Wiru language
| Wiru | |
|---|---|
| Witu | |
| Native to | Papua New Guinea | 
| Region | Ialibu-Pangia District, Southern Highlands Province | 
| Ethnicity | Wiru | 
| Native speakers | (15,300 cited 1967, repeated 1981) | 
| Latin | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | wiu | 
| Glottolog | wiru1244 | 
| ELP | Wiru | 
| Map:  The Wiru language of New Guinea
   The Wiru language   Trans–New Guinea languages   Other Papuan languages   Austronesian languages   Uninhabited | |
Wiru or Witu is the language spoken by the Wiru people of Ialibu-Pangia District of the Southern Highlands Province of Papua New Guinea. The language has been described by Harland Kerr, a missionary who lived in the Wiru community for many years. Kerr's work with the community produced a Wiru Bible translation and several unpublished dictionary manuscripts, as well as Kerr's Master's thesis on the structure of Wiru verbs.
There are a considerable number of resemblances with the Engan languages, suggesting Wiru might be a member of that family, but language contact has not been ruled out as the reason. Usher classifies it with the Teberan languages.