fbpx
Wikipedia

Bantu languages

The Bantu languages (English: UK: /ˌbænˈt/, US: /ˈbænt/ Proto-Bantu: *bantʊ̀)[1][2] are a language family of about 600 languages that are spoken by the Bantu peoples of Central, Southern, Eastern and Southeast Africa. They form the largest branch of the Southern Bantoid languages.

Bantu
Geographic
distribution
Central Africa, Southeast Africa, East Africa, Southern Africa
Linguistic classificationNiger–Congo?
Proto-languageProto-Bantu
Subdivisions
ISO 639-2 / 5bnt
Glottolognarr1281
The Bantu languages shown within the Niger–Congo language family. Non-Bantu languages are greyscale.

The total number of Bantu languages is estimated at between 440 and 680 distinct languages, depending on the definition of "language" versus "dialect".[3] Many Bantu languages borrow words from each other, and some are mutually intelligible.[4]

The total number of Bantu speakers is estimated to be around 350 million in 2015 (roughly 30% of the population of Africa or 5% of the world population).[5] Bantu languages are largely spoken southeast of Cameroon, and throughout Central, Southern, Eastern, and Southeast Africa. About one-sixth of Bantu speakers, and one-third of Bantu languages, are found in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

The most widely spoken Bantu language by number of speakers is Swahili, with 16 million native speakers and 80 million L2 speakers (2015).[6] Most native speakers of Swahili live in Tanzania, where it is a national language, while as a second language it is taught as a mandatory subject in many schools in East Africa, and is a lingua franca of the East African Community.

Other major Bantu languages include Zulu with 12 million speakers (South Africa and Zimbabwe), Xhosa with 8.2 million speakers, and Shona with less than 10 million speakers (if Manyika and Ndau are included). Zimbabwe has Kalanga, Matebele, Nambiya and Zulu speakers.[7][8] Ethnologue separates the largely mutually intelligible Kinyarwanda and Kirundi, which together have 20 million speakers.[9]

Name

The similarity among dispersed Bantu languages had been observed as early as the 17th century.[10] The term Bantu as a name for the group was coined (as Bâ-ntu) by Wilhelm Bleek in 1857 or 1858, and popularized in his Comparative Grammar of 1862.[11] He coined the term to represent the word for "people" in loosely reconstructed Proto-Bantu, from the plural noun class prefix *ba- categorizing "people", and the root *ntʊ̀- "some (entity), any" (e.g. Zulu umuntu "person", abantu "people").

There is no indigenous term for the group, as Bantu-speaking populations refer to themselves by their endonyms, but did not have a concept for the larger ethno-linguistic phylum. Bleek's coinage was inspired by the anthropological observation of groups frequently self-identifying as "people" or "the true people" (as is the case, for example, with the term Khoikhoi, but this is a kare "praise address" and not an ethnic name).[12]

The term narrow Bantu, excluding those languages classified as Bantoid by Guthrie (1948), was introduced in the 1960s.[13]

The prefix ba- specifically refers to people. Endonymically, the term for cultural objects, including language, is formed with the ki- noun class (Nguni ísi-), as in KiSwahili (Swahili language and culture), IsiZulu (Zulu language and culture) and KiGanda (Ganda religion and culture).

In the 1980s, South African linguists suggested referring to these languages as KiNtu. The word kintu exists in some places, but it means "thing", with no relation to the concept of "language".[14] In addition, delegates at the African Languages Association of Southern Africa conference in 1984 reported that, in some places, the term Kintu has a derogatory significance.[15] This is because kintu refers to "things" and is used as a dehumanizing term for people who have lost their dignity.[16]

In addition, Kintu is a figure in some mythologies.[17]

In the 1990s, the term Kintu was still occasionally used by South African linguists.[18] But in contemporary decolonial South African linguistics, the term Ntu languages is used.[18]

