Yawa languages
Small language family of Indonesia / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Yawa languages, also known as Yapen languages,[1] are a small family of two closely related Papuan languages, Yawa (or Yava) and Saweru, which are often considered to be divergent dialects of a single language (and thus a language isolate). They are spoken on central Yapen Island and nearby islets, in Cenderawasih Bay, Indonesian Papua, which they share with the Austronesian Yapen languages.
Yawan | |
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Yapen | |
Geographic distribution | central Yapen Island, Cenderawasih Bay |
Linguistic classification | West Papuan or independent language family
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Subdivisions | |
Glottolog | yawa1259 |
Yawa proper had 6000 speakers in 1987. Saweru has been variously reported to be partially intelligible with other dialects of Yawa and to be considered a dialect of Yawa by its speakers, and to be too divergent for intelligibility and to be perceived as a separate language. It is moribund, spoken by 150 people out of an ethnic group of 300.