Pagi language
Pagi, or Bembi, is a Papuan language spoken by 2,000 people in five villages in Sandaun Province and in Vanimo District of Papua New Guinea, near the border with Indonesian Papua.
Pagi | |
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Native to | Papua New Guinea |
Region | Sandaun Province |
Native speakers | 2,100 (2003)[1] |
Border
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Dialects |
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Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | pgi |
Glottolog | pagi1244 [3] |
Etymology
The name "Bewani" attributes to the mountains that form a boundary between the Vanimo and Amanab Districts. The several languages spoken are:
- Kilmeri: spoken in Kiliwis village.
- Tok Pisin
- Ainbai: spoken in Ainbai nad Elis villages.
- Imbinis:dialect of Pagi, spoken in Imbinis and Imbio villages.
- Ossima: dialect of Kilmeri, spoken around Ossima station.
- Isi: dialect of Kilmeri, spoken in Isi village.
Usage
Pagi is spoken near the Bewani Station, Idoli and Amoi villages. The Tok Pisin is generally used by the government officials and in families where husband and wife belong to communities speaking different indigenous languages. However, the region is influenced by English and is the main language used in schools of the region, accompanied occasionally by Tok Pisin.[4][5]
gollark: WHYJIT is *really* fast since all it does is stick GCC and your code into a shellscript together.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: The WHY which esobot supports is the nonJIT version.
gollark: WHY (the compiler) is very fast. Code it outputs is not fast.
gollark: Basically, the WHYJIT compiler reads your code, adds a busy loop and makes a shellscript containing that code and the entire C compiler which, when run, unpacks the C compiler, uses it to compile the C, and executes the output.
References
- Pagi at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
- Language descriptions - Pagi
- Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Pagi". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
- Sociologistic survey of Pagi and Kilmeri (1981) : Robert Brown (PDF)"BROWN, Robert, author. 1981. A sociolinguistic survey of Pagi and Kilmeri. Workpapers in Papua New Guinea Languages 29. Ukarumpa: Summer Institute of Linguistics."
- Survey archive on Summer Institute of Linguistics International
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