Origin

The Bantu languages descend from a common Proto-Bantu language, which is believed to have been spoken in what is now Cameroon in Central Africa.[19] An estimated 2,500–3,000 years ago (1000 BC to 500 BC), speakers of the Proto-Bantu language began a series of migrations eastward and southward, carrying agriculture with them. This Bantu expansion came to dominate Sub-Saharan Africa east of Cameroon, an area where Bantu peoples now constitute nearly the entire population.[19][20] Some other sources estimate the Bantu Expansion started closer to 3000 BC.[21]

The technical term Bantu, meaning "human beings" or simply "people", was first used by Wilhelm Bleek (1827–1875), as the concept is reflected in many of the languages of this group. A common characteristic of Bantu languages is that they use words such as muntu or mutu for "human being" or in simplistic terms "person", and the plural prefix for human nouns starting with mu- (class 1) in most languages is ba- (class 2), thus giving bantu for "people". Bleek, and later Carl Meinhof, pursued extensive studies comparing the grammatical structures of Bantu languages.

Classification

 
The approximate locations of the sixteen Guthrie Bantu zones, including the addition of a zone J around the Great Lakes. The Jarawan languages are spoken in Nigeria.

The most widely used classification is an alphanumeric coding system developed by Malcolm Guthrie in his 1948 classification of the Bantu languages. It is mainly geographic. The term "narrow Bantu" was coined by the Benue–Congo Working Group to distinguish Bantu as recognized by Guthrie, from the Bantoid languages not recognized as Bantu by Guthrie.[22]

In recent times,[when?] the distinctiveness of Narrow Bantu as opposed to the other Southern Bantoid languages has been called into doubt (cf. Piron 1995, Williamson & Blench 2000, Blench 2011), but the term is still widely used.

There is no true genealogical classification of the (Narrow) Bantu languages. Until recently[when?] most attempted classifications only considered languages that happen to fall within traditional Narrow Bantu, but there seems to be a continuum with the related languages of South Bantoid.[23]

At a broader level, the family is commonly split in two depending on the reflexes of proto-Bantu tone patterns: Many Bantuists group together parts of zones A through D (the extent depending on the author) as Northwest Bantu or Forest Bantu, and the remainder as Central Bantu or Savanna Bantu. The two groups have been described as having mirror-image tone systems: where Northwest Bantu has a high tone in a cognate, Central Bantu languages generally have a low tone, and vice versa.

Northwest Bantu is more divergent internally than Central Bantu, and perhaps less conservative due to contact with non-Bantu Niger–Congo languages; Central Bantu is likely the innovative line cladistically. Northwest Bantu is clearly not a coherent family, but even for Central Bantu the evidence is lexical, with little evidence that it is a historically valid group.

Another attempt at a detailed genetic classification to replace the Guthrie system is the 1999 "Tervuren" proposal of Bastin, Coupez, and Mann.[24] However, it relies on lexicostatistics, which, because of its reliance on overall similarity rather than shared innovations, may predict spurious groups of conservative languages that are not closely related. Meanwhile, Ethnologue has added languages to the Guthrie classification which Guthrie overlooked, while removing the Mbam languages (much of zone A), and shifting some languages between groups (much of zones D and E to a new zone J, for example, and part of zone L to K, and part of M to F) in an apparent effort at a semi-genetic, or at least semi-areal, classification. This has been criticized for sowing confusion in one of the few unambiguous ways to distinguish Bantu languages. Nurse & Philippson (2006) evaluate many proposals for low-level groups of Bantu languages, but the result is not a complete portrayal of the family.[22][11] Glottolog has incorporated many of these into their classification.[25]

The languages that share Dahl's law may also form a valid group, Northeast Bantu. The infobox at right lists these together with various low-level groups that are fairly uncontroversial, though they continue to be revised. The development of a rigorous genealogical classification of many branches of Niger–Congo, not just Bantu, is hampered by insufficient data.[26][13]

Computational phylogenetic classifications

Simplified phylogeny of northwestern branches of Bantu by Grollemund (2012):[27]

