Also Known As:
Tunuvivi, Diwi, Wonga:k, Wongak, Wunuk, Ni-mara, Woranguwe
Dialects & Varieties
Community, identity, wellbeing: The report of the Second National Indigenous Languages Survey
Doug Marmion, Kazuko Obata and Jakelin Troy. 2014. "Community, Identity, Wellbeing: the Report of the Second National Indigenous Languages Survey." Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies.
Critically Endangered
80 percent certain, based on the evidence available
<35
Native Speakers Worldwide
Speaker Number Trends
Speaker Number Trend 4
Less than half of the community speaks the language, and speaker numbers are decreasing at an accelerated pace.
4
Transmission
Transmission 5
There are only a few elderly speakers.
5
Speakers
Native or fluent speakers:
No results found.
Second-language speakers and learners
No results found.
Semi-speakers or rememberers
5
Children:
No results found.
Young adults
No results found.
Older adults
No results found.
Elders
No results found.
Ethnic or community population
No results found.
Year information was gathered
No results found.
Comments on speakers
No results found.
Location and Context
Countries
No results found.
Location Description
No results found.
Government Support
No results found.
Institutional Support
No results found.
Speakers' Attitude
No results found.
Other Languages Used By The Community
None
Number of Other Language Speakers:
None
Domains of Other Languages:
None
Writing Systems
Standard orthography:
No results found.
Writing system:
No results found.
Other writing systems used:
No results text.
Comments on writing systems:
No results found.
Recent Resources
la verdad de nuestro Salvador en un idioma ancestral.
The Living Archive of Aboriginal Languages is a digital archive of endangered literature in Australi
Alan Lomax Parlametrics - Caught wallaby, bandicoot, swam and slept, walked a long way, made a fire