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Shabo language

 

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Shabo language



 
 
see Shabo (Odessa Oblast)
Shabo (Odessa Oblast)

Shabo is a town of the Odessa Oblast, Ukraine, situated at the Dniester Liman, some 7 km downstream of Bilhorod-DnistrovskyiThe Tatar village was established ca....
 for the Ukrainian settlement.


Shabo (also called Mikeyir) is an endangered language
Endangered language

An endangered language is a language that is at risk of falling out of use, generally because it has few surviving speakers. If it loses all of its native speakers, it becomes an extinct language....
 spoken by about 600 hunter-gatherers in southwestern Ethiopia
Ethiopia

Ethiopia , officially the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia, is a landlocked country situated in the Horn of Africa. Ethiopia is bordered by Eritrea to the north, Sudan to the west, Kenya to the south, Somalia to the east and Djibouti to the northeast....
, in the westernmost part of the Southern Nations, Nationalities, and People's Region
Southern Nations, Nationalities, and People's Region

Southern Nations, Nationalities, and People's Region is one of the nine Regions of Ethiopia of Ethiopia. It comprises the former Regions 7-11....
. They live in three places in the Keficho Shekicho Zone
Keficho Shekicho Zone

'Keficho Shekicho' is a Zone in the Ethiopian Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples Region . While in their latest population estimates the Central Statistical Agency includes it as a single Zone, the list of second administrative level bodies maintained by the United Nations Geographic Information Working Group divides it into two: ...
: Anderaccha
Anderaccha

Anderaccha is a town in southwestern Ethiopia. Located in the Keficho Shekicho Zone of the Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples Region, this town has a latitude and longitude of with an elevation of 1629 meters above sea level....
, Gecch'a, and Kaabo. Many of its speakers are shifting to other neighboring languages, in particular Majang language
Majang language

The Majang language is spoken by the Majangir people of Ethiopia. Although it is a member of the Surmic cluster, this language is the most isolated one in that cluster ....
 and Shakicho (Mocha); its vocabulary is heavily influenced by loanword
Loanword

A loanword is a word directly taken into one language from another with little or no translation. By contrast, a calque or loan translation is a related concept whereby it is the Meaning or idiom that is borrowed rather than the lexical item itself....
s from both these languages, particularly Majangir, as well as Amharic
Amharic language

Amharic is a Semitic languages spoken in North Central Ethiopia by the Amhara people. It is the second most spoken Semitic language in the world, after Arabic language, and the official working language of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia....
.






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Encyclopedia


see Shabo (Odessa Oblast)
Shabo (Odessa Oblast)

Shabo is a town of the Odessa Oblast, Ukraine, situated at the Dniester Liman, some 7 km downstream of Bilhorod-DnistrovskyiThe Tatar village was established ca....
 for the Ukrainian settlement.


Shabo (also called Mikeyir) is an endangered language
Endangered language

An endangered language is a language that is at risk of falling out of use, generally because it has few surviving speakers. If it loses all of its native speakers, it becomes an extinct language....
 spoken by about 600 hunter-gatherers in southwestern Ethiopia
Ethiopia

Ethiopia , officially the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia, is a landlocked country situated in the Horn of Africa. Ethiopia is bordered by Eritrea to the north, Sudan to the west, Kenya to the south, Somalia to the east and Djibouti to the northeast....
, in the westernmost part of the Southern Nations, Nationalities, and People's Region
Southern Nations, Nationalities, and People's Region

Southern Nations, Nationalities, and People's Region is one of the nine Regions of Ethiopia of Ethiopia. It comprises the former Regions 7-11....
. They live in three places in the Keficho Shekicho Zone
Keficho Shekicho Zone

'Keficho Shekicho' is a Zone in the Ethiopian Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples Region . While in their latest population estimates the Central Statistical Agency includes it as a single Zone, the list of second administrative level bodies maintained by the United Nations Geographic Information Working Group divides it into two: ...
: Anderaccha
Anderaccha

Anderaccha is a town in southwestern Ethiopia. Located in the Keficho Shekicho Zone of the Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples Region, this town has a latitude and longitude of with an elevation of 1629 meters above sea level....
, Gecch'a, and Kaabo. Many of its speakers are shifting to other neighboring languages, in particular Majang language
Majang language

The Majang language is spoken by the Majangir people of Ethiopia. Although it is a member of the Surmic cluster, this language is the most isolated one in that cluster ....
 and Shakicho (Mocha); its vocabulary is heavily influenced by loanword
Loanword

