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Zaramo language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bantu language spoken in Tanzania
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Zaramo
Kizaramo
Native toTanzania
RegionPwani Region
Ethnicity657,000Zaramo (2000)[1]
Native speakers
293,000 (2009)[1]
Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-3zaj
Glottologzara1247
G.33[2]
ELPZaramo

Zaramo is aNiger-Congo language, formerly primary language of theZaramo people of easternTanzania. Zaramo is also known as Zalamo, Kizaramo, Dzalamo, Zaramu, Saramo and, Myagatwa. The language is critically endangered. The ethnic population of the Zaramo people reaches about 200,000, yet there are only a few elderly speakers remaining.[3]

These speakers are mostly located in the villages surrounding the city of Dar es Salaam. Zaramo is thought to be passed down matrilineally to the children in these villages, while it remains critically endangered in the city.[4]

There are very few translations of the language in existence except for a few native speakers' documented translations, and the publication of the New Testament from 1975.

History

[edit]

Zaramo is the official language of a Bantu tribe located in the coastal area surrounding the former capital city of Tanzania, Dar es Salaam. Linguistic evidence supports the theory that Zaramo originated from the Luguru tribe. A migration of the Zaramo people eastward from their original location in Tanzania has been the source of slight changes in their cultural language.

The Zaramo as they are known today are made up of clans that migrated from the Kutu and the Luguru around 1700. Their common ancestry with the Luguru is substantiated, in that they have the same common language with only slight dialectal variations. The language of the Zaramo is mutually intelligible with those of the Jutu, the Luguru, the Kwere, and the Kami. Most Zaramo people of today chose to speak the lingua franca of Tanzania.[5]

While the ethnic population of the Zaramo people reaches about 200,000, today there are only a few elderly speakers of Zaramo language. Most Zaramo people speak Swahili as their first language today and have adopted Swahili-Arabic names. They favor the Swahili over their endangered dialect for its broad use in communication and trade.

Phonology

[edit]

Vowels

[edit]

Vowels are noted as /i, e, a, o, u/.

Consonants

[edit]
LabialAlveolarPalatalVelar
Plosivevoicelessptck
voicedbdɟɡ
Fricativevoicelessfs(ʃ)
voicedvz
Nasalmnɲŋ
Approximantwlj
  • [ʃ] may occur in a number of words, but it is not clear if it is phonemic.
  • /v, z/ may also be heard as [pf, dz] in some dialects.
  • Nasal sounds may also occur as aspirated [ʰ] in stressed syllable positions.[6]

Geographic Distribution

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Official Status

[edit]

Zaramo is not the official language of any country or region. Currently, the only locations where Zaramo still exists is Pwani region of eastern Tanzania. This area is located between two cities - Bagamoyo and Dar es Salaam. The rural, costal area is home to the Zaramo people who are the only ethnic group to speak the language.

Dialects Varieties

[edit]

There are no known dialects of Zaramo. It shares a lexical similarity: 68% with Kutu [kdc], 65% with Kami [kcu], 61% with Kwere [cwe] and Doe [doe].[7] This connection is substantiated by the historical relationship between the tribes.

[8]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abZaramo atEthnologue (26th ed., 2023)Closed access icon
  2. ^Jouni Filip Maho, 2009.New Updated Guthrie List Online
  3. ^"Did you know Zaramo is critically endangered?".Endangered Languages. Retrieved2017-04-07.
  4. ^"OLAC resources in and about the Zaramo language".www.language-archives.org. Retrieved2017-05-01.
  5. ^"Zaramo - Dictionary definition of Zaramo | Encyclopedia.com: FREE online dictionary".www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved2017-05-01.
  6. ^Nurse, Derek; Kizara, M. R. (1979).Zalamo. In African languages/Langues africaines 5(1). pp. 84-89+101-104.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link) CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  7. ^"Zaramo".Ethnologue. Retrieved2017-05-01.
  8. ^Steere, Edward (1859-01-01).Short Specimens of the Vocabularies of Three Unpublished African Languages: Gindo, Zaramo, and Angazidja. C. Cull.
Official languages
Indigenous
languages
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NarrowBantu languages (Zones E–H) (byGuthrie classification)
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