Misplaced Pages

Ndom language

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Kolepom Island or Pulau Yos Sudarso is an island separated only by the narrow Muli Strait from the main island of New Guinea . It is part of the Merauke Regency , in the Indonesian province of South Papua . The island is leaf-shaped, about 165 km (103 mi) long with an area of 11,740 km (4,530 sq mi). It was known as Frederik Hendrik Island until 1963. Local and alternative names of the island include Dolok and Kimaam . This is the 11th largest island in Indonesia.

#916083

5-474: Ndom is a language spoken on Yos Sudarso Island in Papua province, Indonesia . It is reported to use a senary (base 6) numbering system, with a problem from the 2007 International Linguistics Olympiad focusing on it. This Papuan languages –related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Yos Sudarso Island With about 11,000 inhabitants, the island's population density

10-460: Is less than 1 per square kilometre (2.5/sq mi). The native population speaks Kolopom languages , including Kimaghima , Ndom , and Riantana/Kimaan . Communities on the island include Kaba, Kimaan, Kladar, Pembre, Wan, and Yomuka. Kimaan (or Kimaam) is the main settlement. It lies in the southeast on the Buaya Strait that separates the smaller island of Komoran from Dolak. The island

15-521: The Arafura Sea , in 1623, Jan Carstensz named it Valse Kaap (Dutch for "False Cape"), a name retained to date (Indonesian Tanjung Vals , English "Cape Vals"). It was considered to be a part of mainland New Guinea until 1835, when between April 26 and May 9 that year the Dutch captains Langenberg, Kool and Banse sailed their schooners Postillon and Sireen through the narrow channels. They named

20-594: The waterway ' Princess Marianne Strait' (now Muli Strait ) and the island after Prince William Frederick Henry , a grandson of the king, who lived in the Dutch East Indies for a while. Until at least 1884 Komoran was thought to be part of Dolak. After the handover of Western New Guinea to Indonesia in May 1963, the Indonesian government renamed the island after the Indonesian naval officer Yos Sudarso , who

25-434: Was first sighted by Europeans in about January 1606 when Willem Jansz and his crew on the ship Duyfken rounded it on their way to and returning from their discovery of Australia . Duyfken spent considerable time in the bight in between the island and the mainland. Jansz's map of the expedition describes the island as lowland and muddy land and with the name "Tiuri". When rounding the prominent southwest cape, jutting into

#916083