<font face="courier new,monospace"><font size="4"><font face="georgia,serif">Australian TV show teaches Aboriginal language<br><br>(AFP) – 13 hours ago<br>via Google<br><br>SYDNEY — An Australian TV channel is broadcasting the first lessons in an Aboriginal language aimed at young children, in a bid to stem an alarming decline that has wiped out hundreds of native dialects.<br>
<br>"Waabiny Time", for three to six-year-olds, teaches "yes", "no" and other basic terms in the Noongar language, which is spoken in the southwestern region around Perth.<br><br>The show, broadcast daily and repeated on Saturdays, started last month with 13 half-hour episodes and proved so popular the entire series is now being screened again.<br>
<br>"I realised while working with Aboriginal communities that kids weren't talking with their grandparents in their language," producer Cath Trimboli, told AFP.<br><br>"It is disappearing, kids are not encouraged to talk in this language. So I wanted to work on this."<br>
<br>Noongar is one of about 60 indigenous languages still spoken in Australia, compared with about 250 -- and up to 700 dialects -- in circulation at the time of white settlement in 1788. Of 13 Noongar dialects, just five now remain.<br>
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