- Archive
- DOBES Archive
- Jaminjungan and Eastern Ngumpin
- Language
- Jaminjung - Ngaliwurru
- Questions (Elicitation)
- Sentences CS
- CS07_a087_01
CS07_a087_01
Detailed Metadata
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- History : NAME:imdi2cmdi.xslt DATE:2016-09-09T16:18:59.454+02:00.
- Name : CS07_a087_01
- Title : JoJ telling the story of the video with the fish and the cat
- Date : 2007-10-14
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- Description : Sitting at Myatt. JM is present and also some children. We watch a short video showing a fish in a bowl, and a cat approaching... and suddenly the fish barks! JoJ is telling what hapens in this video (video from QUIS).
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- Continent : Australia
- Country : Australia
- Region : Myatt, near Timber Creek
- Region : Victoria River District
- Address : Myatt, near Timber Creek
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- Name : DOBES-VRD
- Title : Jaminjungan and Eastern Ngumpin - A documentation of the linguistic and cultural knowledge of speakers in a multilingual setting in the Victoria River District, Northern Australia
- Id : Jaminjungan and Eastern Ngumpin
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- Name : Eva Schultze-Berndt
- Address : Oxford Road, Manchester M13 9PL, UK
- Email : eva.schultze-berndt@manchester.ac.uk
- Organisation : University of Manchester, School of Languages, Linguistics and Cultures
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- Description : This project is funded by the Endangered Languages Programme (DOBES) of the VW Foundation for a period of three years (August 2005-July 2008). The aim of the project is a documentation of the linguistic and cultural knowledge of the remaining speakers of several language varieties belonging to two language groups. The Jaminjungan group consists of Jaminjung and Ngaliwurru (which are closely related) as well as Nungali (now no longer spoken). Languages of the Eastern Ngumpin group are Gurindji, Ngarinyman, Bilinarra, and Mudburra, as well as a mixed language, Gurindji Kriol. These varieties (and in addition English and Kriol, an English-lexified creole), constitute part of a single network of multilingual communicative practice in the region, since their speakers have been in close contact for a long time, and since they now share the same settlements distributed throughout the Victoria River District. One aim of the project therefore is to carefully document variation. The lexical databases are set up to facilitate cross-referencing between the different varieties, for example to identify borrowings and translation equivalents. Focal areas for the text collection are topics such as significant sites, knowledge about plants and animals, and oral history, which are likely to be of particular interest to the speakers and their descendants as well as to linguists, anthropologists, biologists, ecologists, and historians. Two PhD students within the projects focus on the topics of Jaminjung prosody (Candide Simard) and spatial expressions in Ngarinyman (Kristina Henschke), respectively. The project was administered by the University of Graz from August 2005 to March 2007, and by the University of Manchester from April 2007 to July 2008. It is conducted in collaboration with the Diwurruwurru-Jaru Aboriginal Corporation, an Aboriginal Language Centre based in Katherine (N.T.), and includes community members as trainees and co-investigators. The members of the core project team are: Eva Schultze-Berndt (Manchester; project director; Jaminjungan languages and some Ngarinyman), Patrick McConvell (Canberra; Principal Investigator; Ngumpin languages and Gurindji Kriol; anthropology); Felicity Meakins (Melbourne/Manchester; Postdoctoral Fellow; Ngumpin languages and Gurindji Kriol), Kristina Henschke (Graz, PhD student, Ngarinyman); Candide Simard (Manchester, PhD student, Jaminjung/Ngaliwurru). The core project team is supported by Glenn Wightman (Darwin) as ethnobiologist and Alan Marett and Linda Barwick (Sydney) as ethnomusicologists, by Erika Charola (Paris) as a linguistic consultant working on Gurindji, as well as by Nikolaus Himmelmann (Bochum) as and Mark Harvey (Newcastle) as cooperation partners.
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- Key : 1:02
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- Genre : Discourse
- SubGenre : Conversation
- Task : Unspecified
- Modalities : speech
- Subject : Unspecified
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- Interactivity : interactive
- PlanningType : semi-spontaneous
- Involvement : non-elicited
- SocialContext : Private
- EventStructure : Dialogue
- Channel : Face to Face
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- Id : ISO639-3:djd
- Name : Ngaliwurru
- Dominant : Unspecified
- SourceLanguage : Unspecified
- TargetLanguage : Unspecified
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- Description : Ngaliwurru (closely related to Jaminjung/Djamindjung) is the language of people around Timber Creek in the Northern Territory, Northern Australia. Speakers today live in Timber Creek and Katherine, and in some smaller communities in the vicinity. Jaminjung, Ngaliwurru and Nungali belong to the Jaminjungan or Yirram subgroup of one of the Non-Pama-Nyungan language families.