A loanword is a word directly taken into one language from another with little or no translation. By contrast, a calque or loan translation is a related concept whereby it is the Meaning or idiom that is borrowed rather than the lexical item itself....
s from both these languages, particularly Majangir, as well as Amharic
Amharic language

Amharic is a Semitic languages spoken in North Central Ethiopia by the Amhara people. It is the second most spoken Semitic language in the world, after Arabic language, and the official working language of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia....
. Its classification is uncertain; it may be Nilo-Saharan
Nilo-Saharan languages

The Nilo-Saharan languages are a hypothetical group of African languages spoken mainly in the upper parts of the Chari River and Nile rivers , including historic Nubia, north of where the two tributaries of Nile meet....
 (Anbessa & Unseth 1989, Fleming 1991), or may be a language isolate
Language isolate

A language isolate, in the absolute sense, is a natural language with no demonstrable genealogical relationship with other living languages; that is, one that has not been demonstrated to descend from an ancestor common to any other language....
 (Ehret
Christopher Ehret

Christopher Ehret , a professor of African History at UCLA since 1968, is a major figure in African history and African historical linguistics, particularly known for his efforts to correlate linguistic taxonomy and reconstruction with the archaeological record....
 1995). It was first reported to be a separate language by Lionel Bender
Lionel Bender

Lionel Bender may refer to:*Lionel Bender , American author and co-author of several books, publications and essays regarding African languages...
 in 1977, using a wordlist gathered by the missionary Harvey Hoekstra. It is currently being studied by Daniel Aberra of Addis Ababa University
Addis Ababa University

Addis Ababa University is a university in Ethiopia. It was originally named "University College of Addis Ababa" at its founding, then renamed for the former Ethiopian emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia in 1962, receiving its current name in 1975....
.

Classification


Once the many loanword
Loanword

A loanword is a word directly taken into one language from another with little or no translation. By contrast, a calque or loan translation is a related concept whereby it is the Meaning or idiom that is borrowed rather than the lexical item itself....
s from its immediate neighbors, Majang and Shakicho, are removed, the wordlists collected show a significant number of Koman words side by side with a larger number of words with no obvious external relationships. The tentative grammar so far collected offers few obviously convincing external similarities. On this basis, Fleming (1991) has classified Shabo as Nilo-Saharan and, within Nilo-Saharan, as nearest to Koman, while Ehret (1995) has argued that neither Nilo-Saharan nor Afro-Asiatic present any convincing similarities, seeing the Koman words as early loans and saying that "once the evidence of these influences is identified and separated out, there is little else to suggest that Shabo might belong to the Nilo-Saharan family." He thus regards it as an African
African languages

There are an estimated 2,000 languages spoken in Africa. They fall into four major language family:*Afro-Asiatic languages stretches from North Africa to the Horn of Africa and Southwest Asia....
 isolate. Anbessa & Unseth consider it Nilo-Saharan, but present little by way of argument for their position, and no detail on its position within the family.

Sounds


The consonants are:

Bilabial
Bilabial consonant

In phonetics, a bilabial consonant is a consonant articulated with both lips. The bilabial consonants identified by the International Phonetic Alphabet are:...
Alveolar
Alveolar consonant

Alveolar consonants are articulated with the tongue against or close to the superior alveolar ridge, which is called that because it contains the Dental alveolus of the superior teeth....
Palatal
Palatal consonant

Palatal consonants are consonants articulated with the body of the tongue raised against the hard palate . Consonants with the tip of the tongue curled back against the palate are called retroflex consonant....
Velar
Velar consonant

Velars are consonants articulated with the back part of the tongue against the soft palate, the back part of the roof of the mouth, known also as the Soft palate)....
Glottal
Glottal consonant

Glottal consonants are consonants articulated with the glottis. Many phoneticians consider them, or at least the so-called fricatives, to be transitional states of the glottis without a point of articulation as other consonants have; in fact, some do not consider them to be consonants at all....
Plosives
Implosives  
Ejectives 
Fricatives 
Approximants  
Nasals
Nasal consonant

A nasal consonant is produced with a lowered soft palate in the mouth, allowing air to escape freely through the nose. The oral cavity still acts as a resonance chamber for the sound, but the air does not escape through the mouth as it is blocked by the tongue....
 
