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Binandere is a
Papuan language spoken in the "tail" of
Papua New Guinea.
Binandere has 11 consonants:
voiced and
voiceless bilabials, alveolars, and velars;...
- (along with the
related Goilalan languages) by
Timothy Usher (2020). The
Binandere family proper is
transparently valid; Ross
connected it to the Guhu-Semane...
-
families Wurm
would later add to TNG: Wurm's East New
Guinea Highlands,
Binandere in the 'Bird's Tail' of PNG, and two
families that John Z'graggen would...
- family]
Binandere:
Binandere,
Mambare [ambiguous], Musa River, Aiga, Yoda [Yǒda/Koriri,
geographically Hunjara],
Berepo [presumably
Binandere], Amara...
-
spoke Suena during most of the 20th century, but may have
switched to
Binandere.
Suena at
Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required) "A Selective...
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Waria Valley in
Morobe Province,
Papua New Guinea. It is part of the
Binandere subgroup of the Trans–New
Guinea phylum of
languages (Ross, 2005). Zia...
- to
Papua New Guinea. In 1930, they were
reported as
being speakers of
Binandere and
divided into
three groups: the Umo-ke ("River People"); the Eva-Embo...
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Simbari Susuami Tainae Yagwoia Yipma Awin–Pa Awin Pa
Binanderean Baruga Binandere Ewage Korafe Orokaiva Suena Yekora Zia
Bosavi Aimele Beami Edolo Kaluli...
-
language spoken in
Morobe Province,
Papua New Guinea. It is part of the
Binandere family of the Trans–New
Guinea phylum of languages, and is
close particularly...
- / Waia /
Kiwaian ex-Nuclear
Trans New Guinea-13 (Binanderean + Kowan:
Binandere, Baruga, Kowan, Korafe, Suena, Waskia, Zia) Fasu-East
Kutubu Pawaia-Teberan...