Dhanggati language

Dhanggati
Macleay Valley
Region New South Wales, Australia
Ethnicity Dhanggati people
Extinct mid-1980s[1]
Revival 4 in 2006 census[2]
Dialects
  • Dhanggati
  • ? Ngaagu
  • ? Burrgati
Language codes
ISO 639-3 dyn
Glottolog dyan1250[3]
AIATSIS[2] E6

Dhanggati (Dunghutti, Thangatti), previously known as Dyangadi (Djangadi),[4][2] is the extinct Australian Aboriginal language of the Macleay Valley and surrounding high country of the Great Dividing Range in New South Wales. There is an ongoing program of language-revival. Ngaagu (Ngaku) and Burgadi (Burrgati) were probably dialects. The three together have been called the Macleay Valley language.

History

Dhanggati continued to be spoken through the 1960s. Its survival so far into the 20th century can be traced back to the working camps of men from Bellbrook and Lower Creek who escaped social control whilst clearing land for property owners in the western end of the valley. Dhanggati was the language of the camps and working life, away from the pressure to switch to English in the missions and towns.

In 1925 at Kempsey Showground, James Linwood addressed in Dhanggati a meeting of the Australian Aboriginal Progressive Association, to protest the actions of the Aborigines Protection Board.

Attestation

Compared with many NSW languages, Dhanggati has a rich collection of historical sources, from written records in the late 19 th and early 20th centuries to recordings of those last speakers in the 1960s and 1970s. These records form the basis for language revival, because we can extract the grammatical information about sounds, words, word building and sentence building that they contain.

Dhanggati placenames in the Macleay those currently in use e.g. Yarrahappinni Mountain (a corruption of yarra yabani koala rolling)

Classification

On linguistic criteria alone, it seems that Dhanggati is more closely related to Anaiwan (Nganyawana) and Yugambal on the Tablelands than any other language. There were at least two dialects, Dhanggati and Buurrgati, the latter is associated with the region around Macksville.

Social situation

Aboriginal people were multi-lingual, speaking the languages of their neighbours as well as their own. There are significant social relationships amongst Dhanggati, Gumbaynggirr and Biripi peoples, including a shared set of marriage sections, which is also a feature of Anaiwan cultural life.

Grammar

Dhanggati has an unusual "fricitivised rhotic" allophone of the trill or tap when it occurs between vowels, as in mirri and yarri.

Dhanggati has a complex word building strategies including inflectional and derivational suffixes on nouns, adjectives, demonstratives and pronouns. The pronouns include singular, dual and plural number and several cases. There are at least two classes of verbs based on transitivity, with complex word building patterns to express tense, aspect, mood, and to derive other verbs and nominal forms.

Revival program

Dhanggati is taught in two schools on the NSW Mid North Coast. The language program is currently part of the curriculum in Dalaigur Pre School and Green Hill Public, both in Kempsey. The program started about 2000 and now draws on newly made educational resources and the Dhanggati Language Dictionary.

The program sees elders working with school staff and the education department to enable local kids to connect with country and strengthen their identity & Culture.

See also

References

  1. Dhanggati at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  2. 1 2 3 Dhanggati at the Australian Indigenous Languages Database, Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies
  3. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin; Bank, Sebastian, eds. (2016). "Dyangadi". Glottolog 2.7. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
  4. Daingatti has also been given as a name, but may be a different language.

External links

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