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Words near each other
・ Maribor Synagogue
・ Maribor Town Hall
・ Maribor Water Tower
・ Maribou State
・ Maribyrnong
・ Maribyrnong College
・ Maribyrnong Immigration Detention Centre
・ Maribyrnong Park Football Club
・ Maribyrnong Plate
・ Maribyrnong River
・ Maribyrnong River Trail
・ Maribyrnong River Viaduct
・ Maribyrnong Road
・ Maribyrnong, Victoria
・ Marib–Ras Isa oil pipeline
Maric languages
・ Marica
・ Marica (mythology)
・ Marica Bodrožić
・ Marica Hase
・ Marica Malović-Đukić
・ Marica Stražmešter
・ Marica tú
・ Maricao River
・ Maricao State Forest
・ Maricao, Puerto Rico
・ Maricaona
・ Maricar Balagtas
・ Maricar Reyes
・ Maricarmen Arrigorriaga


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Maric languages : ウィキペディア英語版
Maric languages
:''Not to be confused with the Marran languages of the Gunwinyguan family or the Mari languages''
Maran or Maric is a branch of the Pama–Nyungan family of Australian languages.〔RMW Dixon (2002), ''Australian Languages: Their Nature and Development'', p xxxiii〕 The well attested Maric languages are clearly related; however, many languages of the area went extinct before much could be documented of them, and their classification is uncertain. The clear Maric languages are:
:Bidyara (numerous varieties)
:Biri (several varieties)
:Warrungu (& Gugu-Badhun, Gudjal)
:(Kingkel?): Darumbal
Dharumbal was added by Bowern (2011); it had been classified in the Kingkel branch of Waka–Kabic. It is not clear if the other Kingkel language, Bayali, is also Maric; Bayali and Darumbal are not close.
==Unclassified languages==
Ngaro and Giya (Bumbarra), spoken on the coast, may also have been Maric, the latter perhaps a dialect of Biri.
Of the interior, to the west, Breen (2007) writes of "Karna–Mari fringe" languages which are "a discontinuous group of languages, mostly poorly attested, scattered between Karnic and Mari languages but not showing much connection with either or with one another. The only one well attested is also the most remote geographically, Kalkutungu". This includes the Ngura languages, several of which belong to the Karnic branch of Pama–Nyungan. However, Bowern (2011) lists the Badjiri variety as Maric.〔Bowern, Claire. 2011. "(How Many Languages Were Spoken in Australia? )", ''Anggarrgoon: Australian languages on the web'', December 23, 2011 ((corrected ) February 6, 2012)〕 Other poorly attested interior languages which may have been Maric include Ngaygungu (Dixon 2002), Bindal (Bowern 2011), Barna (Bowern 2011), Dhungaloo (doubtful in Bowern, not listed at AIATSIS), and Yirandhali (Dixon, Bowern). Yiman near the coast was ethnically Bidjara. Dixon's "Greater Maric" area listed in Bowern (2011) also includes Guwa (Goa) and Yanda. See also Karnic languages for additional varieties from the area.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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