mbar1253 Rimanggudhinmagugu1256 Roth's Gugu Warra |
AIATSIS[1] | Y195 Rimanggudinhma, Y80 Gugu Warra, Y66 Wurangung |
ELP |
Mbariman-Gudhinma (Rimanggudinhma, Rimang-Gudinhma, Parimankutinma), one of several languages labelled Gugu Warra (Kuku-Warra,[2] Kuku-Wara) 'unintelligible speech' as opposed to Gugu Mini 'intelligible speech',[3] is an extinct dialect cluster of Aboriginal Australian languages of the Cape York Peninsula in northern Queensland, Australia. Another one in the group is Wurangung, also known as Yadaneru or Jeteneru.[4]
The dialects were spoken by the Lamalama people.
Austlang says, quoting linguist Jean-Cristophe Verstraete (2018), that Lamalama, Rimanggudinhma (Mbariman-Gudhinma) and Morrobolam form a genetic subgroup of Paman known as Lamalamic, "defined by shared innovations in phonology and morphology". Within this subgroup, "Morrobolam and Lamalama form a phonologically innovative branch, while Rumanggudinhma forms a more conservative branch".[5]