Bitur | |
---|---|
Mutum | |
Native to | Papua New Guinea |
Native speakers | 860 (2000 census) [1] |
Trans–New Guinea
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 |
mcc |
Glottolog |
bitu1242 |
Bitur (Bituri, Paswam, Mutum [2]) is Papuan language of Western Province, Papua New Guinea.
Bitur is spoken in Bisuaka ( 8°32′26″S 142°42′03″E / 8.540481°S 142.70092°E), Kasimap ( 8°35′22″S 142°50′29″E / 8.589363°S 142.841446°E), Petom ( 8°37′28″S 142°41′19″E / 8.624387°S 142.688669°E), Tewara ( 8°30′51″S 142°45′12″E / 8.51406°S 142.753434°E), and Upiara ( 8°32′47″S 142°38′57″E / 8.546301°S 142.64927°E) villages of Oriomo-Bituri Rural LLG. [1] [3]
Bitur | |
---|---|
Mutum | |
Native to | Papua New Guinea |
Native speakers | 860 (2000 census) [1] |
Trans–New Guinea
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 |
mcc |
Glottolog |
bitu1242 |
Bitur (Bituri, Paswam, Mutum [2]) is Papuan language of Western Province, Papua New Guinea.
Bitur is spoken in Bisuaka ( 8°32′26″S 142°42′03″E / 8.540481°S 142.70092°E), Kasimap ( 8°35′22″S 142°50′29″E / 8.589363°S 142.841446°E), Petom ( 8°37′28″S 142°41′19″E / 8.624387°S 142.688669°E), Tewara ( 8°30′51″S 142°45′12″E / 8.51406°S 142.753434°E), and Upiara ( 8°32′47″S 142°38′57″E / 8.546301°S 142.64927°E) villages of Oriomo-Bituri Rural LLG. [1] [3]