The Yangkaal , also spelt Yanggal , are an Aboriginal Australian people of area of the Gulf of Carpentaria in the state of Queensland .
6-507: Gananggalinda is a variant name of the same group. The Yangkaal language was also known as Yanggaralda, Janggal, Gananggalinda, Nemarang, and other names. Geoffrey O'Grady grouped it as a variety of Yukulta within the Tangkic language family . The implication was that "Yanggal" was simply an alternative name for "Njangga", which is an alternative ethnonym for the Yanyula (Yanyuwa) , from which
12-619: Is a moribund Tangkic language spoken by the Kaiadilt on the South Wellesley Islands , north west Queensland , Australia . Other members of the family include Yangkaal (spoken by the Yangkaal people), Lardil , and Yukulta (Ganggalidda). Kayardild is a critically endangered language , considered near-extinct. In 1981, there were around fifty native speakers of Kayardild. The number of speakers of Kayardild significantly reduced since
18-440: The 1940s as a result of the stolen generations . By 1981, there were fifty known native speakers. In the 2016 census, there were eight. Kayardild is known for its many unusual case phenomena, including case stacking of up to four levels, the use of clause-level case to signal interclausal relations and pragmatic factors, and another set of 'verbal case' endings which convert their hosts from nouns into verbs morphologically. It
24-628: The traditional lands of the Gananggalinda were near Bayley Point and Point Parker on the coast of the Gulf of Carpentaria . The Gananggalinda and their neighbours the Yukulta / Ganggalidda have similar culture and language. The Yangkaal were composed of at least three kin groups : The Yangkaal eventually moved to Mornington Island , where Arthur Capell briefly interviewed one informant, and obtained information, some of which turned out to be unreliable. He
30-570: The word Yanggal may have derived. The Yangkaal work over 300 square miles (780 km) of land, both on Forsyth Island and the stretch of coastline opposite, on the mainland, running as far west as Cliffdale Creek mainland opposite. Much of the continental coastland used by the Yangkaal was mangrovial . David Horton reported in The Encyclopaedia of Aboriginal Australia: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander history, society and culture that
36-487: Was told that their name for their homeland on Forsyth Island was Nemi, from which he deduced that their language was Nemarang. This misapprehension was corrected by Norman Tindale , who explained that this term was the personal name of a Yangkaal person known on the Mornington Island Mission as Edward Nemie, the latter being a distortion of the missionary's word "name". Yangkaal language Kayardild
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