Abuʼ Arapesh language
Arapesh language of Papua New Guinea
Abu' | |
---|---|
Ua | |
Native to | Papua New Guinea |
Region | East Sepik Province: Albiges/Mablep Rural LLG, ward 8; Sandaun Province: East Aitape Rural LLG, wards 23, 24, 25 |
Native speakers | 2,600 (2000 census)[1] |
Language family | Torricelli
|
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | aah |
Glottolog | abua1245 |
ELP | Abu' |
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Abuʼ, also known as Ua (meaning 'no'), is an Arapesh language (Torricelli family) of Papua New Guinea. It is dying, as speakers are shifting to Tok Pisin.
Otto Nekitel, a first language speaker of Abu' Arapesh, was awarded a PhD from the ANU in 1986 for his thesis Sociolinguistic aspects of Abu, becoming the first Papua New Guinean to receive a doctorate in linguistics.
Abuʼ is spoken in:[1][2]
- East Sepik Province: Albiges/Mablep Rural LLG, ward 8 (Wamsak / Amom) (3°30′52″S 142°54′11″E / 3.514525°S 142.903064°E / -3.514525; 142.903064 (Amom))
- Sandaun Province: East Aitape Rural LLG, wards 23, 24, 25 (respectively: Wamsis (3°28′03″S 142°57′37″E / 3.467489°S 142.960415°E / -3.467489; 142.960415 (Womsis)), Balup (3°23′37″S 142°57′49″E / 3.393568°S 142.96348°E / -3.393568; 142.96348 (Balup)), Matapau (3°21′40″S 143°01′27″E / 3.361089°S 143.024274°E / -3.361089; 143.024274 (Matapau)))
References
- ^ a b Abu' at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022)
- ^ United Nations in Papua New Guinea (2018). "Papua New Guinea Village Coordinates Lookup". Humanitarian Data Exchange. 1.31.9.
External links
- OLAC resources in and about the Abu' Arapesh language
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