Nyawaygi language

The Nyawaygi language, also spelt Nywaigi, Geugagi, Njawigi, Nyawigi or Nawagi, is an extinct Australian Aboriginal language that was spoken by the Nyawaygi people in North Queensland, on the east coast of Australia. The Nyawaygi language region includes the landscape within the Hinchinbrook Regional Council, Halifax Bay, and Rollingstone.

Nyawaygi had the smallest number of consonants, 12, of any Australian language. It had 7 conjugations, 3 open and 4 closed, the latter including monosyllabic roots, and, in this regard, conserved a feature of proto-Pama–Nyungan lost from contiguous languages.

Consonants

 * Unlike most Australian languages, occurs as an allophone of /r/ when after a consonant. /r/ is heard as  in all other environments.
 * Palatal sounds /ɟ, ɲ/ can occasionally be heard as dental sounds.
 * /r/ can also occasionally be heard as a tap.
 * /ɻ/ can be heard as a flap in word-final positions.

Vocabulary
Some words from the Nyawaygi language, as spelt and written by Nyawaygi authors include:


 * Alu head
 * Angal boomerang
 * Balgan stone
 * Buramu butterfly
 * Gabagan aunt
 * Touca tula good day
 * Wadi laugh
 * Yunggul one