Trill
Trill

Trill is a type of vibration; it may refer to:* trill , a type of musical ornament* trill consonant, a type of sound used in some languages* Trill, a sound similar to the musical ornament made by animals including the Maine Coon cat and numerous varieties of bird...
s
    


Consonants in parenthesis are not entirely phonemic, according to Teferra (1995): and are in free variation
Free variation

Free variation in linguistics is the phenomenon of two sounds or forms appearing in the same environment without a change in meaning and without being considered incorrect by native speakers....
and , and sometimes also , are in free variation, as in Majang; Teferra speculatively links this to the traditional practice of removing the lower incisor
Incisor

Incisors are the first kind of tooth in heterodont mammals. They are located in the premaxilla above and mandible below....
s of men. and occasionally alternate.

Implosive consonants are common in languages of the area, but ejective consonants are not found in Majang.

Consonant length is found in several words, such as walla "goat", kutti "knee"; however, it is often unstable.

Teferra tentatively postulates 9 vowels: , possibly with further distinctions based on advanced tongue root
Advanced tongue root

In phonetics, advanced tongue root and retracted tongue root, abbreviated ?ATR, are contrasting states of the root of the tongue during the pronunciation of vowels in some languages, especially in West Africa....
. Five of these - - have long counterparts. Occasionally final vowels are deleted, shortening medial vowels: eg deego or deg "crocodile".

The syllable structure is (C)V(C); all consonants except and can occur syllable-finally.

The language is tonal, but its tonology is unclear. Two minimal pair
Minimal pair

In phonology, minimal pairs are pairs of words or phrases in a particular language, which differ in only one phonological element, such as a Phone , phoneme, toneme or chroneme and have a distinct meaning....
s are cited by Teferra 1995, including "kill" versus "meat".

Grammar


Syntax


Basic word order is subject-object-verb; there are postpositions rather than prepositions.

Pronouns


English Ehret Tefera & Unseth Hoekstra
I ti? (m.), 'ta?a (f.) ti? ti?(ka)
you (sg.) kuku (m.), kungu (f.) kuku ?a?(ka)
he yi (m.) ?a ?a(uf?)
we yi? (m.), ann (f.) yi? yii?a
you (pl.) sitalak (m.), siyakk (f.), suba (both) ?u(b?k) 
they kuka 


The pronouns "I" and "he" have been compared to Surmic languages
Surmic languages

Surmic Languages are a subgroup of the Nilo-Saharan languages.*North *South**Southeast **Southwest The Surmic group of languages is part of the Nilo-Saharan language family, found in southwest Ethiopia and adjoining parts of southeast Sudan....
; however, there are also resemblances in the pronouns with the Omotic
Omotic languages

The Omotic languages are a branch of the Afro-Asiatic family spoken in southwestern Ethiopia. The Ge'ez alphabet is used to write some Omotic languages, the Roman alphabet for some others....
 Gunza language (Bender 1983.) The gender distinctions made are unusual for Africa.

Verbs


Negation
Negation

In logic and mathematics, negation or not is an operation on logical values, for example, the logical value of a proposition, that sends true to false and false to true....
 is by adding the particle be after the verb or noun negated: gumu be "(it is) not (a) stick", ?am be-gea "he will not come" ("come not-?"). Negative forms in b are widespread in Nilo-Saharan
Nilo-Saharan languages

The Nilo-Saharan languages are a hypothetical group of African languages spoken mainly in the upper parts of the Chari River and Nile rivers , including historic Nubia, north of where the two tributaries of Nile meet....
 and Afro-Asiatic languages
Afro-Asiatic languages

The Afro-Asiatic languages constitute a language family with about 375 living languages and more than 300 million speakers spread throughout North Africa, the Horn of Africa, and Southwest Asia ....
.

There appears to be a causative
Causative

A causative form, in linguistics, is an expression of an agent causing or forcing a patient to perform an action .All languages have ways to express causation, but they differ in the means....
 suffix
-ka: mawo hoop, "water boiled" > upa mawo hoop-ka "(a) man boiled water".

A particle
git (infinitive
Infinitive

In grammar, infinitive is the name for certain verb forms that exist in many languages. In the usual description of English language, the infinitive of a verb is its basic form with or without the grammatical particle to: therefore, do and to do, be and to be, and so on are infinitives....
? subjunctive?) marks the verb in constructions with "want":
moopa git in?eet ("sit git want") "I want to sit".

Much of the verbal morphology is uncertain; there appears to be a 3rd person singular future suffix
-g- (eg in?age t'a-g "he will eat") and a 2nd person plural suffix -?e (eg subuk maak?le kak t'a-?e "You (pl.) ate corn", "you-pl. corn past? eat-2nd-pl.")

