| Ampanang | |
|---|---|
| Native to | Indonesia |
| Region | Kenohan,Kutai Kartanegara Regency,East Kalimantan |
Native speakers | (30,000 cited 1981)[1] |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | apg |
| Glottolog | ampa1239 |
Ampanang is anAustronesian language spoken at the village of Ampanang (no longer exists today), at the Kahala river (flowing intoLake Semayang and eventually theMahakam),East Kalimantan. It is closely related toTunjung, forming theMahakam languages.[2] This language has very little documentation, and is only known from a fragmented vocabulary list on S. C. Knappert's workBeschrijving van de Onderafdeeling Koetei (1905). Ampanang had been already displaced by or mixed withKutainese orMalay among the younger generation.[3]
Christian missionary sites claim that Ampanang people live in Jambuk and Lemper (Bongan,West Kutai), thus conflicting with the information provided by S. C. Knappert.[4]
Source:[3]
| English | Ampanang (in modern spelling) | Indonesian |
|---|---|---|
| man | liha | laki-laki |
| woman | wawé | perempuan ~wanita |
| child | tuhi | anak |
| river | luah | sungai |
| house | elu | rumah |
| cat | méong | kucing |
| dog | imong | anjing |
| sick | perah | sakit |
| so (adverb) | suah | sekali |
| Numbers | ||
| one | ca | satu |
| two | rega | dua |
| three | telu | tiga |
| four | apat | empat |
| five | lima | lima |
| six | hagan | enam |
| seven | tucu | tujuh |
| eight | halung | delapan |
| nine | salatian | sembilan |
| ten | sapuluh | sepuluh |
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