Most Australian languages do not exhibit any fricatives, as far as I know …
It is a kind of different language in…
Korean
Amharic
Armenian
Greek
Chinese
Latin
Russian
Georgian
Is it possibly an indigenous Australian language?
I hear a little japanese, might be japanese or korean
It is an indigenous language of Australia.
Is it one of the Torres Strait Islands languages, Meriam Mir or Kala Lagaw Ya?
Sorry, my mistake. It isn’t a language of Australia, but is in fact spoken quite a bit further north in Asia.
That’s what I thought in the first place: Even the Torres Strait Islands languages don’t exhibit so many fricatives and affricates … Apart from that, I rest my case.
The mystery language is Monguor (Dēd Mongol), a Mongolic language spoken in Qinghai and Gansu Provinces in the northeastern China.
Is it possibly an indigenous Australian language?
Most Australian languages do not exhibit any fricatives, as far as I know …
It is a kind of different language in…
Korean
Amharic
Armenian
Greek
Chinese
Latin
Russian
Georgian
Is it possibly an indigenous Australian language?
I hear a little japanese, might be japanese or korean
It is an indigenous language of Australia.
Is it one of the Torres Strait Islands languages, Meriam Mir or Kala Lagaw Ya?
Sorry, my mistake. It isn’t a language of Australia, but is in fact spoken quite a bit further north in Asia.
That’s what I thought in the first place: Even the Torres Strait Islands languages don’t exhibit so many fricatives and affricates … Apart from that, I rest my case.
The mystery language is Monguor (Dēd Mongol), a Mongolic language spoken in Qinghai and Gansu Provinces in the northeastern China.