Nganga: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Words and Phrases
By (Author) Aunty Fay Muir
By (author) Sue Lawson
Walker Books Australia
Black Dog Books
1st June 2018
Australia
Children
Non Fiction
Short-listed for Educational Publishing Awards Australia, Primary Reference Resource 2019 (Australia)
Paperback
144
Width 131mm, Height 198mm
232g
Nganga is an authoritative and concise collection of words and phrases related to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and issues.
Nganga (ng gar na): To see and understand.
Aunty, Uncle, sorry business, deadly, womens business, marngrook, dreamtime, Elders, songlines. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander words have become part of our everyday vocabulary but we may not know their true meaning of the word or where the words come from. In Nganga, Aunty Fay Muir and Sue Lawson have brought together these words, their meanings and their history. Engage with the rich and unique culture of Aboriginal Australians through this authoritative and concise collection.
Aunty Fay Stewart-Muir is an Elder and Traditional Owner of Boon Wurrung Country. She is the senior linguist at the Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages in Melbourne. Fay is working with her own Boon Wurrung language, recording and putting language into the database for future and present generations. She presents language-related workshops to community members who are reclaiming their languages, as well as universities and TAFEs that are interested in understanding the many and challenging aspects of language reclamation. She also goes out to schools to educate the students about language and culture and to teach language. Nganga is her first children's book.
Sue Lawson writes books for children and young adults. She has won the Australian Family Therapists Award for Childrens Literature and was short-listed for the Prime Ministers Literary Awards and the Childrens Book Council of Australia Book of the Year Awards."