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Nicobarese languages

The Nicobarese languages or Nicobaric languages, form an isolated group of about half a dozen closely related Austroasiatic languages, spoken by most of the inhabitants of the Nicobar Islands administered by the Indian Republic. They have a total of about 30,000 speakers. Most Nicobarese speakers speak the Car language. Paul Sidwell (2015:179) considers the Nicobarese languages to subgroup with Aslian.

Typology
The morphological similarities between Nicobarese and Austronesian languages have been used as evidence for the Austric hypothesis (Reid 1994). Weber (2025) also noted typological similarities between Nicobarese and Austronesian that are absent in other Austroasiatic branches, and suggested that Nicobarese may have an Austronesian substrate. In general, the Nicobarese languages display verb-initial word orders, and have elaborate paradigmatic agreement systems. They also have suffixing, which is uncommon in the Mainland Southeast Asia linguistic area. Nancowry, Chaura, Teressa show nominative-accusative alignment in marking and agreement. Car Nicobarese however displays a highly eccentric ergative alignment and split ergativity (based on word order). In contrast with nearly entirely of the ergative languages of the world where marking agreement with the ergative (A) arguments is the norm, in Car Nicobarese the subjects (S) of intransitive predicates and the patients (P) of transitive predicates often receive overt markings and agreement instead. This marked absolutive pattern is illustrated by following examples: 1. Intransitive S 2. Transitive P of V-P-A (agreement but no case marking) 3. Transitive P of V-A-P (case marked but no agreement) ==Languages==
Languages
From north to south, the Nicobaric languages are: • Car: Car (Pū) • Chaura–Teressa: Chaura (Tutet/Sanënyö), Teressa (Taih-Long/Lurö) • Central: Nancowry (Nang-kauri/Mūöt), Camorta, Katchal (Tehnu) • Southern: Southern Nicobarese (Sambelong), Shompen (Shom Peng) ==Classification==
Classification
Sidwell (2017) Paul Sidwell (2017) classifies the Nicobaric languages as follows. • NicobaricCar • Chaura–Teressa • Teressa, Chaura • Central-Southern • Central: Nancowry, Camorta, Katchall • Southern: Southern Nicobarese, Shompen Sidwell (2022) Sidwell (2022), based on a computational phylogenetic lexical analysis, proposes a new classification which treats Car and Shompen as single language branches of North and South Nicobarese while placing other lects into Central Nicobarese. • Nicobarese • Northern • Car (Pū) • Central • ChawraTeressaChawra (Sanënyö, Tətɛt) • Teressa–Bompoka (Luröö, Təihlɔŋ, Poatat) • South–Central • Nancowry–Little Nicobar • Nancowry (Mūöt), Camorta (Kinlaka), Katchall (Tehnyu), Trinkat (Laful) • Little Nicobarese (Lamôngsĕ, Kondul, Pulo Milo) • Great Nicobarese (Tökahāṅilāhngö) • Southern • Shompen (Kalay, Keyet) ==See also==
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