L63: Thura / Yura

AIATSIS code: 
L63
AIATSIS reference name: 
Thura / Yura

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Name
Thesaurus heading language
Thesaurus heading people
ABN name
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ABS name
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Horton name
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Ethnologue name
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ISO 639-3 code
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Tindale name
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Tindale (1974)
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O'Grady et al (1966)
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Glottocode
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Other sources
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Synonyms
Jura, Thura, Adnjamadhanha-Gujani, Yura
Comment
Comments: 

The term Thura-Yura refers to a genetically related sub-group of Pama-Nyungan. This name incorporates th > y lenition which distinguishes the northern members of this sub-group. (2004:179). Yura means Aboriginal person in Adnyamathanha, the corresponding Kuyani word is Thura (Hercus, p.c 2006).

Languages in this sub-group include Kaurna L3; Ngadjuri L5; Nukunu L4Narangga L1; Barngala L6Adnyamathanha L10; Kuyani L9; Nauo L2 and Wirangu C1 which exhibits some differences with the Thura-Yura languages described as influences from Western Desert languages.

One particular cultural-linguistic feature uniquely Thura-Yura is the use of ten birth-order names. Another are the regular pronoun forms unique to the sub-group.

In an earlier publication, Hercus refers to Adnyamathanha with the name Adnjamadana-Gujani, or Jura (Hercus, 1974:16). Yura is not the name of a language; it was previously the reference name for L63 but this has been changed to incorporate the language group name.

References: 
  • Oates, Lynette F. 1975. The 1973 supplement to a revised linguistic survey of Australia. Armidale: Armidale Christian Book Centre.
  • Hercus, L. 1974. Important Aboriginal languages in Hemisphere, Vol 8 no 1.
    S 05/2, vol. 18

  • Simpson, J & L Hercus. 2004. Thura-Yura as a subgroup, in (Bowern & Koch eds) Australian Languages : classification and the comparative method. John Benjamins : Amsterdam/Philadelphia

Status: 
Confirmed
Location
State / Territory: 
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Location information: 
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Maps: 
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Links
Programs
Activities: 
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People: 
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Indigenous organisations: 
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Speakers
Year Source Speaker numbers
1975Oates-
1984Senate-
1990Schmidt-
1996Census-
2001Census-
2004NILS1-
2005Estimate-
2006Census-
2011Census-
2014NILS2
2016Census-
2018-2019NILS3

Speaker numbers were measured differently across the censuses and various other sources listed in AUSTLANG. You are encouraged to refer to the sources.

Speaker numbers for ‘NILS 2004’ and ‘2005 estimate’ come from 'Table F.3: Numbers of speakers of Australian Indigenous languages (various surveys)' in 'Appendix F NILS endangerment and absolute number results' in McConvell, Marmion and McNicol 2005, pages 198-230 (PDF, 2.5MB).

Documentation
Type Documentation Status Documentation Score
Word list None 0
Text Collection None 0
Grammar None 0
Audio-visual None 0
Manuscript note: 
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Grammar: 
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Dictionary: 
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Classification
Source Family Group Sub-group Name Relationship
Ethnologue (2005)          
Dixon (2002)          
Wurm (1994)          
Walsh (1981)          
Oates (1975) Unclassified     Jura  
Wurm (1972)          
O'Grady, Voegelin and Voegelin (1966)