| Kwʼadza | |
|---|---|
| Ngomvia, Qwadza | |
| Native to | Tanzania |
| Region | Bahi |
| Extinct | 1980s[1] |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | wka |
wka.html | |
| Glottolog | kwad1248 |
| ELP | Kw'adza |
Kwʼadza (Qwadza), orNgomvia, is an extinctSouth Cushitic language formerly spoken inTanzania in theBahi District. The last speaker died sometime between 1976 and 1999.[1]
The Kwʼadza people lived in the 20th and late 19th centuries between theGogo andSandawe, and reported having recently migrated to the area fromUzigua. They were agriculturalists growing sorghum, maize and millet; known domestic animals werehumped cattle, donkeys, goats, sheep, doves, chickens and dogs. Theexonym "Ngomvia" originates fromUngomvia, the Gogo name of their final settlement area. From this same base are also derived in Gogo and Swahili the namesWangomvia for the people, andKingomvia for the language. Approximately 600 Kwʼadza people in 30 extended family households were reported in 1908, at which time most of them already primarily spokeGogo.[2] Two speakers were known to remain by 1974 in the town of Bankolo.[3] Three clans among the Sandawe, the Ágwatl'oo, Beetsatoo and Bisa, are also remembered as having earlier been speakers of Kwʼadza.[4]
Kwʼadza is poorly attested, and its grammar was never recorded in detail. Regardless, the marking of gender and number on nouns,[5][6][7] as well as what appear to be derivational suffixes on attested nouns[6] and verbs,[8] can be consistently connected with the other Rift languages.
While Kwʼadza is accordingly agreed to be a South Cushitic language, its classification within the group is not certain. Fleming[9] and Ehret proposed that Kwʼadza would form a subgroup withAsa, called "East Rift" by the latter. Ehret proposes a set of shared East Rift sound changes, including e.g. a merger of Proto-Riftpharyngeals *ħ and *ʕ with theglottals *h and *ʔ, respectively, and a merger of a Proto-Rift central vowel *ɨ into either *e or *o depending on the consonant environment.[10] Kruijsdijk (2024) instead argues that Kw'adza is closer to West Rift than to Asa, being the second to split off from West Rift.[11] Blažek (2019) proposes, using a glottochronological analysis, that Kw'adza was the first to split off from West Rift, though notes that some figures may not be reliable due to later influence, i.e. of Burunge on Alagwa.[12]
The known lexicon of Kwʼadza has a large stock of identifiably Rift / South Cushitic roots, as well as loanwords from other languages from the area, as also in the other Rift languages. The non-Cushitic numeralsitame 'one' andbeʼa ~ mbɛa 'two' suggest a connection withHadza, while e.g.haka 'four' (found also as Asahak andMbuguháí) suggests a connection withSandawe and theKhoe languages.[13] Ehret notes as distinctively East Rift lexicon, shared only by Kʼwadza and Asa, the following:[14]
| meaning | Kwʼadza | Asa | Kwʼadza | meaning | Asa | meaning |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 'beer' | sawako | šeba | deleʔ- | 'to make a rude sucking noise with the lips' | deʔ- dedeʔ- | 'to belch' 'to quarrel' |
| 'black' | -abesu | -biasa | faʔamo | 'buffalo' | faʔanok | 'elephant' |
| 'giraffe' | gweʔesiko | geʔesuk | nigiliko | 'baobab' | nikidok | 'large ficus species' |
| 'unripe' | tsʼetsʼem- | reše (< *detsʼe) |
The phonology is not certain, but the following has been suggested:[15]
| Labial | Alveolar | Post- alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| plain | labial | ||||||||
| Nasal | m | n | ɲ | ŋ | |||||
| Plosive | voiceless | p | t | k | kʷ | ʔ | |||
| voiced | b | d | ɡ | ɡʷ | |||||
| Affricate | dz | ||||||||
| Ejective | tsʼ | tɬʼ | tʃʼ | kʼ | kʼʷ | ||||
| Fricative | f | s | ɬ | x | xʷ | h | |||
| Approximant | w | l | j | ||||||
/ɡ/ and/l/ have the allophones[dʒ] and[ɽ] before front vowels./tʃʼ/ is 'mildly' ejective. Ehret reports that/kʼ/ and/kʼʷ/ are voiced[ɡ,ɡʷ] if a preceding consonant is voiced.
| Front | Back | |
|---|---|---|
| Close | i | u |
| Close-mid | e | o |
| Open | a | |
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