Ampanang is an extinct Austronesian language spoken at the village of Ampanang, at the Kahala river, modern-day East Kalimantan. It is closely related to Tunjung, forming the Mahakam languages. This language has extremely little documentation, and is only known from a 19-word vocabulary list on Beschrijving van de Onderafdeeling Koetei (1905). However, the 16th edition of the Ethnologue reported 30,000 speakers as of 1981.

Ampanang is an extinct Austronesian language spoken at the village of Ampanang, at the Kahala river, modern-day East Kalimantan. It is closely related to Tunjung, forming the Mahakam languages. This language has extremely little documentation, and is only known from a 19-word vocabulary list on Beschrijving van de Onderafdeeling Koetei (1905). However, the 16th edition of the Ethnologue reported 30,000 speakers as of 1981.

Ampanang is an extinct Austronesian language spoken at the village of Ampanang, at the Kahala river, modern-day East Kalimantan. It is closely related to Tunjung, forming the Mahakam languages. This language has extremely little documentation, and is only known from a 19-word vocabulary list on Beschrijving van de Onderafdeeling Koetei (1905). However, the 16th edition of the Ethnologue reported 30,000 speakers as of 1981.

Ampanang is an extinct Austronesian language spoken at the village of Ampanang, at the Kahala river, modern-day East Kalimantan. It is closely related to Tunjung, forming the Mahakam languages. This language has extremely little documentation, and is only known from a 19-word vocabulary list on Beschrijving van de Onderafdeeling Koetei (1905). However, the 16th edition of the Ethnologue reported 30,000 speakers as of 1981.

Ampanang is an extinct Austronesian language spoken at the village of Ampanang, at the Kahala river, modern-day East Kalimantan. It is closely related to Tunjung, forming the Mahakam languages. This language has extremely little documentation, and is only known from a 19-word vocabulary list on Beschrijving van de Onderafdeeling Koetei (1905). However, the 16th edition of the Ethnologue reported 30,000 speakers as of 1981.

Ampanang is an extinct Austronesian language spoken at the village of Ampanang, at the Kahala river, modern-day East Kalimantan. It is closely related to Tunjung, forming the Mahakam languages. This language has extremely little documentation, and is only known from a 19-word vocabulary list on Beschrijving van de Onderafdeeling Koetei (1905). However, the 16th edition of the Ethnologue reported 30,000 speakers as of 1981.

Ampanang is an extinct Austronesian language spoken at the village of Ampanang, at the Kahala river, modern-day East Kalimantan. It is closely related to Tunjung, forming the Mahakam languages. This language has extremely little documentation, and is only known from a 19-word vocabulary list on Beschrijving van de Onderafdeeling Koetei (1905). However, the 16th edition of the Ethnologue reported 30,000 speakers as of 1981.

Ampanang is an extinct Austronesian language spoken at the village of Ampanang, at the Kahala river, modern-day East Kalimantan. It is closely related to Tunjung, forming the Mahakam languages. This language has extremely little documentation, and is only known from a 19-word vocabulary list on Beschrijving van de Onderafdeeling Koetei (1905). However, the 16th edition of the Ethnologue reported 30,000 speakers as of 1981.

Ampanang is an extinct Austronesian language spoken at the village of Ampanang, at the Kahala river, modern-day East Kalimantan. It is closely related to Tunjung, forming the Mahakam languages. This language has extremely little documentation, and is only known from a 19-word vocabulary list on Beschrijving van de Onderafdeeling Koetei (1905). However, the 16th edition of the Ethnologue reported 30,000 speakers as of 1981.