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Australian Aboriginal language
This article is about the Australian language. For the Cushitic language, see Alawa language (Tanzania).
Alawa has a typical consonant inventory for an Indigenous Australian language, with five contrastive places of articulation, multiple lateral consonants, and no voicing contrast among the stops.
The vowel system of Alawa is made up of four vowel phonemes: the high front vowel /i/, the high back vowel /u/, the mid front vowel /e/, and the low central vowel /a/.
There are no rounding contrasts or length contrasts in this language.
Vocabulary
Capell (1942) lists the following basic vocabulary items:
gloss
Alawa
man
lilmi
woman
girija
head
guɽuguɽu
eye
gulur
nose
gujumur
mouth
ŋaːndal
tongue
djeːjälŋ
stomach
gundjäl
bone
galawa
blood
ŋulidji
kangaroo
girimbọ
opossum
gudjaɳi
emu
djinaliri
crow
waŋgunaji
fly
wuɳɖil
sun
marawaɭbaɭ
moon
aɖaŋari
fire
wubu
smoke
guŋuŋu
water
ŋọgọ
See also
Glenn M. Wightman (1991), Alawa ethnobotany: Aboriginal plant use from Minyerri, northern Australia, vol. 11, Conservation Commission of the Northern Territory, WikidataQ109466390