Ndrumbea language
| Ndrumbea | |
|---|---|
| Naa Dubea | |
| Native to | New Caledonia | 
| Region | Southern tip outside Nouméa (Paita on the west coast, Ounia on the east coast) | 
| Native speakers | (2,000 cited 1996 census) | 
| Austronesian
 
 | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | duf | 
| Glottolog | dumb1241 | 
| Ndrumbea is classified as Vulnerable by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger | |
Ndrumbea, variously spelled Dumbea, Ndumbea, Dubea, Drubea and Païta, is a New Caledonian language that gave its name to the capital of New Caledonia, Nouméa, and the neighboring town of Dumbéa; it is also spoken in the nearby region of Païta. It however has been displaced to villages outside the capital, with fewer than a thousand speakers remaining. Gordon (1995) estimates that there may only be two or three hundred. The Dubea are the people; the language has been called Naa Dubea (or more precisely Ṇã́ã Ṇḍùmbea) "language of Dubea".
Ndrumbea is one of the few Austronesian languages that is tonal, and it has a series of consonants that are also unusual for the region.