Bantu
Northwest
Northwest 1
Northwest 2
Central

Other computational phylogenetic analyses of Bantu include Currie et al. (2013),[28] Grollemund et al. (2015),[29] Rexova et al. 2006,[30] Holden et al., 2016,[31] and Whiteley et al. 2018.[32]

Glottolog classification

Glottolog (2021) does not consider the older geographic classification by Guthrie relevant for its ongoing classification based on more recent linguistic studies, and Divides Bantu into four main branches (Bantu A-B10-B20-B30, Central-Western Bantu, East Bantu and Mbam-Bube-Jarawan).[33]

Language structure

Guthrie reconstructed both the phonemic inventory and the vocabulary of Proto-Bantu.[3]

The most prominent grammatical characteristic of Bantu languages is the extensive use of affixes (see Sotho grammar and Ganda noun classes for detailed discussions of these affixes). Each noun belongs to a class, and each language may have several numbered classes, somewhat like grammatical gender in European languages. The class is indicated by a prefix that is part of the noun, as well as agreement markers on verb and qualificative roots connected with the noun. Plural is indicated by a change of class, with a resulting change of prefix.[18][13] All Bantu languages are agglutinative.

The verb has a number of prefixes, though in the western languages these are often treated as independent words.[34] In Swahili, for example, Mtoto mdogo amekisoma (for comparison, Kamwana kadoko karikuverenga in Shona language) means 'The small child has read it [a book]'. Mtoto 'child' governs the adjective prefix m- (representing the diminutive form of the word) and the verb subject prefix a-. Then comes perfect tense -me- and an object marker -ki- agreeing with implicit kitabu 'book' (from Arabic kitab). Pluralizing to 'children' gives Watoto wadogo wamekisoma (Vana vadoko varikuverenga in Shona), and pluralizing to 'books' (vitabu) gives watoto wadogo wamevisoma.[21]

Bantu words are typically made up of open syllables of the type CV (consonant-vowel) with most languages having syllables exclusively of this type. The Bushong language recorded by Vansina, however, has final consonants,[35] while slurring of the final syllable (though written) is reported as common among the Tonga of Malawi.[36] The morphological shape of Bantu words is typically CV, VCV, CVCV, VCVCV, etc.; that is, any combination of CV (with possibly a V- syllable at the start). In other words, a strong claim for this language family is that almost all words end in a vowel, precisely because closed syllables (CVC) are not permissible in most of the documented languages, as far as is understood.[37][23]

This tendency to avoid consonant clusters in some positions is important when words are imported from English or other non-Bantu languages. An example from Chewa: the word "school", borrowed from English, and then transformed to fit the sound patterns of this language, is sukulu. That is, sk- has been broken up by inserting an epenthetic -u-; -u has also been added at the end of the word. Another example is buledi for "bread". Similar effects are seen in loanwords for other non-African CV languages like Japanese. However, a clustering of sounds at the beginning of a syllable can be readily observed in such languages as Shona,[38] and the Makua languages.[39]

With few exceptions, such as Kiswahili and Rutooro, Bantu languages are tonal and have two to four register tones.

Reduplication

Reduplication is a common morphological phenomenon in Bantu languages and is usually used to indicate frequency or intensity of the action signalled by the (unreduplicated) verb stem.[37]

  • Example: in Swahili piga means "strike", pigapiga means "strike repeatedly".

Well-known words and names that have reduplication include:

Repetition emphasizes the repeated word in the context that it is used. For instance, "Mwenda pole hajikwai," while, "Pole pole ndio mwendo," has two to emphasize the consistency of slowness of the pace. The meaning of the former in translation is, "He who goes slowly doesn't trip," and that of the latter is, "A slow but steady pace wins the race." Haraka haraka would mean hurrying just for the sake of hurrying, reckless hurry, as in "Njoo! Haraka haraka" [come here! Hurry, hurry].

In contrast, there are some words in some of the languages in which reduplication has the opposite meaning. It usually denotes short durations, and or lower intensity of the action and also means a few repetitions or a little bit more.

