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Eastern Ngad'a |
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Ngadha (also known as Ngada or Ngad'a) is an Austronesian language, one of six languages spoken in the central stretch of
the Indonesian island of Flores. From west to east these languages are: Ngadha, Nage, Keo, Ende, Lio, and Palu'e. Ngadha is
bizarre because it has no prefixes nor suffixes at all. This strangely streamlined language is thought by linguist John McWhorter
to have originated when little people were subjugated into Indonesian society in the past. McWhorter (2006) speculates this
rare linguistic transformation would have occurred to the ancestor of Ngadha and the related Keo and Rongga languages. These
languages form the proposed Central Flores group of the Sumba–Flores languages, according to Blust (2009). However, according
to the Ethnologue, Ngad'a is one of the 27 Bima-Sumba languages that are a group of the 169 languages of the Central Malayo-Polynesian
family. Ngadha is a very small member of the huge, well-documented family of the Malayo-Polynesian languages, which includes
Tagalog, Malagasy, and Malay, each with millions of speakers. Its basic vocabulary, such as body parts, numbers, and action
verbs, are very similar to those languages; Ngadha has kept 94 out of 247 common words in the lexicon of the Proto-Malayo-Polynesian
language. |
Names (more)[en] Eastern Ngad'a |
Language type : Living
Technical notes
This page is providing structured data for the language Eastern Ngad'a. |
ISO 639 CodesISO 639-3 : neaLinked Data URIshttp://lexvo.org/id/iso639-3/neahttp://dbpedia.org/resource/ISO_639:nea More URIs at sameas.org SourcesAuthority documentation for ISO 639 identifier: neaFreebase ISO 639-3 : nea GeoNames.org Country Information Publications Office of the European Union Metadata Registry : Countries and Languages |