[RNLD] Australian tongue twisters

Rachel Nordlinger racheln at unimelb.edu.au
Mon Jun 22 05:16:58 UTC 2015


I’m loving these tongue twisters!  My students always struggle with this
one when learning Murrinhpatha - it’s a good test for the initial velar
nasals. 

ngunungam-ngem ngarra Kungarlbarl ‘I’m going to Kungarlbarl’.

Cheers,

Rachel
-- 
A/Prof Rachel Nordlinger
Associate Professor and Reader
Research Unit for Indigenous Language
ARC Centre of Excellence for the Dynamics of Language
School of Languages and Linguistics
University of Melbourne
VIC 3010, Australia
http://languages-linguistics.unimelb.edu.au/academic-staff/rachel-nordlinge
r




On 21/06/2015 1:08 am, "Norvin W Richards" <norvin at mit.edu> wrote:

>Here are some Lardil ones:
>
>Dubuduburr durathur dulbiribiriwu burururu.
>ɖubudubur ɖuɹaðuɹ ɖulbiɹibiɹiwu buɹuɹuɹu
>'The tiger mullet will tickle the rain bird with a (species of bush used
>for firedrill)'
>
>Burbur bana buribur bana burdu.
>buɹbuɹ bana buɹibuɹ bana buɖu
>'Both the feather and the gun are short'
>
>Dulbiribiri dulburri burrurri.
>ɖulbiɹibiɹi ɖulburi bururi
>'The rain bird picked seaweed up off the ground'
>
>--Norvin Richards
>________________________________________
>From: Margaret Carew [margaret.carew at batchelor.edu.au]
>Sent: Friday, June 19, 2015 11:22 PM
>To: r-n-l-d at lists.unimelb.edu.au
>Subject: RE: [RNLD] Australian tongue twisters
>
>From: Burarra/Gun-nartpa
>
>rrugurrgurda jin-digigirrnga
>
>'the crab crawls around'
>
>Margaret Carew
>Project Linguist, CALL
>Division of Higher Education and Research
>Batchelor Institute – Desert Peoples Centre Campus
>tel: 08 8951 8344
>email: 
>margaret.carew at batchelor.edu.au<mailto:firstname.surname at batchelor.edu.au>
>| www.batchelor.edu.au<http://www.batchelor.edu.au/>
>[cid:16C5211D-95E8-4825-9A6B-1A5F1F581B21]
>2014 NT Training Awards – Winner, Training Provider of the Year
>2014 NT Training Awards – Winner, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
>Student of the Year
>
>________________________________
>From: Murray Garde [mgarde3 at bigpond.com]
>Sent: Friday, 19 June 2015 09:47
>To: r-n-l-d at lists.unimelb.edu.au
>Subject: Re: [RNLD] Australian tongue twisters
>
>A tongue-twister from Bininj Kunwok (Kuninjku dialect):
>
>ŋaŋaŋʔŋaŋa ŋɛʔŋɛʔ yimeŋ
>nganganghnganga ʼngehngehʼ yimeng
>The grey-crowned babbler said nge’ nge’.
>Includes velar nasals in syllable initial and final positions and in a
>cluster with a glottal stop.
>
>and another favourite:
>
>dabːorabːolk bɪrɪbitbom bembem bɪrɪbɪmbom
>Dabborrabbolk birribidbom bembem birribimbom.
>The old people climbed up and painted a sole fish.
>
>
>Murray Garde
>
>On 19 Jun 2015, at 8:14 am, John Hobson
><john.hobson at sydney.edu.au<mailto:john.hobson at sydney.edu.au>> wrote:
>
>Dear Australianists,
>
>I’m assembling some activities to support pronunciation skills
>development for learners of Australian languages, one of which is the use
>of tongue twisters. If anyone can offer any examples I’d be pleased to
>receive them, especially for phones and phonotactics that are considered
>problematic for English speakers.
>
>Regards,
>
>John
>
>JOHN HOBSON | Lecturer
>Director, Indigenous Education Programs
>Faculty of Education & Social Work
>
>THE UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY
>Rm 711, Education Building A35
>The University of Sydney | NSW | 2006
>
>T +61 2 9351 6994 | F +61 2 9351 6924
>E john.hobson at sydney.edu.au<UrlBlockedError.aspx>
>W Staff Profile<http://fdp.edsw.usyd.edu.au/users/jhobson> | Patyegarang,
><http://www.indigoz.com.au/language/> Indigenous Australian languages
>education<http://www.indigoz.com.au/language/>
>
>"When you lose a language, you lose a culture, intellectual wealth, a
>work of art. It's like dropping a bomb on a museum, the Louvre."
>Comment by the late Kenneth Hale, cited in The Economist (November 3,
>2001).
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