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Karina speaking Yankunytjatjara | Aboriginal Australians and Torres Strait Islanders | Wikitongues 

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From First Languages Australia, Karina Lester speaks Yankunytjatjara, a language of Aboriginal Australians and Torres Strait Islanders. Learn more: firstlanguages....
The speaker(s) featured herein have not explicitly agreed to distribute this video for reuse. For inquiries on licensing this video, please contact First Languages Australia: firstlanguages....
Yankunytjatjara is spoken by as many as 7600 people, primarily in parts of Western Australia, South Australia, and the Northern Territory. It is a member of the Wati linguistic family, which includes over a dozen languages from central-west Australia. Like all Indigenous languages of Australia and the Torres Strait, Yankunytjatjara fell into steep decline over the 1900s, as forced assimilation policies designed by the Australian government coerced Aboriginal Australians and Torres Strait Islanders to abandon their ancestral languages in favor of English. The most brutal of these policies included the forced abduction of Indigenous children-the Stolen Generation-who were sent to boarding schools where they were given English names and punished for speaking their languages. Today, Yankunytjatjara is one of many Australian languages to be experiencing a renaissance, as language champions like Karina Lester work to pass their cultures onto the next generation. First Languages Australia (FLA), which recorded this video, is part of that movement. An organization by and for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians, FLA is working to safeguard and amplify the linguistic heritage of Australia's more than two-hundred Indigenous nations. Learn more about their work here: firstlanguages....
Help us caption & translate this video!
amara.org/v/C1...

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7 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 103   
@Wikitongues
@Wikitongues 4 года назад
Caption and translate this video: amara.org/v/C1I9D/ Help us record another language by supporting on Patreon: patreon.com/wikitongues Submit your own video here: wikitongues.org/submit-a-video Sign up for our monthly newsletter: eepurl.com/gr-ZQH
@kyliejones573
@kyliejones573 4 года назад
So great to see some Australian Aboriginal languages!
@Wikitongues
@Wikitongues 4 года назад
We'll be archiving and amplifying a terrific oral histories collection by First Languages Australia, so stay tuned! More are on the way :)
@dubleffler9451
@dubleffler9451 4 года назад
SO good to see an Aboriginal language on here!- Remember pre European contact- it is estimated that there were about 500 different Australian languages-and that's not including the dialects. There are still around 300 languages spoken here in Australia today.
@garrettwillett
@garrettwillett 4 года назад
Really appreciate those who work for language preservation ❤️
@Wikitongues
@Wikitongues 4 года назад
Have a look at First Languages Australia: firstlanguages.org.au/! We will be helping them archive and amplify a tremendous collection of oral histories from different Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities, including Karina's video here. What's your mother tongue (or ancestral language)? :)
@ultramet
@ultramet 4 года назад
Amazingly beautiful. Language is one of mankind’s most precious resources. It is a gift that we must preserve at all cost. This channel is amazing.
@Wikitongues
@Wikitongues 4 года назад
Thank you so much for being a part of Wikitongues! We appreciate you
@MenelionFR
@MenelionFR 4 года назад
Thanks Wikitongues, I've never heard an Australian language but always wondered how such a language sounds.
@Wikitongues
@Wikitongues 4 года назад
Thank you for following along! Stay tuned for more :)
@flyingfoxes4630
@flyingfoxes4630 4 года назад
@Welsh Simon what he/she means is Aboriginal Australian languages, the languages spoken before English arrived in Australia.
@gayvideos3808
@gayvideos3808 4 года назад
@Welsh Simon what are you talking about, english isnt australian
@anonb4632
@anonb4632 3 года назад
@@gayvideos3808 Not originally, but there is a distinctive Australian form of English.
@cheddarcheese9311
@cheddarcheese9311 2 года назад
@@gayvideos3808 NOO I AM ENGLAND AMERICAAAAAAAAN!!!!
@brainandforce
@brainandforce Год назад
I found something striking the first time I listened to it, but I wasn't sure what. After a couple of listens, I realized it's the total lack of /s/ in Yankunytjatjara.
