Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/134674
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Type: Journal article
Title: What women want: Teaching and learning pronouns in Ngarrindjeri
Author: Gale, M.-A.
Giles, A.
Simpson, J.
Amery, R.
Wilkins, D.
Citation: Australian Journal of Linguistics, 2021; 41(4):477-502
Publisher: Taylor and Francis Group
Issue Date: 2021
ISSN: 0726-8602
1469-2996
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Mary-Anne Gale, Angela Giles, Jane Simpson, Rob Amery and David Wilkins
Abstract: Ngarrindjeri is one of many Aboriginal languages being actively revived in southern Australia. Women in the Ngarrindjeri community have expressed a desire to speak, read and write their language with the same richness as when it was spoken fluently over 70 years ago. Like many Aboriginal languages, Ngarrindjeri has a rich selection of free and bound pronouns, which express person, number and case, but unlike most other Australian languages, it has a third set of reduced free form pronouns. This tripartite set is used to express discourse saliency and continuing topic, and to definitize noun phrases. This paper addresses the issue of teaching and learning how to use Ngarrindjeri pronouns in traditional ways, but for contemporary purposes. Learning Ngarrindjeri requires understanding grammatical categories such as case that differ substantially from English, plus understanding the use of free forms for discourse saliency, bound forms for continuing topics, and free reduced forms where English uses articles. Finally, it requires memorizing a large number of pronoun forms. We share anecdotes on learning pronouns from individual authors, and a reflection from a young Ngarrindjeri woman. We then propose strategies and resources to make it easier to learn, remember and use the complex, regularized pronoun paradigms of Ngarrindjeri.
Keywords: Ngarrindjeri; pronouns; language revival; Berndt and Berndt; Aboriginal language
Rights: © 2022 The Australian Linguistic Society
DOI: 10.1080/07268602.2022.2027867
Grant ID: http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP150103287
http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP190102413
Published version: https://taylorandfrancis.com/
Appears in Collections:Linguistics publications

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