Orya
A language of Indonesia (Papua)
| Population | 1,600 (1985 SIL). No monolinguals. 900 in Unurum-Guay, 100 in Bonggo subdistrict, 600 in Lereh subdistrict. |
| Region | Unurum-Guay, Bonggo subdistrict, Lereh subdistrict, Taja, Witi, and Wamho (formerly of Orya) villages. |
| Language map |
Indonesia, Eastern Papua, reference number 163 |
| Alternate names | Oria, Uria, Warpok, Warpu |
| Dialects | Barat (West Orya), Timur (East Orya), Yapsi-Taja. Slight dialect differences. |
| Classification | Tor-Kwerba, Orya-Tor, Orya |
| Language use | Children learn Orya in most cases. All domains. Positive attitude. Also use Indonesian [ind] or Papuan Malay [pmy]. |
| Language development | Literacy rate in L1: 5%–15%. Some adult literacy classes. NT: 2005. |
| Writing system | Latin script. |
| Comments | ‘Uria’ is a misspelling used earlier. ‘Warpok’ is the Nimboran name. Swidden agriculturalists: papaya, bananas, kankong; hunters: pig, wallaby, cassowary. Traditional religion, Christian. |
Entries from the SIL Bibliography about this language:
Academic Publications
FIELDS, Philip, author. 1991. "A phonology of the Orya language."
FIELDS, Philip, author. 1996. "Pivot and nominalisation in Orya."
GREGERSON, Marilyn; STERNER, Joyce K., editors. 1998. Symbolism and ritual in Irian Jaya.
SHALER, Dorothy, recorder. 2012. Kanang song DS-03-pres.
Vernacular Publications
Nwe ale tawa gwenhap de ol tatak 1. 1990.
Ola gulksun blaunzimki: Gandum dansa de hlïng gïlsïnhïp. 1990.

