Ngumbarl language


Ngumbarl is an extinct, poorly-attested Nyulnyulan language formerly spoken in Western Australia, north of the town of Broome along the coast, by the Ngumbarl people.

Documentation

The language was previously thought to be unattested. Although Daisy Bates had recorded data, comprising a wordlist and a few sentences, in the early twentieth century with Ngumbarl/Jukun informant Billingee, it had previously been thought the data were only for Jukun. The list contains about 800 words, but the orthography is inconsistent and the translations are somewhat unreliable.

Phonology

It is difficult to infer much about Ngumbarl's phonology, because of the orthography used in its corpus. Claire Bowern reconstructs a tentative sound change of word-final -i in the proto-language to -a.

Grammar

The ergative suffix was -na; if this evolved from *-ni, it matches the previously mentioned sound change from -i to -a. The locative was -kun.
Very few verbs, and no full paradigms, are found in the data, although there are some partial paradigms, e.g.:
NgumbarlEnglish

ngangalanybi
I steal

ingalanybi
he steals

yirrlanybi
they steal

Eastern Nyulnyuylan languages have experienced a group of changes in its verbal morphology:
Ngumbarl's attested forms are consistent with these — assuming the verb forms were given in the same tense.