| Kungkari | |
|---|---|
| Kuungkari of Barcoo River | |
| Native to | Australia | 
| Extinct | (date missing) | 
Pama–Nyungan
 
  | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | lku | 
| Glottolog | kuun1236 | 
| AIATSIS[1] | L38 | 
| ELP | Kungkari | 
Kungkari (also Gunggari, Koonkerri, Kuungkari) is an extinct and unclassified Australian Aboriginal language.[1] The Kungkari language region included the landscape within the local government boundaries of the Longreach Shire Council and Blackall-Tambo Shire Council.[2]
Classification
Geographically it lay near the Barcoo River between the Karnic and Maric languages, but had no obvious connection to either; the data is too poor to draw any conclusions on classification.
Bowern (2001) mentions Kungkari as a possible Karnic language.[3]: 247
Wafer and Lissarrague (2008)[4]: 324 report that a description of Kungkari by Breen (1990)[5]: 22–64 is of Kungkari, not the similarly-named Gunggari, which was Maric.[3]
Phonology
Consonants
| Peripheral | Laminal | Apical | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Labial | Velar | Dental | Palatal | Alveolar | Retroflex | |
| Plosive | p | k | t̪ | c | t | ʈ | 
| Nasal | m | ŋ | n̪ | ɲ | n | ɳ | 
| Rhotic | r | |||||
| Lateral | (l̪) | ʎ | l | ɭ | ||
| Approximant | w | j | ɻ | |||
- The dental lateral [l̪] mainly occurs as an allophone of /l/ within the consonant cluster /lt̪/.
 - /t/ may be realized as a voiced stop [d] when after /n/, or as a voiced tap [ɾ] in intervocalic positions.
 
Vowels
| Front | Central | Back | |
|---|---|---|---|
| High | i iː | u (uː) | |
| Low | a aː | 
- The long [uː] only rarely occurs.[5]
 
References
- 1 2 L38 Kungkari at the Australian Indigenous Languages Database, Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies
 - ↑  
 This Wikipedia article incorporates text from Kuungkari   published by the State Library of Queensland under CC BY licence, accessed on 25 May 2022. 
 - 1 2 Bowern, Claire (2001). "Karnic classification revisited". In J Simpson; et al. (eds.). Forty years on. Canberra Pacific Linguistics. pp. 245–260. Archived from the original on 3 November 2021.
 - ↑ Wafer, Jim; Lissarrague, Amanda (2008). A Handbook of Aboriginal Languages of New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory. Muurrbay Aboriginal Language & Culture Co-operative.
 - 1 2 Breen, Gavan (1990). Salvage studies of Western Queensland Aboriginal languages (PDF). Pacific Linguistics B-105. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics.
 
External links
- Kuungkari, Bidjara, Inangai & Wangkangurru (Central West Region) community language journey digital story, at State Library of Queensland
 
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