  • Example 1: In Xitsonga and (Chi)Shona, famba means "walk" while famba-famba means "walk around".
  • Example 2: in isiZulu and SiSwati hamba means "go", hambahamba means "go a little bit, but not much".
  • Example 3: in both of the above languages shaya means "strike", shayashaya means "strike a few more times lightly, but not heavy strikes and not too many times".
  • Example 4: In Shona kwenya means "scratch", Kwenyakwenya means "scratch excessively or a lot".

Noun class

The following is a list of nominal classes in Bantu languages:[40]

Singular classes Plural classes Typical meaning(s)
Number Prefix Number Prefix
1 *mʊ- 2 *ba- Humans, animate
3 *mu- 4 *mi- Plants, inanimate
5 *dɪ- 6 *ma- Various; class 6 for liquids (mass nouns)
7 *ki- 8 *bɪ- Various, diminutives, manner/way/language
9 *n- 10 *n- Animals, inanimate
11 *du- Abstract nouns
12 *ka- 13 *tu- Diminutives
14 *bu- Abstract nouns
15 *ku- Infinitives
16 *pa- Locatives (proximal, exact)
17 *ku- Locatives (distal, approximate)
18 *mu- Locatives (interior)
19 *pɪ- Diminutives

Syntax

Virtually all Bantu languages have a Subject–verb–object word order with some exceptions such as the Nen language which has a Subject-Object-Verb word order.[41]

By country

Following is an incomplete list of the principal Bantu languages of each country.[42] Included are those languages that constitute at least 1% of the population and have at least 10% the number of speakers of the largest Bantu language in the country.

Most languages are referred to in English without the class prefix (Swahili, Tswana, Ndebele), but are sometimes seen with the (language-specific) prefix (Kiswahili, Setswana, Sindebele). In a few cases prefixes are used to distinguish languages with the same root in their name, such as Tshiluba and Kiluba (both Luba), Umbundu and Kimbundu (both Mbundu). The prefixless form typically does not occur in the language itself, but is the basis for other words based on the ethnicity. So, in the country of Botswana the people are the Batswana, one person is a Motswana, and the language is Setswana; and in Uganda, centred on the kingdom of Buganda, the dominant ethnicity are the Baganda (singular Muganda), whose language is Luganda.

Geographic areas

Map 1 shows Bantu languages in Africa and map 2 a magnification of the Benin, Nigeria and Cameroon area, as of July 2017.[citation needed]

 
 
Localization of the Niger–Congo languages

Bantu words popularised in western cultures

A case has been made out for borrowings of many place-names and even misremembered rhymes – chiefly from one of the Luba varieties – in the USA.[44]

Some words from various Bantu languages have been borrowed into western languages. These include:

Writing systems

Along with the Latin script and Arabic script orthographies, there are also some modern indigenous writing systems used for Bantu languages:

