Wadawurrung language


Wadawurrung, also rendered as Wathawurrung, Wathaurong or Wada wurrung, and formerly sometimes Barrabool, is the Aboriginal Australian language spoken by the Wadawurrung people of the Kulin Nation of Central Victoria. It was spoken by 15 clans south of the Werribee River and the Bellarine Peninsula to Streatham. Various regional programs and initiatives promote the usage and revitalisation of Wadawurrung language.

Phonology

Consonants

Blake reconstructs Wadawurrung consonants as such;
LabialAlveolarLaminalRetroflexVelar
Stopsp/b t/d th/dh
tj/dj
rt/rd k/g
Nasalsm n nh/ny rn ng
Lateralsl ly rl
Rhoticsrr r
Glidesy w

Due to the varied nature of attestations of the language, Blake reconstructs Wadawurrung consonants in complacence to the standard features of the Australian Languages.
It is presumed that Wadawurrung did not distinguish between voiced and unvoiced consonants.
What Blake attributes as a distinction between 'alveolar' and 'laminal' consonants is better described as a distinction between dental and post-alveolar pronunciation on nasal and stop consonants. This is a distinction in indigenous language families of the Australian south-east such as Yuin-Kuric and the Gippsland languages.
It is presumed there was no distinction between post-alveolar and palatal . It is assumed that a similar correspondence occurs with the post-alveolar stop, thus mixed attestation between 'th', 'tj' & 'ty'.
The post-alveolar consonants in word final position are rendered as 'yl', 'yt' & 'yn', respectively. E.g. 'Gowayn' - Eel. The word final nasal after /a/ is always cited as 'ayn' due to its fluctuation with 'ng' in sources
Blake asserts that sources do not differentiate between alveolar and retroflex and the distinction is thus presumed from comparison to other Victorian Aboriginal Languages. Blake represents every rhotic as 'rr' unless drawing from modern sources such as Hercus.

Vowels

Blake does not specify the number of vowels present in Wadawurrung. The standard set of and are used, however Blake notes a consistent correspondence between 'a', 'u' and 'o' in various sources. There is also fluctuation between 'a' and 'e' as the last vowel in a word, however Blake maintains that they are distinct vowels

Vocabulary

Place names

Select placenames with attested origin in Wathawurrung language terms are;
PlacenameOrigin
BarraboolUnclear, variously reported as "oyster", "slope down to water" or "rounded hill".
BarwonFrom Barrwang meaning "Magpie", same origin as the town of Parwan.
BungareeMeaning "hut" or "tent".
BuninyongFrom Buninyouang, recorded by early colonists as meaning "Man lying on back with raised knee", in reference to the profile of Mount Buninyong.
ConnewarreFrom koonoowarra, meaning black swan. Same origin as the town of Koonwarra in South Gippsland.
CorioPossibly "Sandy cliffs", other sources state "small marsupial" or "wallaby".
GeelongFrom Djillong, City of Greater Geelong maintains it means "Land" or "Cliffs", other sources suggest it was the original name of Corio Bay.
GheringhapEither from "gheran" as meaning "timber", then followed by a placename suffix "-hap", or a reference to the black wattle tree.
GnarwarreSaid to be from the name of a local wetland and its waterfowl, possibly same origin as Lake Connewarre from kunuwarra for the black swan.
Jan JucEither "milk" or "ironbark".
KoorweingubooraEither "where the crane eats frogs" or "land of many waters".
ModewarreThe musk duck.
MoolapA meeting place for gathering shellfish.
MooraboolEither from a word for "ghost" or the name for the curlew.
MoriacMeaning "hill".
MyrniongThe native yam-daisy, also spelled Murnong.
ParwanFrom Barrwang meaning "Magpie", same origin as that of the Barwon River.
TarneitFrom the Wathaurong word for the colour white.
Wendoureefrom wendaaree.
When settler William Cross Yuille asked a local indigenous woman what the name of the lake was, she told him to go away.
hence the name
WerribeeFrom Wirribi-yaluk, the name of the Werribee River, with Wirribi said to mean "spine" or "backbone".
WingeelFrom the word for the wedge-tailed eagle and creator spirit. Compare spelling Bunjil from other Kulin languages
Woady Yaloak RiverFrom Wurdi-yaluk meaning "big creek".
You YangsReportedly Ude Youang, meaning "big mountains".

Animal Names

Wadawurrung vocabulary pertaining to local wildlife;