"Aranda" is a simplified,
Australian English approximation of the traditional pronunciation of the name of
Arrernte .
Glottolog defines the
Arandic group of languages/dialects as comprising five Aranda (Arrernte) dialects, plus two distinct languages,
Kaytetye (Koch, 2004) and Lower Southern (or just Lower) Aranda, an extinct language.
Ethnologue defines 8 Arandic languages and classifies them slightly differently. Two dialects are more widely spoken than any of the others: •
Eastern Arrernte (also known as
Central Arrernte) dialects include
Akarre,
Antekerrepenh,
Ikngerripenhe,
Mparntwe Arrernte. Spoken in the Alice Springs area and others, there were 1,910 speakers in the 2016 census, making it the most widely spoken Arrernte, and Australian Aboriginal, language. This is the dialect most often referred to as "Arrernte" and the strongest of all in the group. There is a project encouraging its use,
Apmere angkentye-kenhe, • The
Alyawarra dialect is spoken by the
Alyawarra people, in the
Sandover and
Tennant Creek areas as well as Queensland. In 2016 there were 1,550 speakers of the language, giving it a status of "Developing". It is similar to Western Arrernte. (Kaytetye is related to this dialect, but is classed as a separate language.) All of the other dialects are either threatened or extinct: •
Andegerebinha (or Antekerrepenhe or Ayerrerenge) was spoken in the
Hay River area (east of Alice Springs), but is now
extinct. •
Ayerrerenge, (also known as Yuruwinga, Bularnu and other variations) was spoken by the
Yuruwinga/Yaroinga people is the north-easternmost member of the Arrernte group of languages, and the least studied. and
Argadargada in the NT. It is now extinct. divided into Eastern and Western, is spoken by the
Anmatyerr (or Anmatjirra) people. The Eastern form seems more closely related to Eastern Arrernte and Southern Alywarre than Western Anmatyerre, which is noticeably different phonetically from other Arandic languages. •
Western Arrarnta (Western Arrernte, Western Aranda, Akara, Southern Aranda, possible sub-dialect
Akerre), spoken west of Alice Springs, is nearly extinct, being only spoken by 440 people in 2016. Other terms are
Tyuretye Arrernte and
Arrernte Alturlerenj. Breen distinguishes Tyurretye Arrernte (which he initially called Mbunghara) from Western Arrernte, saying that two speakers first recorded, from the Standley Chasm and Mbunghara, was not known until the mid-1980s, and that it may have been the "real" Western Arrernte, before the latter was mixed with Southern Arrernte (
Pertame) at the
Hermannsburg Mission. This dialect has similarities with Alyawarre and Kaytetye.
Sign language The Arrernte also have a highly developed
Arrernte sign language, also known as Iltyeme-iltyeme. There is also an Anmatyerr sign language called
iltyem-iltyem which is used by many Anmatyerr speakers to communicate non-verbally; the word iltja means 'hand, finger' and the term translates as 'signaling with hands'. Sign language is used when Anmatyerr people when hunting, when talking to the deaf, when somebody passes away and when talking to elders. ==Current usage and tuition==