Pagsasao a Kómnzo
Appearance
(Naibaw-ing manipud iti Pagsasao a Kómnjo)
Komnzo | |
---|---|
Rouku | |
Rehion | Papua Baro a Guinea |
Patubo a mangisasao | 150–250 (2018)[1] |
Kodkodigo ti pagsasao | |
ISO 639-3 | Awan (mis ) |
Glottolog | komn1238 |
ELP | Komnzo |
Nagsasabtan: 8°42′06″S 141°35′55″E / 8.701793°S 141.598485°ENagsasabtan: 8°42′06″S 141°35′55″E / 8.701793°S 141.598485°E |
Ti pagsasao a Kómnzo, (ammo pay a kas Komnzo, Kómnjo, Kamundjo) ket ti pagsasao a Yam ti Papua Baro a Guinea nga insasao babaen dagiti 150–250 a tattao idiay purok ti Rouku ken iti ili ti Morehead.[1]
Dagiti nagibasaran
[urnosen | urnosen ti taudan]- ^ a b Döhler 2018
- Döhler, Christian (2013) "Don't talk to him! His family speaks a bit mixed." Multilingualism from the perspective of the documenter. presentation at the 3rd International Conference on Language Documentation and Conservation (ICLDC). Accessed on 2019-11-12.
- Döhler, Christian (2016). Komnzo: A language of Southern New Guinea (Tesis). The Australian National University. doi:10.25911/5D778A5C79763. hdl:1885/107178.
- Döhler, Christian (2018). A Grammar of Komnzo. Studies in Diversity Linguistics 22. Berlin: Language Science Press. doi:10.5281/zenodo.1477799. ISBN 978-3-96110-125-2.
- Evans, Nicholas, I Wayan Arka, Matthew Carroll, Christian Döhler, Eri Kashima, Emil Mittag, Kyla Quinn, Jeff Siegel, Philip Tama & Charlotte van Tongeren. (2017) The languages of Southern New Guinea. In Bill Palmer (ed.), The languages and linguistics of the New Guinea area, 641–774. Berlin; Boston: Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-029525-2. Nalaa idi 2019-11-12.