Ehret (1995) mentions the following tense-aspect suffixes:
  • -gg imperfect
  • -e perfect
    Perfect aspect

    The perfect aspect is variously considered either an grammatical aspect or grammatical tense which calls a listener's attention to the consequences generated by an action, rather than the action itself....
  • -kkus present perfect
  • no affix: imperative
    Imperative

    Imperative can mean:*Imperative mood, a grammatical mood expressing commands, direct requests, and prohibitions*Imperative programming, a programming paradigm in computer science...


Nouns


The plural system is unclear. Three plural forms given by one person were:

  • "house" ?oku > "houses" ?okuk
  • "dog" kaal/kaan > "dogs" kaalu/kaanu
  • "leg" bicca > "legs" biccaka


However, another speaker did not form separate plurals at all, or added them by uniformly adding the word
y??ro afterwards.

There is a suffix
-k which seems to sometimes mark the direct object, e.g. upa kaan-ik ye "a man saw a dog" ("man dog saw"). A similar suffix is found in many Eastern Sudanic languages
Eastern Sudanic languages

The Eastern Sudanic languages form a family of languages spoken from Northern Sudan to northern Tanzania, usually considered a subfamily of Nilo-Saharan languages, following Joseph Greenberg....
.

Case markings mentioned by Ehret (1995) include:
  • -ti ablative
  • -uk, -ik instrumental
    Instrumental

    An instrumental is a musical composition or recording without lyrics or any other sort of vocal music; all of the music is produced by musical instruments....
  • -ke, -e genitive
  • -kak, -gak accusative
    Accusative case

    The accusative case of a noun is the grammatical case used to mark the direct object of a transitive verb. The same case is used in many languages for the objects of prepositions....


Postpositions


Shabo uses postpositions after nouns, eg:
upa mana pond ??pik moi "a man sat on a rock" (lit. "man rock on ? sat").

Numbers


The number system, as given by Tefera and Unseth, is as follows, with Majang equivalents to show how much is borrowed:

  1. i?ki (Majang om-o?)
  2. bap (p??y)
  3. jiita (jiit)
  4. a?an (a?an)
  5. tuul (tuul)
  6. tulu(?/m) (tuul a om)
  7. tulikaki?ki (possibly error for 6?) (tuul a p??y)
  8. tunajiita (tuul a jiit)
  9. tulaa?an (tuul a a?an)
  10. bapif (bap if = "two hands") (aarn = 'two hands')
  11. mabafifi?ki (aarn a om)


and 20 is
i?k upa kor ("one person complete") cf. Majang rumer i?it 'one person complete'.

Sample sentences


mawo hoop: water boiled
upa mawo hoop-ka: A man boiled water (lit. "man water boiled-caus.")
gumu be: it is not a stick (lit. "stick not".)
ma gumu: it is a stick (lit. "stick ?")
d?rbakan kaal nu ?e-be: Derbakan does not have a dog (lit. "Derbakan dog poss.? ?:not")
d?rbakan kaal nu yaa?k: Derbakan has a dog (lit. "Derbakan dog poss.? positive?")
?am be-gea: he will not come (lit. "come not-?")
in?igi am-k: he will come (lit. "? come ?")
tin-ta be-ge: he will not eat (lit. "? eat not ?")
in?age t'a-g: he will eat (lit. "? eat ?")
paar bap: two snakes (lit. "snake two")
upa kaan-ik ye: a man saw a dog (lit. "man dog-obj. saw")
kaan upa-k ye: a dog saw a man (lit. "dog man-obj. saw")
koto upa d?pik ye: a woman saw a man (lit. "woman man tense? saw")
gom c'uwa t'a: fire burned wood (lit. "fire wood ate")
cu ??pik ibalabiyan-an ?e (word divisions uncertain): you (pl.) came (lit. "you(pl.) ?:? come-2pl.")
subuk maak?le kak t'a-?e: you (pl.) ate corn (lit. "you(pl.) corn aux? eat-2pl.")
wo ka git in?eet: I want to drink (lit. "drink ? infin.? want")
moopa git in?eet: I want to sit (lit. "sit ? infin.? want")
abiya?ge: they came
upa kakaak jaal kaki ye ?am: I saw the man who came yesterday (lit. "man came yesterday ? saw ?")
upa mana pond ??pik moi: a man sat on a rock (lit. "man rock on aux.? sat")


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