Sidney Herbert Ray has written:
'A comparative vocabulary of the dialects of British New Guinea' -- subject(s): Languages, Papuan languages, Melanesian languages
1 answer
4750ml - 18ml = 4732ml.......
1 answer
William George Lawes has written:
'Grammar and vocabulary of language spoken by Motu tribe (New Guinea)' -- subject(s): Motu language, Papuan languages
1 answer
Yes, there are creation myths among the indigenous Papuan peoples of Papua New Guinea. These myths often involve stories of ancestral beings shaping the landscape, creating humans, and establishing social customs. These creation stories play a significant role in Papuan cultural identity and are passed down through oral tradition.
1 answer
Indonesian or by their ethnic group "javanese" "ballinese" "papuan"
1 answer
a tipan...esspecially the Papuan
tipan its the most dangerous alive
1 answer
There is no historical evidence or records indicating that Papuans traveled to the Philippines in their Lalakois. Lalakois are specifically associated with the culture of the Papuan people and are traditionally used for rituals and ceremonies in their own region.
2 answers
Oh, dude, the East Indies are like a linguistic melting pot! You've got languages like Indonesian, Javanese, Sundanese, and like a bunch of others spoken there. It's like a linguistic buffet, so take your pick and enjoy the language feast!
3 answers
The abelam of Papuan New Guinea
2 answers
The spotted jelly, lagoon jelly, golden medusa, or Papuan jellyfish (Mastigias papua) is a species of jellyfish from the Indo-Pacific.
1 answer
There are many Australian animals which could be considered fliers. Some examples are the cockatiel, Australo-Papuan babbler and the scrub robin.
1 answer
In late July 1942, as the Japanese advanced towards Kokoda village, they were engaged by forward elements of the Papuan Infantry Battalion and the Australian 39th Infantry Battalion. Despite the Australians' stubborn resistance, Kokoda fell to the larger Japanese force and by 27 August 1942, the Australians and the few Papuan troops who had stayed with them had been forced back to Isurava.
2 answers
Plumbed Whistling- Duck
Pink- eared Duck
Paradise Shelduck
Partridge Pigeon
Papuan Frogmouth
Papuan Spine- tailed Swift
Polynesian Storm- petrel
Pink-footed Shearwater
Piping shrike
Pelican
Painted firetail
Peregrine falcon
Pheasant coucal
Pied butcher bird
Pied cormorant
Powerful owl
Port Lincoln parrot
Purple swamphen
1 answer
'Very ancient' is quite a subjective term. To some, 200 years is very ancient, whereas to others, something can be quite young and millions of years old. Devanagari is thought to have been developed around 1000 CE. This makes it about a millennium old. This makes it about the same age as Russian, Spanish, Mongolian, and Thai. Not a particularly old script (for example, Sumerian, the world's oldest known language, developed around 2900 BCE), but not a particularly young one either (particularly recent languages include Iroquois, ~1800 CE, Bantu, ~1700 CE, Papuan, ~1900 CE).*
*It is important to bear in mind that excepting Devanagari, this answer references languages, rather than scripts. In most cases the writing systems of the mentioned languages developed more or less at the same pace as the languages.
1 answer
There are several languages of the Torres Strait Islanders.
The western-central Torres Strait language does not have a single name, but the dialects are Kalaw Lagaw Ya, Kalau Kawau Ya, Kulkalgau Ya and Kawalgau Ya - also called Kowrareg.
The eastern Torres Strait language is a Papuan language - Meriam Mir.
In addition, there is a Torres Strait Creole, which developed from Pacific English around about the 1880s, and is variously known as Blaikman Tok, Broken/Brokan or Yumplatok.
2 answers
Bahinemo is an ethnicity of people. It is also a language of northern Papua New Guinea. Just type it in to the google website "bahinemo" and it will give you sites to go to to help you understand what bahinemo is. It sounds and seems to be very interesting. :)
2 answers
Marta Rohatynskyj has written:
'Sex affiliation among the Omie of Papua New Guinea' -- subject(s): Social life and customs, Omie (Papuan people)
1 answer
The archaic Papuans were an ancient population that inhabited the island of New Guinea. They were the ancestors of present-day Papuan peoples and played a significant role in the genetic and cultural history of the region.
1 answer
no, i don't think so, the people of Papuan wishes just to get indenpendendence from indonesia, self determanation as a nation of west papua.
1 answer
Romance languages. Like 'Roman'ce languages. Cause Latin comes from the Romans
2 answers
1 answer
The languages of India and the languages of Europe have a common source
1 answer
No, not all regular languages are context-free. Regular languages are a subset of context-free languages, but there are context-free languages that are not regular.
1 answer
Undecidable languages are languages for which there is no algorithm that can determine whether a given input string is in the language or not. Examples of undecidable languages include the Halting Problem and the Post Correspondence Problem.
Decidable languages, on the other hand, are languages for which there exists an algorithm that can determine whether a given input string is in the language or not. Examples of decidable languages include regular languages and context-free languages.
The key difference between undecidable and decidable languages is that decidable languages have algorithms that can always provide a definite answer, while undecidable languages do not have such algorithms.
1 answer
1 answer
There are 512 living languages and 9 extinct languages.
1 answer
Programming languages such as COBOL and FORTRAN are examples of procedure languages.
1 answer
All romance languages branched off from Latin.
1 answer
there are 22 official languages and 398 living languages in India
1 answer
the two languages where Hindi and English.
1 answer
Could you please specify the languages you are referring to?
1 answer
English & French are the main languages in France
1 answer
English and French are Canada's two official languages although there are several native languages and immigrant languages also.
1 answer
There is no such language as "Yugoslavian."
1 answer
Yes, many languages around the world have their own unique sign languages that are distinct from each other. These sign languages are used by deaf communities to communicate and are not universal across all languages.
1 answer