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The Nor–Pondo aka Lower Sepik languages are a small language family of northern Papua New Guinea. They were identified as a family by K Laumann in 1951 under the name Nor–Pondo, and included in Donald Laycock's now-defunct 1973 Sepik–Ramu family. Malcolm Ross (2005) broke up the Nor branch and thus renamed the family Lower Sepik; he classifies it as one branch of a Ramu–Lower Sepik language family. Ethnologue (2009) keeps Nor together but breaks up Pondo.
Murik
Kopar
Chambri
Karawari (Tabriak), Yimas
Angoram
Ross (2005) notes Murik does not share the /p/s characteristic of the first- and second-person pronouns of Kopar and the Pondo languages, so the latter may form a group: Murik vs Kopar–Pondo. Foley (2005) tentatively proposes that Chambri and Angoram may be primary branches: Nor, Chambari, Karawari–Yimas, Angoram.
The pronouns reconstructed for the proto-language are,
Papua New Guinea, Indonesia, Kava, Melanesia, Realm of New Zealand
Australia, Indonesia, New Zealand, Malaysia, Canada
Papua New Guinea, Sepik languages, Torricelli languages, Anthropology, Sepik–Ramu languages
Sepik languages, Ramu languages, Nor–Pondo languages, Yuat languages, Papua New Guinea