Wulna language
In-game article clicks load inline without leaving the challenge.
Wulna or Wuna is an extinct Indigenous language of Australia. It was a non-Pama-Nyungan language spoken in the Adelaide River region of the Northern Territory. It is poorly attested and only tentatively classified as being related to Limilngan.
It had one speaker left in 1981, Jack Wandi, who was recorded by Gavan Breen in 1980-1981.
Resources
The State Library of New South Wales has an original copy of by John W. O. Bennett (1869).
The book documents the vocabulary and pronunciation of Wulna in general, in addition to place names from the Adelaide River region of Northern Territory. The original copy has been annotated by Paul Foelsche, the first police inspector of Northern Territory, who has added his own words to the vocabulary list, and his own corrections on pronunciation.
External links
- AUSTLANG includes and entry for the
- Paradisec has an open access collection of Gavan Breen's
- A scanned online copy of , on the State Library of New South Wales' website