Article published In: Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages
Vol. 13:1 (1998) ► pp.1–61
Pidgin Ngarluma
An Indigenous Contact Language in North Western Australia
Published online: 1 January 1998
https://doi.org/10.1075/jpcl.13.1.02den
https://doi.org/10.1075/jpcl.13.1.02den
This paper discusses evidence of an early pidgin in use amongst Aboriginal people of the north west coast of Western Australia. The crucial evidence comes from an Italian manuscript describing the rescue, by local Aborigines, of two castaways wrecked on North West Cape in 1875. The data reveals that the local Aborigines attempted to communicate with the Italian-speaking survivors using what appears to be an Australian language spoken some 300 kilometers further along the coast, around the emerging center of the new Pilbara pearling industry. I present an analysis of the material, showing that it differs from Australian languages of the area in significant ways and can be considered a reduced variety. I conclude that this variety is an indigenous pidgin — the first to be described for Australia.
Cited by (10)
Cited by ten other publications
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2024. Toward a typology of Australian contact languages. Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages 39:1 ► pp. 1 ff.
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Meakins, Felicity
Meakins, Felicity
Vaughan, Jill & Debbie Loakes
Versteegh, Kees
2018. Temporal adverbs of contrast in the Basic Variety of Arabic. In Arabic in Contact [Studies in Arabic Linguistics, 6], ► pp. 233 ff.
Bowern, Claire
Roberts, Sarah J. & Joan Bresnan
Bakker, Peter
[no author supplied]
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