- Source: Gaagudju language
Gaagudju (also spelt Gagadu, Gaguju, and Kakadu) is an extinct Australian Aboriginal language formerly spoken in the environs of Kakadu National Park, in Arnhem Land, Northern Territory, Australia.
Country and status
Explorer Baldwin Spencer incorrectly ascribed the name "Kakadu tribe" to all of the people living in the Alligator Rivers area, but Gaagudju was confined to the plains South and East Alligator Rivers.
The language is classed as extinct, since its last fluent speaker, Big Bill Neidjie, died on 23 May 2002; AUSTLANG's sources recorded no speakers between 1975 and 2016.
Classification
Gaagudju has traditionally been classified with the Gunwinyguan languages. However, in 1997 Nicholas Evans proposed an Arnhem Land family that includes Gaagudju.
Phonology
= Vowels
== Consonants
=Vocabulary
Capell (1942) lists the following basic vocabulary items:
References
Harvey, Mark (2002). A Grammar of Gaagudju. Walter de Gruyter.
External links
AusAnthrop Australian Aboriginal tribal database
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Gaagudju language
- Gaagudju
- Big Bill Neidjie
- List of language families
- List of Indigenous Australian writers
- May 23
- GBU
- Macro-Gunwinyguan languages
- Giimbiyu language
- List of Australian Aboriginal languages