@Lagiacrus1996
@Lagiacrus1996 4 года назад
Can't wait for more indigenous Australian languages. Any chance for (whadjuk) nyoongar? The people of where I am from in Australia.
@Wikitongues
@Wikitongues 4 года назад
We actually have some videos from the Nyoongar community, although they are more in English than Nyoongar, so stay tuned! What is your ancestral language? :)
@brods
@brods 4 года назад
@@Wikitongues +1 for Nyoongar!
@haojunli917
@haojunli917 4 года назад
This is a genuinely fascinating language 😭😭😭
@Wikitongues
@Wikitongues 4 года назад
We agree! In the coming weeks and months, we'll be publishing more videos from the outstanding oral history collection at First Languages Australia: firstlanguages.org.au/. If you're new to Wikitongues, we hope you'll join us and subscribe for more
@diamarieful
@diamarieful 4 года назад
Wikitongues, thank you for providing a platform for people to hear Aboriginal Australian languages. Most non-Aboriginal Australians have probably never heard language, I know I didn't until I was an adult. Look forward to hearing more.
@andrewdunbar828
@andrewdunbar828 2 года назад
True. I'm an Aussie in my fifties and I've always been interested in languages. Even though I lived in Townsville for a while I never heard anybody speak an indigenous language in real life in Australia. I've only heard them on the internet and rarely on TV and movies. I have heard indigenous languages in several other countries in my world travels though.
@nazarkgb1
@nazarkgb1 3 года назад
I didn’t realize there were quite so many indigenous people and languages still in substantial use in Australia. How wonderful!! (As an American I’m know lots of people think the same thing about the US, so perhaps I should have known)
@andrewdunbar828
@andrewdunbar828 2 года назад
Australian languages that are not English creoles don't have more than about 3,000 speakers any more. A few that are still thriving are spoken by much smaller groups, such as some of the Yolngu languages. Creole languages such as Kriol and Yumplatok now have more speakers.
@TheGloriousLobsterEmperor
@TheGloriousLobsterEmperor 2 года назад
These languages must be preserved at all cost. They are culture, they are history! Colonialism wiped out so many, we must preserve those that still live.
@shelookstome8727
@shelookstome8727 4 года назад
Thank you for the work that you do in preserving Indigenous languages, Karina! I live in Adelaide and I'm sad that we never learnt any Aboriginal languages in primary school :( I think it should be compulsory. It was beautiful listening to you speak in your native tongue.
@jungletheme2094
@jungletheme2094 3 года назад
It is SO HARD to find long examples of language Karina! thank you.
@robert_wigh
@robert_wigh 4 года назад
Dear God, this language only has 420 native speakers (according to Wikipedia as of 27.05.2020)...
@nathanmerritt1581
@nathanmerritt1581 3 года назад
That's a lot of speakers considering the Fate of other aboriginal languages.
@Brillemeister
@Brillemeister 4 года назад
Beautiful sound to this language! Thanks for what you do. God bless
@fraserbatts
@fraserbatts 4 года назад
Good to see one of the many beautiful Indigenous Australian languages. Please do one on Noongar!
@MalaysianTropikfusion
@MalaysianTropikfusion 4 года назад
Wow. It sounds very Dravidian 😨 I wouldn't have guessed it.
@lisasutherland-fraser4479
@lisasutherland-fraser4479 4 года назад
Interesting you say that as I see a huge similarity between the physiognomy of Dravidians and Aboriginal people.
@Mara-ub3tq
@Mara-ub3tq 4 года назад
Retroflex consontants?
@varungambhir3403
@varungambhir3403 4 года назад
Aren’t dravidians and aboriginal Australians genetically related
@MalaysianTropikfusion
@MalaysianTropikfusion 4 года назад
@@Mara-ub3tq Yes, precisely.
@MalaysianTropikfusion
@MalaysianTropikfusion 4 года назад
@@varungambhir3403 I've read a scientific paper which either corroborated that or proved that wrong. I don't quite remember now 😥
@kooltom4
@kooltom4 4 года назад
Kaya and thankyou Karina, wonderful to hear your language as I have little experience of South Aus. Grew up in Yorta Yorta land, now in the Whadjuk land of the Noongar people. Although I'm 100% wadjela, having convict ancestry both sides, I am so humbled by the extraordinary history of this land and the people, the languages and culture, though ashamed at what has been lost since invasion too. Thankyou for keeping your culture and language alive for all of us.
