Dhuwal (also Dual, Duala) is one of the Yolŋu languages spoken by Aboriginal Australians in the Northern Territory, Australia. Although all Yolŋu languages are mutually intelligible to some extent, Dhuwal represents a distinct dialect continuum of eight separate varieties. In 2019, Djambarrpuyŋu became the first Indigenous language to be spoken in an Australian parliament, when Yolŋu man and member of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly Yingiya Guyula gave a speech in his native tongue.
Ethnologue divides Dhuwal into four languages, plus Dayi and the contact variety Dhuwaya (numbers are from the 2006 census.):
Dhuwaya is a stigmatised contact variant used by the younger generation in informal contexts, and is the form taught in schools, having replaced Gumatj ca. 1990.
Pitjantjatjara dialect of the Western Desert language | pa ṉa | 'earth, dirt, ground; land' | diacritic (underline) indicates the retroflex nasal (ɳ) |
Wajarri language | nha nha | 'this, this one' | digraph indicating the dental nasal (n̪) |
Yolŋu languages | yol ŋu | 'person, man' | represents the velar nasal (borrowed from the International Phonetic Alphabet) |
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