Wikitongues | The Kayan language, casually spoken | Wahyu speaking Kayan Mahakam | Wikitongues @Wikitongues | Uploaded July 2021 | Updated October 2024, 1 hour ago.
The Kayan language is a macrolanguage spoken by the Kayan people of Indonesian Borneo. An Austronesian language, it is related to Bahasa Indonesia, and a distant cousin of Malagasy and Hawaiian.
Explore: wikitongues.org/languages
Submit: wikitongues.org/submit-a-video
More from Wikipedia: "Kayan (Kajan, Kayan proper) is a dialect cluster spoken by the Kayan people of Borneo. It is a cluster of closely related dialects with limited mutual intelligibility and is itself part of the Kayan-Murik group of Austronesian languages. Baram Kayan is a local trade language. Bahau is part of the dialect cluster, but is not ethnically Kayan."
This video was recorded by DeAndre A. Espree-Conaway in Samarinda, Kalimantan, Indonesian Borneo. This video is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International license. To download a copy, please contact hello@wikitongues.org.
The Kayan language is a macrolanguage spoken by the Kayan people of Indonesian Borneo. An Austronesian language, it is related to Bahasa Indonesia, and a distant cousin of Malagasy and Hawaiian.
Explore: wikitongues.org/languages
Submit: wikitongues.org/submit-a-video
More from Wikipedia: "Kayan (Kajan, Kayan proper) is a dialect cluster spoken by the Kayan people of Borneo. It is a cluster of closely related dialects with limited mutual intelligibility and is itself part of the Kayan-Murik group of Austronesian languages. Baram Kayan is a local trade language. Bahau is part of the dialect cluster, but is not ethnically Kayan."
This video was recorded by DeAndre A. Espree-Conaway in Samarinda, Kalimantan, Indonesian Borneo. This video is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International license. To download a copy, please contact hello@wikitongues.org.