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Bassa language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kru language spoken in Liberia
For the Bantu language spoken in Cameroon, seeBasaa language. For the Kainji languages spoken in Nigeria, seeBasa languages.
Bassa
𖫔𖫧𖫳𖫒𖫨𖫰𖫨𖫱 (Ɓǎsɔ́ɔ̀)
Native toLiberia,Ivory Coast,Sierra Leone
Native speakers
410,000 (2006)[1]
Bassa Vah alphabet (Vah)
Language codes
ISO 639-3bsq
Glottolognucl1418
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You may needrendering support to display the uncommonUnicode characters in this article correctly.

TheBassa language is aKru language spoken by about 783,000Bassa people inLiberia,Ivory Coast, andSierra Leone.

Phonology

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Consonants

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LabialAlveolarPalatalVelarLabial-
velar
Glottal
Plosive/
Affricate
voicelessptt͡ʃkk͡p
voicedbdd͡ʒɡɡ͡b
implosiveɓɗʄ
Nasalmnɲ
Fricativevoicelessfsh
voicedvzɣʷ
Approximantw
  • /ʄ/ can be heard as a glide[j] intervocalically within compound words.
  • /ɡ͡b/ when followed by a nasal can be heard as[ŋ͡m].
  • /h/ only rarely occurs.[2]

Vowels

[edit]
FrontCentralBack
oralnasaloralnasaloralnasal
Closeiĩuũ
Close-mideo
Open-midɛɛ̃ɔɔ̃
Openaã

Bassa alphabets

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Further information:Bassa Vah alphabet andBassa Vah (Unicode block)
The Bassa Vah alphabet.

It has an indigenous alphabet,Vah, first popularized by Thomas Flo Lewis, who has instigated publishing of limited materials in the language from the mid-1900s through the 1930s, with its height in the 1910s and 1920s.[3] It has been reported that the alphabet was influenced by theCherokee syllabary created bySequoyah.[4]

The Vah alphabet has been described as one which, "like the system long in use among theVai, consists of a series of phonetic characters standing for syllables."[5] In fact, however, Vah is alphabetic. It includes 30 consonants, seven vowels, and five tones that are indicated by dots and lines inside each vowel.

In the 1970s theUnited Bible Societies (UBS) published a translation of the New Testament. June Hobley, of Liberia Inland Mission, was primarily responsible for the translation. TheInternational Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) was used for this translation rather than the Vah alphabet, mostly for practical reasons related to printing. Because the Bassa people had a tradition of writing, they quickly adapted to the new alphabet, and thousands learned to read.

In 2005, UBS published the entire Bible in Bassa. The translation was sponsored by the Christian Education Foundation of Liberia,Christian Reformed World Missions, and UBS. Don Slager headed a team of translators that included Seokin Payne, Robert Glaybo, and William Boen.

The IPA has largely replaced the Vah alphabet in publications. However, Vah is still highly respected and is still in use by some older men, primarily for record keeping.

Latin Bassa orthography

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Letters

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  • A - a - [a]
  • B - be - [b]
  • Ɓ - ɓe - [ɓ/ⁿb]
  • C - ce - [c]
  • D - de - [d]
  • Đ - ɖe - [ɖ/ɺ]
  • Dy - dye - [dʲ/ɲ]
  • Ɛ - ɛ - [ɛ]
  • E - e - [e]
  • F - ef - [f]
  • G - ge - [g]
  • Gb - gbe - [ɡ͡b/ŋ͡m]
  • Gm - gme - [g͡m]
  • H - ha - [h]
  • Hw - hwa - [hʷ]
  • I - i - [i]
  • J - je - [ɟ]
  • K - ka - [k]
  • Kp - kpe - [k͡p]
  • M - em - [m]
  • N - en - [n]
  • Ny - eny - [ŋ]
  • Ɔ - ɔ - [ɔ]
  • O - o - [o]
  • P - pe - [p]
  • S - es - [s]
  • T - te - [t]
  • U - u - [u]
  • V - ve - [v]
  • W - we - [w]
  • Xw - xwa - [xʷ]
  • Z - ze - [z]

Other letters

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  • ã - [ã]
  • ẽ - [ẽ]
  • ĩ - [ĩ]
  • ɔ̃ - [ɔ̃]
  • ũ - [ũ]

Some Bassa speakers write nasalised vowels as an, en, in, ɔn, and un.

Tones

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  • á - [a˥]
  • à - [a˨]
  • a - [a˧]
  • ǎ - [a˨˧]
  • â - [a˥˩][6]

References

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  1. ^Bassa atEthnologue (18th ed., 2015)(subscription required)
  2. ^Bertkau, Jana S. (1975).A phonology of Bassa. Monrovia: Peace Corps.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: publisher location (link)
  3. ^"Bassa language and alphabet".www.omniglot.com. Retrieved2020-02-27.
  4. ^Unseth, Peter (20 December 2016)."The international impact of Sequoyah's Cherokee syllabary".Written Language & Literacy.19 (1):75–93.doi:10.1075/wll.19.1.03uns.
  5. ^Starr, Frederick. Liberia: Description, history, problems. Chicago, 1913. P.246
  6. ^"Bassa language and alphabet".Omniglot.

External links

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Official language
Indigenous languages
Manding
Kru
Other
Creole languages
Eastern
Western
Grebo
Wee
Others
Others
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