Mayi-Kutuna language
Mayi-Kutuna, also spelt Mayaguduna, Maikudunu and other variants, is an extinct Mayabic language once spoken by the Mayi-Kutuna, an Aboriginal Australian people of the present-day Cape York Peninsula in northern Queensland, Australia.[2]
| Mayi-Kutuna | |
|---|---|
| Mayaguduna | |
| Native to | Australia | 
| Region | Cape York Peninsula, Queensland | 
| Ethnicity | Maikudunu, ?Marrago | 
| Extinct | (date missing) | 
| Pama–Nyungan
 
 | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | xmy | 
| Glottolog | maya1280 | 
| AIATSIS[1] | G24 | 
| ELP | Mayi-Kutuna | 
Gavan Breen (1981) thought that the Marrago might have been a sub-group of the Mayi Kutuna people; Paul Memmott (1994) lists the Marrago language separately but gives no further detail. Their status is unconfirmed by the AIATSIS collection.[3]
References
    
- G24 Mayi-Kutuna at the Australian Indigenous Languages Database, Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies
- G24 Mayi-Kutana at the Australian Indigenous Languages Database, Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies
- G45 Marrago at the Australian Indigenous Languages Database, Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies
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