Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Iraqw language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cushitic language spoken in Tanzania
Not to be confused withIroquoian languages orIraqi Arabic.
Iraqw
Kángw Iraqw
Native toTanzania
RegionManyara,Arusha
EthnicityIraqw
Native speakers
600,000 (2009)[1]
Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-3irk
Glottologiraq1241
This article containsIPA phonetic symbols. Without properrendering support, you may seequestion marks, boxes, or other symbols instead ofUnicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, seeHelp:IPA.
Two Iraqw speakers, recorded inTanzania.

Iraqw (/ɪˈrɑːk/[2]) is aCushitic language spoken inTanzania in theArusha andManyara Regions. It is expanding in numbers as theIraqw people absorb neighbouring ethnic groups.[clarification needed] The language has manyDatooga loanwords, especially in poetic language. TheGorowa language, to the south, shares numerous similarities and is sometimes considered a dialect.

Phonology

[edit]

Vowels

[edit]

Whiteley (1958) lists the following vowel phonemes for Iraqw. All of the vowels except /ə/ occur in both short and long versions:

FrontCentralBack
Closeiu
Mideo
Opena

/o/ can be heard as[ə] within the environment of pharyngeal consonants.

Consonants

[edit]

Whiteley (1958) and Mous (1993) list the following consonants:

Iraqw consonant phonemes
 LabialAlveolarPalatal /
Palato-
alveolar
Velar/UvularPharyngealGlottal
CentralLateralPlainLabialized
Nasalmn(ɲ⟨ny⟩)ŋ⟨ng⟩ŋʷ
Plosive/
Affricate
voicelesspt(⟨ch⟩)k
voicedbd(⟨j⟩)ɡɡʷ
ejectivetsʼtɬʼ⟨tl⟩ ~qχʼqʷʼ ~qχʷʼʔ⟨'⟩
Fricativevoicelessfsɬ⟨sl⟩(ʃ⟨sh⟩)xħ⟨hh⟩h
voicedʕ⟨/⟩
Trillr
Approximantlj⟨y⟩w

In the popular orthography for Iraqw used in Lutheran and Catholic materials as well as in collections of traditional Iraqw stories[3] and academic literature (e.g. Nordbustad 1988[4] and Mous 1993[5]), the majority of the orthography follows theSwahili orthography with the addition of x and q. Other additions to the orthography are the soundɬ is spelled⟨sl⟩, thetɬʼ is spelled⟨tl⟩, theħ is spelled⟨hh⟩, andʕ is spelled⟨/⟩.[6] Consonants /ɲ, tʃ, dʒ, ʃ/ mainly occur from loanwords of Swahili and Datooga.[7]

Morphology

[edit]

Noun morphology

[edit]

Gender

[edit]

Nouns in Iraqw have three genders: masculine, feminine, and neuter. The gender of a noun can be deduced from the type of agreement that it triggers on other elements in the sentence, but the agreement system is unusual, and obeys the following principle:[8]

  • Masculine nouns require the masculine form of the verb
  • Feminine nouns require the feminine form of the verb
  • Neuter nouns require the plural form of the verb

The masculine, feminine, and plural forms of the verb are identified by the form the verb takes when the subject is pronoun which is a.) a third person masculine singular ('he'), b.) a third person feminine singular ('she'), or c.) a third person plural ('they').

Masculine verb forms
Feminine verb forms
Neuter verb forms

There are several unusual things that are worth noting. One is that 'tail' is neuter in the singular and feminine in the plural; despite this, the plural verb form is used for 'tail', since it is neuter, and neuters use the plural verb form. This is why "plural" is often used as a label for this gender; plural gender is common in a number of Cushitic languages. Another is that the verbs do not agree with their subjects in number, so the masculine pluraldaaqay'boys' takes the masculine form of the verb, not the plural form of the verb.

Number

[edit]

Nouns typically have separate singular and plural forms, but there are many distinct plural suffixes.[9] reports that there are fourteen different plural suffixes. The lexical entry for a noun must specify the particular plural suffix it takes.

The gender of a plural noun is usually different from the gender of the corresponding singular. Compare the following singular and plural nouns, with their genders:

singularsingular genderpluralplural gendermeaning
awumawef'bull'
bila'mbil'aawef'cliff'
nyaqotmnyaqootma'f'colobus monkey'
hhampamhhampeerin'wing'
tlankaftlankadun'bridge'
lamaflameemon'lie'
slanúmslaneemon'python'
xweeranxweer(a)dun'night'

While it is not possible to predict the gender of a noun or which plural suffix it will take, the form of the plural suffix determines the gender of the plural noun. So, for example, all plural nouns with the-eemo suffix are neuter.[10]

Construct case suffixes and gender linkers

[edit]

The gender of a noun is important for predicting the construct case suffix and the gender linker that it will use. When a noun is directly followed by

