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Northern Andamanese language
Native language of North Andaman Island, India From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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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]
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.
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Great Andamanese koiné
Summarize
Perspective
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.
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

- Column in yellow denotes loanword derived from Hindi
Place names
Vocabulary:[10]
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References
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