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Jane Simpson Jane Simpson i(A95772 works by)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 Six Decades, 210 Warlpiri Speakers and 11,000 Words: How a Groundbreaking First Nations Dictionary Was Made Carmel O'Shannessy , Jane Simpson , Otto Jungarrayi Sims , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: The Conversation , 25 May 2023;

— Review of Warlpiri Encyclopaedic Dictionary Mary Laughren , 2022 reference

'The first large dictionary of the Warlpiri language began in 1959 in Alice Springs, when Yuendumu man †Kenny Wayne Jungarrayi and others started teaching their language to a young American linguist, Ken Hale.' (Publication summary)

1 y separately published work icon Kulurdu Marni Ngathaitya! : A Kaurna Learner's Guide Robert Amery , Jane Simpson , Anne Best (illustrator), Mile End : Kaurna Warra Pintyanthi Wakefield Press , 2021 24008757 2021 single work picture book children's

'Few resources exist to assist the learner of Kaurna, the language of the Adelaide Plains, South Australia. This Kaurna Learners' Guide, Kulurdu Marni Ngathaitya!, has been developed as a step-by-step guide for learning to speak the language and to assist teachers of Kaurna language. It assumes no previous knowledge though, of course, many Kaurna people will know some of the language already.

'Organised into two main sections, Part One (Chapters 1-16) introduces common words and expressions for use in a range of contexts on topics that are often spoken about, allowing the learner to dive straight into the language. Part Two (Chapters 17-25) guides the learner through various aspects of Kaurna grammar and sentence construction and provides detailed explanation.

'Language learning is rewarding. Learning Kaurna can provide insights into Kaurna culture and the way of thinking of Kaurna people as they lived in the nineteenth century.'  (Publication summary)

1 Talking the Talk : Fresh Closing the Gap Targets Require a Tailored Approach to Language Jane Simpson , Denise Angelo , Francis Markham , 2020 single work column
— Appears in: The Conversation , 31 July 2020;

'Indigenous languages have been in the news this week. For the first time, an Indigenous language, Ngunnawal, was used for the acknowledgment of country at the opening of the ACT Legislative Assembly.' 

1 The State of Australia’s Indigenous Languages – and How We Can Help People Speak Them More Often Jane Simpson , 2019 single work
— Appears in: The Conversation , 21 January 2019;

'In 1788 there were between 300 and 700 Indigenous languages spoken across Australia by millions of people, as shown in anthropologist Norman Tindale’s 1974 map. However in the Australian 2016 Census, only around 160 of these languages were reported as being spoken at home.' (Introduction)

1 Working Verbs : The Spread of a Loan Word in Australian Languages Jane Simpson , 2017 single work criticism
— Appears in: Language, Land and Song : Studies in Honour of Luise Hercus 2017; (p. 244-262)

'From the first encounters with outsiders, Indigenous Australians developed words for expressing the new things, animals and concepts that came with the outsiders. This paper shows how the distribution of a single loanword ‘work’ and its variants across Australia sheds light on early contact between outsiders and Indigenous Australians, as well as between Indigenous Australians themselves. I propose that widespread multilingualism has led to diffusion both of forms and of strategies for integrating them morphologically into the grammars of individual languages. The geographical distribution of a surprising pronunciation of ‘work’ involving a flap or trill and possibly a final /m/ suggests diffusion areas of borrowing from neighbouring languages and chain borrowing, rather than separate independent borrowings from English. Diffusion through traditional Indigenous languages, rather than through a contact language, provides a partial explanation for the surprising absence of particular variants in the English-lexifier contact languages that developed in Australia.'  (Introduction)

1 Introduction Harold Koch , Peter Austin , Jane Simpson , 2017 single work criticism
— Appears in: Language, Land and Song : Studies in Honour of Luise Hercus 2017; (p. 1-19)

'This collection honours the work of Luise Hercus. Luise Hercus has been a leading figure in the documentation of Australian Indigenous languages for more than 50 years. Her work ranges from salvage studies to detailed descriptions, all richly contextualised by documentation of songs, stories, land and biographies.' (Introduction)

1 1 y separately published work icon Language, Land and Song : Studies in Honour of Luise Hercus Peter Austin (editor), Harold Koch (editor), Jane Simpson (editor), Australia : Endangered Languages Publishing , 2017 15316152 2017 anthology criticism biography

'The contributors to this book highlight current practice in language documentation, drawing on insights from anthropology, digital humanities, education, ethnography, history, linguistics and musicology. The book shows how the value of this multi-faceted documentation has become clear over the last 50 years.' (Publication summary)

1 y separately published work icon The Living Archive of Aboriginal Languages Michael Christie , Cathy Bow , Brian C. Devlin , Jane Simpson , Darwin : Charles Darwin University , 2014 7893662 2014 single work criticism

This booklet introduces the Living Archive of Aboriginal Languages project, explains the background and context of the project, and includes a history of pedagogical practices in the Northern Territory and the production of picture books and readers in language.

1 Indigenous Placenames : An Introduction Luise Anna Hercus , Jane Simpson , 2002 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Land is a Map: Placenames of Indigenous Origin in Australia 2002; (p. 1-23)
1 y separately published work icon A Learner's Guide to Warumungu Jane Simpson , Alice Springs : IAD Press , 2002 21029355 2002 reference information book

'Warumungu the language spoken in and around Tennant Creek has lent its name (in other spellings) to a suburb of Canberra and a battleship.

'The Warumungu language belongs to 700 or so people living in Tennant Creek and areas to the north, east and south in Central Australia. This learner's guide gives clear and extensive instruction in pronunciation grammar and recent spelling conventions and extra information on skin and kinship systems.'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

3 2 y separately published work icon Tucker's Mob Christobel Mattingley , Jeanie Adams (illustrator), ( trans. Rob Amery et. al.agent with title Maikoko Birko ) Norwood : Omnibus , 1992 Z837576 1992 single work picture book children's
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