The Brahman languages, Biyom and Tauya, form a subbranch of the Rai Coast branch of the Madang languages of Papua New Guinea. The family is named after the cattle station and town of Brahman, which lies between the territories of the two languages.
Brahman | |
---|---|
(Biyom–Tauya) | |
Geographic distribution | Brahman, Papua New Guinea |
Linguistic classification | Madang
|
Language codes | |
Glottolog | None |
Genetic relations
editJohn Z'graggen (1971, 1975) classified four languages as Brahman, Biyom, Faita, Isabi, Tauya.[1]
Ross (2005) broke up Brahman, placing Faita among the Sogeram languages (another sub-branch of Madang) and Isabi among the unrelated Goroka languages – a position followed by Usher (2018).
References
edit- ^ Brahman Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine, in the 15th edition of Ethnologue