See also

References

  1. ^ Wells, John C. (2008). Longman Pronunciation Dictionary (3rd ed.). Longman. ISBN 978-1-4058-8118-0.
  2. ^ Jones, Daniel (2011). Roach, Peter; Setter, Jane; Esling, John (eds.). Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary (18th ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-15255-6.
  3. ^ a b "Guthrie (1967-71) names some 440 Bantu 'varieties', Grimes (2000) has 501 (minus a few 'extinct' or 'almost extinct'), Bastin et al. (1999) have 542, Maho (this volume) has some 660, and Mann et al. (1987) have c. 680." Derek Nurse, 2006, "Bantu Languages", in the Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics, p. 2. :Ethnologue report for Southern Bantoid" 2012-10-16 at the Wayback Machine lists a total of 535 languages. The count includes 13 Mbam languages, which are not always included under "Narrow Bantu".
  4. ^ McWhorter, J. 2001. The Power of Babel (pp. 81-82). New York: Freeman-Times-Henry Holt.
  5. ^ Total population cannot be established with any accuracy due to the unavailability of precise census data from Sub-Saharan Africa. A number just above 200 million was cited in the early 2000s (see Niger-Congo languages: subgroups and numbers of speakers for a 2007 compilation of data from SIL Ethnologue, citing 210 million). Population estimates for West-Central Africa were recognized as significantly too low by the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs in 2015 ( (PDF). United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. July 2016. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 June 2019. Retrieved 26 June 2017.). Population growth in Central-West Africa as of 2015 is estimated at between 2.5% and 2.8% p.a., for an annual increase of the Bantu population by about 8 to 10 million.
  6. ^ "Swahili" 2018-08-08 at the Wayback Machine, Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015): "47,000,000 in Tanzania, all users. L1 users: 15,000,000 (2012), increasing. L2 users: 32,000,000 (2015 D. Nurse). Total users in all countries: 98,310,110 (as L1: 16,010,110; as L2: 82,300,000)."
  7. ^ "Ethnologue: Zulu". Ethnologue. from the original on 2018-06-15. Retrieved 2017-03-05.
  8. ^ "Ethnologue: Shona". from the original on 2016-12-28. Retrieved 2017-03-06.
  9. ^ "Statistical Summaries". Ethnologue. from the original on 2013-02-02. Retrieved 2012-06-29.
  10. ^ R. Blench, Archaeology, Language, and the African Past (2006), p. 119. 2018-06-27 at the Wayback Machine.
  11. ^ a b Silverstein, Raymond O. (January 1968). "A note on the term 'Bantu' as first used by W. H. I. Bleek". African Studies. 27 (4): 211–212. doi:10.1080/00020186808707298.
  12. ^ R. K. Herbert and R. Bailey in Rajend Mesthrie (ed.), Language in South Africa (2002), p. 50. 2018-06-27 at the Wayback Machine.
  13. ^ a b c Studies in African Linguistics: Supplement, Issues 3–4, Department of Linguistics and the African Studies Center, University of California, Los Angeles (1969), p. 7.
  14. ^ Joshua Wantate Sempebwa, The Ontological and Normative Structure in the Social Reality of a Bantu Society: A Systematic Study of Ganda Ontology and Ethics, 1978, p. 71.
  15. ^ "Addendum". South African Journal of African Languages. 4 (Suppl 1): 120. 1 January 1984. doi:10.1080/02572117.1984.10587452.
  16. ^ Molefi Kete Asante, Ama Mazama, Encyclopedia of African Religion (2009), p. 173. 2018-06-27 at the Wayback Machine.
  17. ^ David William Cohen, The Historical Tradition of Busoga, Mukama and Kintu (1972). Joseph B. R. Gaie, Sana Mmolai, The Concept of Botho and HIV/AIDS in Botswana (2007), p. 2. 2018-06-27 at the Wayback Machine.
  18. ^ a b c as in Noverino N. Canonici, A Manual of Comparative Kintu Studies, Zulu Language and Literature, University of Natal (1994).
  19. ^ a b Philip J. Adler, Randall L. Pouwels, World Civilizations: To 1700 Volume 1 of World Civilizations, (Cengage Learning: 2007), p.169.
  20. ^ Toyin Falola, Aribidesi Adisa Usman, Movements, borders, and identities in Africa, (University Rochester Press: 2009), p.4.
  21. ^ a b Gemma Berniell-Lee et al, "Genetic and Demographic Implications of the Bantu Expansion: Insights from Human Paternal Lineages" 2011-04-16 at the Wayback Machine, Oxford Journals
  22. ^ a b Bostoen, Koen (2004). Linguistics for the use of African history and the comparative study of Bantu pottery vocabulary. OCLC 803473571.
  23. ^ a b Dalby, David (January 1976). "The Prehistorical Implications of Guthrie's Comparative Bantu. Part II: Interpretation of Cultural Vocabulary". The Journal of African History. 17 (1): 1–27. doi:10.1017/s0021853700014742. ISSN 0021-8537. S2CID 163068049.
  24. ^ The Guthrie, Tervuren, and SIL lists are compared side by side in .
  25. ^ Hammarström, Harald; Forke, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin; Bank, Sebastian, eds. (2020). "Narrow Bantu". Glottolog 4.3. from the original on 2020-11-04. Retrieved 2020-12-02.
  26. ^ Bryan, M.A.(compiled by), The Bantu Languages of Africa. Published for the International African Institute, Oxford University Press, 1959.
  27. ^ Grollemund, Rebecca. 2012. Nouvelles approches en classification : Application aux langues bantu du Nord-Ouest 2020-06-18 at the Wayback Machine. Ph.D Dissertation, Université Lumière Lyon 2, Lyon, 550 pp.
  28. ^ Currie, Thomas E., Andrew Meade, Myrtille Guillon, Ruth Mace (2013). "Cultural phylogeography of the Bantu Languages of sub-Saharan Africa". 2018-07-18 at the Wayback Machine. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 2013, Volume 280, issue 1762 doi:10.1098/rspb.2013.0695
  29. ^ Grollemund, Rebecca Simon Branford, Koen Bostoen, Andrew Meade, Chris Venditti, and Mark Pagel (2015). "Bantu expansion shows that habitat alters the route and pace of human dispersals". 2018-07-18 at the Wayback Machine. PNAS October 27, 2015. 112 (43), 13296–13301. doi:10.1073/pnas.1503793112
  30. ^ Rexová, K., Bastin, Y., Frynta, D. 2006. "Cladistic analysis of Bantu languages: a new tree based on combined lexical and grammatical data". Naturwissenschaften 93, 189–194.
  31. ^ Holden, C., Meade, A., Pagel, M. 2016. "Comparison of MP and Bayesian Bantu Trees" (Chp. 4). In: The Evolution of Cultural Diversity: a Phylogenetic Approach, Ruth Mace, Clare Holden, Stephen Shennan (eds.)(Amazon Look Inside)(in Britain 1st published by UCL Press, 2005).
  32. ^ Whiteley, P.M., Ming Xue, Wheeler, W.C. 2018. Revising the Bantu tree. Cladistics, 1-20 (amnh.org).
  33. ^ "Glottolog 4.5 - Narrow Bantu".
  34. ^ Derek Nurse, 2008. Tense and aspect in Bantu, p 70 (fn). In many of the Zone A, including Mbam, the verbs are clearly analytic.
  35. ^ Vansina, J. Esquisse de Grammaire Bushong. Commission de Linguistique Africaine, Tervuren, Belgique, 1959.
  36. ^ Turner, Rev. Wm. Y., Tumbuka–Tonga$1–$2 $3ictionEnglish Dictionary Hetherwick Press, Blantyre, Malawi 1952. pages i–ii.
  37. ^ a b Abdulaziz Lodhi, "". Africa & Asia, 2002, 2:4–26, Göteborg University
  38. ^ Doke, Clement M., A Comparative Study in Shona Phonetics University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 1931.
  39. ^ Relatório do I Seminário sobre a Padronização da Ortografia de Línguas Moçambicanas NELIMO, Universidade Eduardo Mondlane. 1989.
  40. ^ "Les classes nominales en bantu". from the original on 2017-11-01. Retrieved 2005-04-26.
  41. ^ Nurse, Derek (3 July 2008). Tense and Aspect in Bantu. ISBN 978-0-19-923929-0.
  42. ^ "According to Ethnologue". Ethnologue.org. from the original on 2012-06-16. Retrieved 2012-06-29.
  43. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k South African National Census of 2011
  44. ^ Vass, Winifred Kellersberger (1979). The Bantu Speaking Heritage of the United States. Center for Afro-American Studies, University of California. p. 73. ISBN 9780934934015. from the original on 30 March 2021. Retrieved 7 September 2014. "Here we go looby-loo; here we go looby-la (or looby-light) / Here we go looby-loo; all on a Saturday night!" Both of these Luba words, lubilu (quickly, in a hurry), and lubila (a shout) are words still in common usage in the Republic of Zaïre.

Bibliography

  • Biddulph, Joseph, Bantu Byways Pontypridd 2001. ISBN 978-1-897999-30-1.
  • Finck, Franz Nikolaus (1908). Die Verwandtschaftsverhältnisse der Bantusprachen. Vandenhoek und Ruprecht. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  • Guthrie, Malcolm. 1948. The classification of the Bantu languages. London: Oxford University Press for the International African Institute. doi:10.4324/9781315105536.
  • Guthrie, Malcolm. 1971. Comparative Bantu, Vol 2. Farnborough: Gregg International.
  • Heine, Bernd (1973). "Zur genetische Gliederung der Bantu-Sprachen". Afrika und Übersee: Sprachen, Kulturen (in German). 56 (3): 164–185..
  • Maho, Jouni F. 2001. (towards clearing up) a mess. Africa & Asia, 1:40–49.
  • Maho, Jouni F. 2002. . Göteborg University: Department of Oriental and African Languages.
  • Nurse, Derek; Philippson, Gérard (2006). The Bantu Languages. London: Routledge..
  • Piron, Pascale (1995). . Journal of West African Languages. 25 (2): 3–39. Archived from the original on 2013-01-15..
  • Stanford (2013). "Kiswahili". Retrieved 2013-06-20.(subscription required)[full citation needed]

Further reading

  • De Blois, K.F. (1970). "The augment in the Bantu languages". Africana Linguistica. 4: 85–165. doi:10.3406/aflin.1970.879..
  • KNAPPERT, JAN. “The Bantu Languages: An Appraisal”. In: European Journal of Sociology / Archives Européennes de Sociologie / Europäisches Archiv Für Soziologie, vol. 28, no. 2, 1987, pp. 177–91. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/23997575. Accessed 20 Nov. 2022.

External links

  • Arte da lingua de Angola: oeferecida [sic] a virgem Senhora N. do Rosario, mãy, Senhora dos mesmos pretos The art of the language of Angola, by Father Pedro Dias, 1697, Lisbon, artedalinguadean
  • Comparative Bantu Online Dictionary linguistics.berkeley.edu, includes comprehensive bibliography.
  • Maho, Jouni Filip goto.glocalnet.net, 4 June 2009, 120pp. Guthrie 1948 in detail, with subsequent corrections and corresponding ISO codes.
  • Bantu online resources bantu-languages.com, Jacky Maniacky, 7 July 2007, including
    • List of Bantu noun classes with reconstructed Proto-Bantu prefixes bantu-languages.com (in French)
  • pp 204–09, ucla.edu, 24 June 2012
  • Contini-Morava, Ellen. Noun Classification in Swahili. 1994, Virginia.edu
  • .linguistics.berkeley.edu 529 names
  • Introduction to the languages of South Africa salanguages.com
  • Journal of West African Languages
  • Uganda Bantu Languages ugandatravelguide.com

