Wangkajunga dialect
Wangkajunga is a dialect of the Western Desert language.
Traditionally, its speakers lived in the north-eastern section of the Great Sandy Desert and the Canning Stock Route, and to the south and west of Lake Gregory. These are areas that are considered deserts but have many water holes that speakers travel between, two examples being Christmas Creek and Fitzroy Crossing.
While older speakers continue to use Wangkajunga as their primary language, younger speakers tend to understand Wangkajunga but use different languages in their daily lives. For example, many younger speakers primarily use an English-based creole commonly referred to as the Fitzroy Valley Kriol.
The name 'Wangkajunga' only appears to have emerged in the 1970s. This name is said to have been based on the words wangka meaning 'talk' or 'word' and junga meaning 'correct' or 'straight,' so when put together, the language name essentially means 'the correct language.' It is important to note, however, that there is still some debate on how this name should be spelled, as it has been recorded differently by different linguists studying the language.
Phonology
Vowels
Martu Wangka contains three contrastive vowels, which may be either short or long. Long vowels are less common and usually occur either on the first syllable of a word or as the ending of a monosyllabic word. The chart below illustrates this:- /i/ has allophones, in free variation. When following a palatal consonant, or preceding a retroflex continuant /ɻ/, it can be realised as.
- /u/ has the allophones,. When following or preceding palatal consonants, it may be realised as more fronted to.
- /a/ is typically pronounced as. When in unstressed positions as a second syllable of a three syllable word, it can be pronounced as and word-finally as. When following the glide /w/, or preceding a velar consonant, it can be realised as. When between two laterals, it can be realised as.
Consonants
- /k/ can have a voiced allophone when occurring after nasal continuants, or in different intervocalic positions. It may also be heard as a voiced fricative in intervocalic positions.
- /ɟ/ can have a voiceless fricative allophone when occurring intervocalically.
- /ʈ/ can also be heard as tap sounds in various intervocalic positions.
Syllable structure
| Template | Example | Translation |
| CV | ju.nu | waterhole |
| CVV | muu.ngu | fly |
| CVC | kurn.tal | niece |
| CVVC | kaarn'.ka | crow |
Stress
Martu Wangka has stress similar to that of other languages in its family: primary stress usually falls on the first syllable of a word, and secondary stress usually falls on the second syllable after the primary stressed syllable. The final syllable of a word is usually unstressed.Morphology
Nominals
In Martu Wangka, nominal morphology has affixation, reduplication, compounding, and case marking. The usual formula for constructing a noun isnominal word = nominal root – – inflection
Derivational suffixes
Nominals in Martu Wangka do not all have derivational suffixes, but when they do, these suffixes attach directly to the nominal root and then are followed by any inflectional suffixes. The usual derivational suffixes function to indicate a nominal having or lacking something, the related timing and spacing, comparison of certain properties, or number. The table below shows examples of some of the common derivational affixes associated with these groupings. The word containing the relevant suffix is bolded in each line of the gloss.| Function | Suffix | Meaning | Example |
| Having/Lacking a thing or property | -kurlu | having | |
| Having/Lacking a thing or property | -pinti | associated thing | |
| Associated Time and Space | -jarra | associated time | |
| Associated Time and Space | -puru | temporal | |
| Comparison of Properties | -yuru | similar | |
| Comparison of Properties | -munu | contradictive | |
| Numbers | -marlu | numerative | |
| Numbers | -rarra | related kin |
Verbs
Martu Wangka contains around 70 basic verbs that can serve as verbal roots and then an indefinite amount of complex verbs formed through various morphological processes. These verbs contain a wide variety of meanings including but not limited to actions, motions, physical positions, sensations, and utterances. The usual formula for constructing a verb isverbal word = verbal root inflection
Derivational affixes
Derivational verb morphology in Martu Wangka consists of various causatives, inchoatives, and directional affixes. Causitives include suffixes like '-maInflectional affixes
Inflectional affixes on verbs are used to indicate tense and how the speaker feels about the action that the verbal root describes. Tense affixes include indicators of present, past, future, perfective, and imperfective tenses. Feeling affixes can be used to inflect when a speaker wants something to happen, is trying to make something happen, believes that something should happen, and to discuss hypothetical scenarios.There are four different conjugation classes that determine how verbs realize various inflectional morphemes: the ø class, wa class, rra class, and la class. These classes are organized by shared characteristics of the imperative form of the verb.
Reduplication
There is both nominal and verbal reduplication in Martu Wangka, which is usually used to generate a new word with related meaning, but can also be used to emphasize certain actions or traits. Nominal reduplication has two types: reduplication and frozen reduplication. With reduplication, the nominal is repeated, which creates a new reduplicated nominal. With frozen reduplication, only the reduplicated form of the nominal is in the language and the non-reduplicated form does not exist.Verbal reduplication can be both partial, full, and frozen reduplication. To form a reduplicated verb, usually the verb root or the preverb of a compound verb is reduplicated. It is typically used when creating a word for an action that repeats itself, such as going around in circles.
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