  • an adjective
  • a possessive noun phrase
  • a numeral
  • a relative clause
  • a verb

then aconstruct case suffix must appear after the noun. The construct case marker is⟨-ú⟩ or⟨-kú⟩ for masculine nouns;⟨-Hr⟩ or⟨-tá⟩ for feminine nouns; and⟨-á⟩ for neuter nouns:[11]

hhar-tá

stick-construct:FEM

baabú-'ee'

father-1SG.POSS

hhar-tá baabú-'ee'

stick-construct:FEM father-1SG.POSS

'the stick of my father'

waahlá-r

python-construct:FEM

ur

big

waahlá-r ur

python-construct:FEM big

'big python'

an-á

1SG-S:1/2

hiim-ú

rope-construct:MASC

urúux

pull:1SG

an-á hiim-ú urúux

1SG-S:1/2 rope-construct:MASC pull:1SG

'I pull the rope'

Thegender linkers are similar to the construct cases suffixes, but appear between the noun and other suffixes (such as the demonstrative, indefinite, and possessive suffixes). The following example shows masculine, feminine, and neuter nouns before the 'their' possessive suffix and the demonstrative-qá''that (far, but visible)'.[12]

masculinefeminineneuter
gura''stomach'hasam'dilemma'hhafeeto'mats'

Adverbial case clitics

[edit]

Iraqw has four adverbial case clitics: the directive, the ablative, the instrumental and the reason case clitics. Adverbial case clitics occur in the position immediately before the verb and are cliticised to the preceding noun with the gender linker, or they might occur in a position after the verb, in which case they are obligatorily followed by a resumptive pronounalé.

CasesCliticExample
Directivei
Ablativewa
Instrumentalar
Reasonsa

Syntax

[edit]

Noun phrases

[edit]

The noun comes first in the noun phrase, and precedes possessors, adjectives, numerals, and relative clauses. An element called the construct case suffix appears between the noun and these modifiers, as discussed in the Morphology section above:

hhar-

stick-construct:FEM

baabú-'ee'

father-1SG.POSS

hhar- baabú-'ee'

stick-construct:FEM father-1SG.POSS

'the stick of my father'

waahlá-r

python-construct:FEM

ur

big

waahlá-r ur

python-construct:FEM big

'big python'

Sentences

[edit]

An Iraqw sentence contains a verb in final position, and an auxiliary-like element called the 'selector'. Either the subject or the object of the sentence may precede the selector,[14] and the selector agrees with the preceding noun. So in the first example below,iri shows agreement with/ameenirdá' 'that woman', and in the second example,uná shows agreement withgitladá':

/ameeni-r-dá'

woman-fem-that

i-ri

S.3-narrative:past

tsuwa

for.sure

fa/á-r

food-construct:fem

/agagiin.

eat:impf:3s

/ameeni-r-dá' i-ri tsuwa fa/á-r /agagiin.

woman-fem-that S.3-narrative:past for.sure food-construct:fem eat:impf:3s

'And that woman was surely eating.'

('aníng)

I

gitla-dá'

man-that

'u-na

obj:masc-past

aahhiit

hate:1sg

('aníng) gitla-dá' 'u-na aahhiit

I man-that obj:masc-past hate:1sg

'I hate that man.'

References

[edit]
  1. ^Iraqw atEthnologue (21st ed., 2018)Closed access icon
  2. ^Tucker, A. N.; Bryan, M. A. (September 22, 2017).The Non-Bantu Languages of North-Eastern Africa: Handbook of African Languages Part 3. Routledge.ISBN 9781351600385 – via Google Books.
  3. ^Berger, Paul Hrsg. (1998).Iraqw texts. Köppe.ISBN 3-927620-34-3.OCLC 722327455.
  4. ^Nordbustad, Frøydis.Iraqw Grammar: An Analytical Study of the Iraqw Language. Berlin: D. Reimer.ISBN 9783496009252.
  5. ^abcdMous 1993.
  6. ^Mous 1993, p. 16.
  7. ^Mous 1993, p. 19.
  8. ^Mous 1993, p. 41.
  9. ^Mous 1993, p. 44.
  10. ^Mous 1993, p. 58.
  11. ^Mous 1993, pp. 95–96.
  12. ^Mous 1993, pp. 90–92.
  13. ^Kruijt, Anne (2018-11-06)."The use of the ablative clitic in locative phrases in Iraqw, a Cushitic language of Tanzania".Journal of African Languages and Linguistics.39 (2):241–265.doi:10.1515/jall-2018-0009.ISSN 0167-6164.S2CID 149938579.
  14. ^Mous 1993, p. 110.

Bibliography

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]

External links

[edit]
Official languages
Indigenous
languages
Bantu
Northeast
Bantu
Bena–Kinga
Chaga
Great Lakes
Kikuyu–Kamba
Northeast Coast
Takama
Kilombero
Rufiji–Ruvuma
Rukwa
Other Bantu
Cushitic
Nilotic
Isolates/unclassified
Sign languages
Central
North
East
East
Highland
Sidamoid
Hadiyyaic–Kambaataic
Hadiyyaic
Kambaataic
Gedeo–Sidama
Lowland
Omo–Tana
Arboroid
Somaloid
Rendille–Boni
Somali languages/language
Digil
Others
Oromoid
Oromo
Central–East
Central
Eastern
Konsoid
Bussa–Dirasha
Dullay
Saho–Afar
Others
North
South
Rift
East
West
North
Iraqwoid
Others
Italics indicateextinct languages
Authority control databases: NationalEdit this at Wikidata
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Iraqw_language&oldid=1300039203"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp