Discovery of a New Language Spoken by Only 350 People in Australia's Remote Village of Lajamanu
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Discovery of a New Language Spoken by Only 350 People in Australia's Remote Village of Lajamanu
Linguists have unveiled the documentation of a newfound language in the secluded village of Lajamanu, situated in Australia's Northern Territory and predominantly inhabited by the Warlpiri community. With just around 350 speakers, this linguistic revelation offers a glimpse into the rich tapestry of diverse languages thriving in the world's remote corners. Explore the intriguing story behind the silent emergence of a language that has quietly flourished in the heart of Australia.
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Light Warlpiri, also known as Warlpiri rampaku, is spoken by several thousand Indigenous people in northern Australia, incorporating elements from both the Warlpiri Aboriginal language and Kriol, a creole developed in the late 19th to early 20th century based on English.
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This cultural enigma was extensively studied by Carmel O'Shannessy, a linguistics professor at the Australian National University, who first reported this "new language" in 2005.
O'Shannessy, in a 2018 statement to Atlas Obscura, said, "For a mixed language to develop, you need to have bilingual or multilingual individuals who are systematically code-switching and have some social reason for creating their speech forms."
Lajamanu is incredibly remote.
In most languages, hearing structures from vastly different, distant languages in the verb system and noun system is rare.
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