Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Northern Andamanese language

Native language of North Andaman Island, India From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

Northern Andamanese is the critically endangered native language of North Andaman Island. It is closely related to Akakede and seems to have consisted of four mutually intelligible dialects: Akachari (Cari), Akakhora (Kora), Akabo (Bo), and Akajeru (Jeru). Jeru is the only one with speakers remaining.[3][4]

Quick Facts Native to, Region ...

When the North Andamanese people were resettled to Strait Island, a koiné developed from the resulting mixture of dialects. It went extinct in the early 2000s.

For more specific information, see the individual dialects.

Remove ads

Great Andamanese koiné

Summarize
Perspective
Quick Facts Mixed Great Andamanese, Native to ...

Great Andamanese koiné is based primarily on Jeru, with lexical and grammatical influence from other Northern Andamanese dialects (Aka-Bo, Aka-Kora and Aka-Cari).

Phonology

Vowels

The Great Andamanese koiné has a seven-vowel system.

More information Front, Central ...

Consonants

Grammar

It is a head-marking polysynthetic and agglutinative language with a SOV pattern. It has a very elaborate system for marking inalienability,[6] with seven possessive markers reflecting different body-divisions. These markers appear as proclitics that classify a large number of nouns as dependent categories.[7]

Vocabulary

Thumb
Northern Andamanese literacy material

Koiné vocabulary:[8][9]

More information Gloss, Great Andamanese ...
  • Column in yellow denotes loanword derived from Hindi

Place names

Vocabulary:[10]

More information Contemporary name, Present Great Andamanese name ...
Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads