Shabo languageShabo (also called Mikeyir) is an endangered language spoken by less than 1,000 hunter-gatherers in southwestern Ethiopia, in the south-central portion of the former Illubabor province. Many of its speakers are shifting to other neighboring languages, in particular Majang and Shakicho; its vocabulary is heavily influenced by loanwords from both these languages, particularly Majang, as well as Amharic. Its classification is uncertain; it may be Nilo-Saharan (Anbessa & Unseth 1989), or may be a language isolate (Ehret 1995). It was first reported to be a separate language by Lionel Bender in 1977, using a wordlist gather by the missionary Harvey Hoekstra. It is currently (as of 2004) being studied by Daniel Aberra of Addis Ababa University.
SoundsConsonants:
Phonetically, the vowels are: a, e, i, o, u, ɪ, ə, ɛ (short and long). It is not clear which of these are phonemic. The language is tonal, but its tonology is unclear. One minimal pair is cited by Tefera & Unseth: há "kill" versus hà "meat". GrammarSyntaxBasic word order is subject-object-verb; there are postpositions rather than prepositions. Pronouns
VerbsNegation is by adding the particle be after the verb or noun negated: gumu be "(it is) not (a) stick", ʔam be-gea "he will not come" ("come not-?"). Negative forms in b are widespread in Nilo-Saharan and Afro-Asiatic languages. There appears to be a causative suffix -ka: mawo hoop, "water boiled" > upa mawo hoop-ka "(a) man boiled water". A particle git (infinitive? subjunctive?) marks the verb in constructions with "want": moopa git inɗeet ("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 inɗage t'a-g "he will eat") and a 2nd person plural suffix -ɗe (eg subuk maakɛle kak t'a-ɗe "You (pl.) ate corn", "you-pl. corn past? eat-2nd-pl.") NounsThe plural system is unclear. Three plural forms given by one person were:
However, another speaker did not form separate plurals at all, or added them by uniformly adding the word yɛɛro afterwards. There is a suffix -k which seems to sometimes mark the direct object, eg upa kaan-ik ye "a man saw a dog" ("man dog saw"). A similar suffix is found in many Eastern Sudanic languages. PostpositionsShabo uses postpositions after nouns, eg: upa mana pond ɗɛpik moi "a man sat on a rock" (lit. "man rock on ? sat"). NumbersThe number system, as given by Tefera and Unseth, is as follows:
and 20 is iŋk upa kor ("one person complete"). Sample sentencesmawo 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 ?") dɛrbakan kaal nu ɗe-be: Derbakan does not have a dog (lit. "Derbakan dog poss.? ?-not") dɛrbakan kaal nu yaaŋk: Derbakan has a dog (lit. "Derbakan dog poss.? positive?") ʔam be-gea: he will not come (lit. "come not-?") inɗigi am-k: he will come (lit. "? come ?") tin-ta be-ge: he will not eat (lit. "? eat not ?") inɗage 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 dɛpik ye: a woman saw a man (lit. "woman man tense? saw") gom c'uwa t'a: fire burned wood (lit. "fire wood ate") cu ɗɛpik ibalabiyan-an ɗe (word divisions uncertain): you (pl.) came (lit. "you(pl.) ? ? come-2pl.") subuk maakɛle kak t'a-ɗe: you (pl.) ate corn (lit. "you(pl.) corn aux? eat-2pl.") wo ka git inɗeet: I want to drink (lit. "drink ? infin.? want") moopa git inɗeet: I want to sit (lit. "sit ? infin.? want") abiyaŋge: they came upa kakaak jaal kaki ye ʔam: I saw the man who came yesterday (lit. "man came yesterday ? saw ?") upa mana pond ɗɛpik moi: a man sat on a rock (lit. "man rock on aux.? sat") LexiconMain article: Shabo lexicon. Bibliography
External links
Categories: Nilo-Saharan languages | Languages of Africa |
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