public_comment: "Older sources refer to this language as Yapunda because it is spoken in Yapunda village; however, speakers refer to their language as Yeri.",
private_comment: null,
source_id: null,
language: {
code_id:2709,
featured: 0,
cached_documentation_score:-1,
google_group_url: "",
simplified_level: "high",
coordinates: "-3.4667, 142.4500",
updated_at: "2018-03-18 01:01:13",
speaker_attitude: "",
government_support: "",
institutional_support: "",
_other_languages_used: "Tok Pisin, other local languages",
domains_of_use: "Used mainly only in the home and/or with family, and may not be the primary language even in these domains for many community members.",
public_comment: ""Certainly no more than 100 [speakers]. Probably closer to 60 or so. Fluent speakers are mostly over the age of 40. As a general rule, females in their 20s and 30s speak a simplified variety of the language. Males in their 30s or so can speak a simplified variety of the language. Most males younger than 30 though have only a passive knowledge of the language. They can’t produce the language, or show obvious difficulty forming sentences in the language. Children only speak Tok Pisin."",