@myasera1769
@myasera1769 4 года назад
This language sound so nice, thank you Karina! I love this channel 😍
@Wikitongues
@Wikitongues 4 года назад
Thank you Mya! :)
@kamranriaz4661
@kamranriaz4661 2 года назад
How do you know her name
@jonahrichardson3000
@jonahrichardson3000 4 года назад
Beautiful! Carry on the great work Wikitongues of documenting minority languages, hope you have more languages from Australia soon
@Wikitongues
@Wikitongues 4 года назад
Check back on Friday, May 27! :D
@lorettei3936
@lorettei3936 2 года назад
Wow, to my ears, this sounds like a combination of Tagolog and South Asian e.g. Bangladeshi, it would be fascinating to figure the evolution of how it was formed.
@deanmodica912
@deanmodica912 4 года назад
So happy to hear this beautiful language!
@MaskedRiderChris
@MaskedRiderChris 3 года назад
There is nothing wrong with remembering where you're from, no matter where you come from, and keeping old languages alive is a great thing. Best of luck with it, sincerely!
@django8968
@django8968 3 года назад
I love the aboriginal people. It would be cool to learn the language one day but I doubt that will happen. Preserve it no matter what. You don’t know who you are unless you know where you’re coming from❤️
@elsakristina2689
@elsakristina2689 4 года назад
So precious!
@andyzhang7890
@andyzhang7890 2 года назад
Hm, not sure if this is the case but it sounds like the Australian enlighten intonation is still present even when speaking Yankunytjatjara
@anonb4632
@anonb4632 3 года назад
Interesting, there are a few sounds here that are a bit like continental south east Asia, and that must be a very old connection.
@wirsindhelden0
@wirsindhelden0 3 года назад
I have to admit - it was difficult for me to un-hear her saying 으로(eu-ro), 자고(ja-go), 지 지말(ji ji-mal)... Over and over again! Of course, I know there are only so many sounds humans can articulate, (these ones, in particular, being on the simpler side) so there tends to be a lot of coincidental overlap amongst completely unrelated languages, but still. If I were creative, I could almost string together a full, semi-coherent korean conversation!
@andrewdunbar828
@andrewdunbar828 2 года назад
I can't detect any similarities. I haven't been to Myanmar but Australian languages don't strike me as being similar to languages of Malaysia, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, or Vietnam where I have travelled off the tourist routes. Maybe you're think of South Asia rather than Southeast Asia?
@FordyHunt
@FordyHunt 4 года назад
What an amazing sounding language
@ktownlad
@ktownlad 4 года назад
Any chance of Kala Lagaw Ya from the Western Torres Strait? There are still many fluent speakers.
@andrewdunbar828
@andrewdunbar828 2 года назад
I came to ask exactly the same thing! I seem to remember a decade or two ago that it had one of the highest counts of speakers, around 3,000, but I was shocked to discover last time I checked that there are now only a few hundred )-:
@satanshameer690
@satanshameer690 4 года назад
At times, it sounds like Dravidian languages. I am a Malayalam speaker!
@4lmqs
@4lmqs 3 года назад
sounds like mix of thai and indian :o
@theophonchana5025
@theophonchana5025 4 года назад
Yankunytjatjara Western Desert
@charonder
@charonder 8 месяцев назад
Sounds beautiful
@matthewmann8969
@matthewmann8969 3 года назад
Torres Strait Islanders are to Australian Aborigines like what Eskimos are to Amerindians
@roja7426
@roja7426 2 года назад
Why does the words of her language sounds similar to tamil. By the way, I don’t understand if the languages but the sounds is similar listening to it. Is there a connection?
@RenegadeRanga
@RenegadeRanga 10 месяцев назад
Yes, mate. DNA links them, and so does the language comparison. I'm a layman, but the more I see the words spelled and the language and tones spoken, they are descended from the Tamil. Probably migrated from the sea a maximum 4000 years ago.
