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Pitta Pitta language
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Pitta Pitta
RegionQueensland
EthnicityPitapita, Ringaringa, Rakkaia, Karanya, Kungkalenja, Maiawali
Native speakers
(3 cited 1979)[1]
likely extinct
Dialects
  • Pitta-Pitta
  • Ringu-Ringu
  • Rakaya
  • Ngulupulu/Karanja
  • Kunkalanja
  • Mayawarli (Maiawali)[2]
Pitha Pitha Sign Language
Language codes
ISO 639-3pit – inclusive code
Individual code:
yxa – Mayawali (Maiawali)
Glottologpitt1247  Pitta Pitta
AIATSIS[3]G6 Pitta Pitta (other dialects listed from here)
ELPPitta-Pitta

Pitta Pitta (also known by several other names and spellings) is an extinct Australian Aboriginal language. It was spoken around Boulia, Queensland.[4]

Status

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In 1979, Barry J. Blake reported that Pitta Pitta was "virtually extinct", with only three speakers remaining – Ivy Nardoo of Boulia, and Ted Marshall and Linda Craigie of Mount Isa.[1] It is now considered unlikely that any speakers remain.[5]

Phonology

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Vocabulary

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Below is a basic vocabulary list from Blake (1981).[6]

English Pitta-Pitta
man karna
woman parratya
mother ngamari
father yapiri
head karti
eye miyi
nose milya
ear ngarra
mouth parla
tongue ṯarli
tooth mirlka
hand mara
breast kaputyu
stomach ngampa
urine purra
faeces kuna
thigh marla
foot ṯina
bone pirna
blood kimpa
dog piyawarli
snake kaṯi
kangaroo kulipila
possum ṯinapali
fish kupi
spider kupu
mosquito kuṉṯi
emu warrukatyi
eaglehawk kurriṯala
crow wakiri
sun warlka
moon tyangi
star tyinpi
stone tipu
water ngapu
camp ngurra
fire maka
smoke kuṯu
food yaṉṯurru
meat kaṯi
stand ṯarrka
sit ṉangka
see ṉatyi
go karnta
get marri
hit piṯi
I ngantya
you inpa
one ngururu
two parrkula

Pituri

[edit]

The name pituri for the leaves chewed as a stimulant by traditional Aboriginal people has been claimed to be derived from the Pitta Pitta word pijiri.[7][8] though Walter Roth pointed out in 1897 that the word 'pituri', thus pronounced, was the term used by the neighbouring Yurlayurlanya people, and added that the Pitta Pitta people called it "tarembola".[9]

Sign language

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The Pitta Pitta had well-developed a signed form of their language.[10]

References

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Further reading

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