Winyarruk pirnin?
Who came?
Pronunciation:
Say: winy-arr-uuk piurn-iin?
(Use rising tone for question.)
Notes:
Vowels: Standard - ‘i’ as in ‘hit’, 'a' as in ‘path’, 'u' as in 'put'. Variation - when ‘i’ follows a ‘p’  and is followed by a ‘r’, ‘rn’ or ‘rt’ but not ‘rr’, the ‘i’ is rounded off like ‘tu’ in French. (top of the tongue touches the back of the palate).
Consonant combination - 'ny' (palato-nasal) combine 'n' and 'y' while top of tongue touches hard palate plus nasal vibration. (Avoid the English 'nee' as in 'many'), - 'rr' roll or trill tongue.
Literal Meaning:
Lit. who-he came?
Shows:
Pronoun - interrogative, Verb ending - has already happened (past) - in
Explanation:
One of the standard ways of asking a question in Wamba Wamba is starting with a pronoun like 'winyarr' (who) with the subject ending 'uk' (his) transferred from a verb 'pirna' (come) plus the past tense (already happened) ending 'in'. 
Learning Focus:
Communication, Language Building
Learning Exercise:
Build - Look up, write down and practice saying - 'Who left?', 'Who spoke?', 'Who slept?'.
Phrase Sentence:
Sentence
Words Associated:
winyarr - who?
pirna - appear, come, arrive, to rise (of sun etc.)
Topics:
Communication - Question
Age Guides:
Yr 7-9, Yr 4-6, Advanced, Yr 10-12
Reference:
Victorian Languages: A Late Survey: L.A. Hercus; p. 53, Interrogative Clauses