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- Id : ISO639-3:rop
- Name : Kriol
- Dominant : Unspecified
- SourceLanguage : Unspecified
- TargetLanguage : Unspecified
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- Id : ISO639-3:djd
- Name : Djamindjung
- Dominant : Unspecified
- SourceLanguage : Unspecified
- TargetLanguage : Unspecified
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- Id : ISO639-3:nug
- Name : Nungali
- Dominant : Unspecified
- SourceLanguage : Unspecified
- TargetLanguage : Unspecified
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- Key : 1:02
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- Description : Sitting at Myatt. JM is present and also some children. JoJ telling the story of the video with the fish and the cat (QUIS).
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- Role : Researcher
- Name : Candide Simard
- FullName : Candide Simard
- Code : CS
- FamilySocialRole : Student
- EthnicGroup :
- BirthDate : Unspecified
- Sex : Female
- Education : Unspecified
- Anonymized : false
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- years : 45
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- Name : Candide Simard
- Address : School of Languages, Linguistics and Cultures, University of Manchester, Oxford Road, M13 9PL, UK
- Email : candide.simard@hotmail.com
- Organisation : School of Languages, Linguistics and Cultures, University of Manchester
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- Key : Nambijin
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- Description : CS began work on Jaminjung and Ngaliwurru with the start of the DOBES-VRD project in August 2005. The focus of the PhD thesis is prosody in Jaminjung, but she has also been involved in work other areas of grammar and lexicographical documentation. CS is based in London and Manchester.
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- Id : ISO639-3:fra
- Name : French
- MotherTongue : Unspecified
- PrimaryLanguage : Unspecified
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- Id : ISO639-3:eng
- Name : English
- MotherTongue : Unspecified
- PrimaryLanguage : Unspecified
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- Role : Consultant
- Name : Nawurla
- FullName : JoJ
- Code : JoJ
- FamilySocialRole : wife to JJ
- EthnicGroup : Jaminjung
- BirthDate : Unspecified
- Sex : Female
- Education : Literate
- Anonymized : true
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- years : 60
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- Name : JoJ
- Address : Ngaliwurru-Wurli Resource Centre, PMB 154, Timber creek via Katherine, NT, Australia 0852
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- Key : Nawurla
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- Description : JoJ has only contributed to the project as a consultant occasionally. She is Jaminjung by descent and a fluent speaker of Jaminjung/Ngaliwurru, and today mainly lives in Myatt, near Timber Creek., where she is married to JJ.
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- Id : ISO639-3:djd
- Name : Djamindjung
- MotherTongue : Unspecified
- PrimaryLanguage : Unspecified
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- Id : ISO639-3:rop
- Name : Kriol
- MotherTongue : Unspecified
- PrimaryLanguage : true
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- Description : Kriol is a creole language based on English vocabulary but with its own grammar. It is used as a lingua franca and often as the primary language of Indigenous Australians throughout a large area in Northern Australia, from the Kimberleys in Eastern Western Australia to Western Queensland.
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- Id : ISO639-3:djd
- Name : Ngaliwurru
- MotherTongue : Unspecified
- PrimaryLanguage : Unspecified
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- Description : Ngaliwurru (closely related to Jaminjung/Djamindjung) is the language of people around Timber Creek in the Northern Territory, Northern Australia. Speakers today live in Timber Creek and Katherine, and in some smaller communities in the vicinity. Jaminjungan, Ngaliwurru and Nungali are closely related and belong to the Jaminjungan or Yirram subgroup of one of the Non-Pama-Nyungan language families.
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- References :
Citation
Candide Simard. (2007). File "CS07_a087_01" in collection "Jaminjungan and Eastern Ngumpin", bundle "". The Language Archive. https://hdl.handle.net/1839/00-0000-0000-0009-845B-7. (Accessed 2023-12-01)
Note: This citation was extracted automatically from the available metadata and may contain inaccuracies. In case of multiple authors, the ordering is arbitrary. Please contact the archive staff in case you need help on how to cite this resource.