Guriaso language
Senu River language of Papua New Guinea
Guriaso | |
---|---|
Region | Papua New Guinea |
Native speakers | 1,500 (2014)[1] |
Language family | Senu River
|
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | grx |
Glottolog | guri1248 |
ELP | Guriaso |
Coordinates: 3°34′52″S 141°35′32″E / 3.581107°S 141.592197°E / -3.581107; 141.592197 (Guriaso) |
Guriaso or Muno is a language of Papua New Guinea. Only described in 1983, it appears to be distantly related to the Kwomtari and Nai languages. (See Senu River languages for details.) It is spoken in Guriaso ward (3°34′52″S 141°35′32″E / 3.581107°S 141.592197°E / -3.581107; 141.592197 (Guriaso)), Amanab Rural LLG, Sandaun Province.[1][2]
References
- ^ a b Guriaso at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022)
- ^ United Nations in Papua New Guinea (2018). "Papua New Guinea Village Coordinates Lookup". Humanitarian Data Exchange. 1.31.9.
Sources
- Baron, Wietze (1983). "Kwomtari survey" (PDF).
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help)
- v
- t
- e
- English
- Hiri Motu
- Tok Pisin
- Papua New Guinean Sign Language
languages
- Adzera
- Amanab
- Awad Bing
- Barok
- Bimin
- Bola
- Bugawac
- Dedua
- Dobu
- Iatmul
- Kâte
- Kobon
- Kovai
- Kuanua
- Kuman
- Kuot
- Kurti
- Lihir
- Mandara
- Mangseng
- Mbula
- Mende
- Mussau-Emira
- Mutu
- Nekgini
- Ngaing
- Niwer Mil
- Nobonob
- Numanggang
- Nyindrou
- Pele-Ata
- Petats
- Ramoaaina
- Seimat
- Solong
- Somba-Siawari
- Suau
- Sulka
- Tangga
- Tobo
- Uneapa
- Ura
- Vitu
- Waris
languages
Angan | |
---|---|
Awin–Pa | |
Binanderean | |
Bosavi | |
Chimbu–Wahgi | |
New Ireland | |
Duna–Pogaya | |
East Kutubuan | |
East Strickland | |
Engan | |
Eleman | |
Ok–Oksapmin | |
Teberan | |
Tirio | |
Turama–Kikorian | |
Larger families |
This Papuan languages-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e