@CP0rings33
@CP0rings33 4 года назад
Any chance of hearing meriam mir?
@Wikitongues
@Wikitongues 4 года назад
Yes, a very good chance! One of FLA's videos has Meriam Mir used at the beginning. We will be posting it next month, so stay posted :)
@wackyruss
@wackyruss Год назад
Definitely sounds like the language that gave us the words kangaroo and didgeridoo! Boomerangs and Billabongs!!!!
@lohovi6571
@lohovi6571 4 года назад
when even the pronouncing the language's name is hard you know what awaits you if you want to learn it what a beautiful language btw
@zeitxgeist
@zeitxgeist 2 года назад
we get exposed to them to a small degree as kids, it's pronounced as read, no tricky vowels or consonants. ya-koon-it-jant-jara
@user-fl1dc9ju3g
@user-fl1dc9ju3g Год назад
I think Autralian citizens must learn thier local aboriginal languages.
@peachesncream2024
@peachesncream2024 2 года назад
Beautiful
@user-jk9qt8om5i
@user-jk9qt8om5i 4 года назад
😘😘😘😘
@user-jk9qt8om5i
@user-jk9qt8om5i 4 года назад
🤤❤️❤️❤️❤️👉🎂 It means i love you and you must have piece of cake 😋
@Prince_Sharming
@Prince_Sharming 4 года назад
This sounds strangely a bit like mohawk.
@tuantanah9076
@tuantanah9076 2 года назад
Wiru. Kungka ninti. Palyo.
@keptins
@keptins 4 года назад
Her accent sounds more Australian in her aboriginal language judging by the few English words she used ("university of Adelaide" etc).
@hotwheelsearl
@hotwheelsearl 4 года назад
keptins generally people who are bilingual speak each language with the proper accent
@keptins
@keptins 4 года назад
@@hotwheelsearl I know that's why I found it interesting that she sounded more Australian (at least to me) when she spoke that particular aboriginal language.
@keptins
@keptins 4 года назад
@@kyliejones573 what do you mean by "that does not mean anything?" I think you don't understand what I tried to say. At least you could have asked.
@hotwheelsearl
@hotwheelsearl 4 года назад
keptins do you mean she spoke Aborgine with an Australian accent? I couldn’t tell...
@keptins
@keptins 4 года назад
@@hotwheelsearl No. She spoke the aboriginal language like any other native speaker (I reckon). But the bunch of English words she happened to throw during her speech in that aboriginal language sounded more Australian than her entire speech in English. Maybe just an auditory illusion.
@user-td4do3op2d
@user-td4do3op2d 3 года назад
Does anyone else think their language sounds like a didgeridoo?
@RenegadeRanga
@RenegadeRanga 10 месяцев назад
These people are definitely descended from the Tamil.
@electronicfreak1111
@electronicfreak1111 3 года назад
RU-vid thinks it’s Indonesian
@hezekiah5510
@hezekiah5510 2 года назад
She stole that bit from Adam Sandler
@blacklightfreakout825
@blacklightfreakout825 4 года назад
Sounds like Hindi related. They speculate based on looks alone that some aboriginals look like a certain ethinc group from the southern part of India that probably traveled by boat to Australia and stayed.
@srita.k9780
@srita.k9780 4 года назад
Not hindi, but more of a southern Indian language. Maybe, Tamil?
@-SUM1-
@-SUM1- 4 года назад
Dravidian you mean. And no, it would've been a coastal migration to Southeast Asia.
@philomelodia
@philomelodia 4 года назад
Srita .K doesn’t sound Dravidian either. Not enough retroflex consonants. There is a flow to it that reminds me more of the new guinea languages.
@mohammedjalloh7658
@mohammedjalloh7658 4 года назад
This has absolutely nothing to do with any language in India, actually.
@rohitchaoji
@rohitchaoji 4 года назад
To me this sounds like either Papuan or Austronesian languages than anything from India. I'd probably have confused it for being related to Indonesian in some way, even though I'd still be wrong.
@saamohod
@saamohod 3 года назад
Sounds like very poor phonetic variety. Five or so sounds only.
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