The Sepik–Ramu languages are a hypothetical language family linking the Sepik, Ramu, Nor–Pondo (Lower Sepik), Leonhard Schultze (Walio–Papi), and Yuat families, together with the Taiap language isolate, and proposed by Donald Laycock in 1973.
•
Sepik–Ramu would consist of a hundred languages of the Sepik and Ramu river basins of northern Papua New Guinea, but spoken by only 200 000 people in all.
Languages of India | Indo-European languages | Celtic languages | Slavic languages | Algonquian languages | Turkic languages | Bantu languages | Romance languages | Berber languages | Australian Aboriginal languages | Germanic languages | Ramu | Goidelic languages | Arawakan languages | North Germanic languages | Indigenous languages of the Americas | Austroasiatic languages | Indo-Aryan languages | Polynesian languages | Northwest Caucasian languages | Munda languages | Mongolic languages | French-based creole languages | Songhay languages | Semitic languages | Dené–Yeniseian languages | Common European Framework of Reference for Languages | Visayan languages | Tupian languages | Tibeto-Burman languages |