The Keram languages of New Guinea are part of the Ramu family.
(See Grass languages for the history of classification.)
Foley (2018) classifies most of them in the Grass branch of the Ramu family,[1] while Usher classifies them as coordinate with the Ramu family, leaving a reduced number of languages in the Grass branch.
[2] They are named for the Keram River.
Usher (2020) reconstructs the pronouns of East Keram and West Keram as follows:[3]