bantu, languages, english, proto, bantu, bantʊ, language, family, about, languages, that, spoken, bantu, peoples, central, southern, eastern, southeast, africa, they, form, largest, branch, southern, bantoid, languages, bantugeographicdistributioncentral, afri. The Bantu languages English UK ˌ b ae n ˈ t uː US ˈ b ae n t uː Proto Bantu bantʊ 1 2 are a language family of about 600 languages that are spoken by the Bantu peoples of Central Southern Eastern and Southeast Africa They form the largest branch of the Southern Bantoid languages BantuGeographicdistributionCentral Africa Southeast Africa East Africa Southern AfricaLinguistic classificationNiger Congo Atlantic CongoVolta CongoBenue CongoBantoidSouthern BantoidBantuProto languageProto BantuSubdivisionsZones A S geographic Mbam Bube Jarawan Manenguba Sawabantu Basaa Bafia Beti Makaa Njem Kele Tsogo Teke Mbede Mboshi Buja Bangi Tetela Mbole Enya Lega Binja Boan Lebonya Nyanga Buyi Northeast Bantu Tongwe Bende Mbugwe Rangi Kilombero Kongo Yaka Sira Kimbundu Chokwe Luchazi Luyana Mbukushu Pende Luban Lunda Rukwa Sabi Botatwe Nyaturu Nilamba Isanzu Nyasa Rufiji Ruvuma Umbundu Kavango Southwest Bantu Yeyi Shona Southern BantuISO 639 2 5bntGlottolognarr1281The Bantu languages shown within the Niger Congo language family Non Bantu languages are greyscale The total number of Bantu languages is estimated at between 440 and 680 distinct languages depending on the definition of language versus dialect 3 Many Bantu languages borrow words from each other and some are mutually intelligible 4 The total number of Bantu speakers is estimated to be around 350 million in 2015 roughly 30 of the population of Africa or 5 of the world population 5 Bantu languages are largely spoken southeast of Cameroon and throughout Central Southern Eastern and Southeast Africa About one sixth of Bantu speakers and one third of Bantu languages are found in the Democratic Republic of the Congo The most widely spoken Bantu language by number of speakers is Swahili with 16 million native speakers and 80 million L2 speakers 2015 6 Most native speakers of Swahili live in Tanzania where it is a national language while as a second language it is taught as a mandatory subject in many schools in East Africa and is a lingua franca of the East African Community Other major Bantu languages include Zulu with 12 million speakers South Africa and Zimbabwe Xhosa with 8 2 million speakers and Shona with less than 10 million speakers if Manyika and Ndau are included Zimbabwe has Kalanga Matebele Nambiya and Zulu speakers 7 8 Ethnologue separates the largely mutually intelligible Kinyarwanda and Kirundi which together have 20 million speakers 9 Contents 1 Name 2 Origin 3 Classification 3 1 Computational phylogenetic classifications 3 2 Glottolog classification 4 Language structure 4 1 Reduplication 4 2 Noun class 4 3 Syntax 5 By country 6 Geographic areas 7 Bantu words popularised in western cultures 8 Writing systems 9 See also 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 Further reading 13 External linksName EditFurther information Bantu peoples Name The similarity among dispersed Bantu languages had been observed as early as the 17th century 10 The term Bantu as a name for the group was coined as Ba ntu by Wilhelm Bleek in 1857 or 1858 and popularized in his Comparative Grammar of 1862 11 He coined the term to represent the word for people in loosely reconstructed Proto Bantu from the plural noun class prefix ba categorizing people and the root ntʊ some entity any e g Zulu umuntu person abantu people There is no indigenous term for the group as Bantu speaking populations refer to themselves by their endonyms but did not have a concept for the larger ethno linguistic phylum Bleek s coinage was inspired by the anthropological observation of groups frequently self identifying as people or the true people as is the case for example with the term Khoikhoi but this is a kare praise address and not an ethnic name 12 The term narrow Bantu excluding those languages classified as Bantoid by Guthrie 1948 was introduced in the 1960s 13 The prefix ba specifically refers to people Endonymically the term for cultural objects including language is formed with the ki noun class Nguni isi as in KiSwahili Swahili language and culture IsiZulu Zulu language and culture and KiGanda Ganda religion and culture In the 1980s South African linguists suggested referring to these languages as KiNtu The word kintu exists in some places but it means thing with no relation to the concept of language 14 In addition delegates at the African Languages Association of Southern Africa conference in 1984 reported that in some places the term Kintu has a derogatory significance 15 This is because kintu refers to things and is used as a dehumanizing term for people who have lost their dignity 16 In addition Kintu is a figure in some mythologies 17 In the 1990s the term Kintu was still occasionally used by South African linguists 18 But in contemporary decolonial South African linguistics the term Ntu languages is used 18 Origin EditThe Bantu languages descend from a common Proto Bantu language which is believed to have been spoken in what is now Cameroon in Central Africa 19 An estimated 2 500 3 000 years ago 1000 BC to 500 BC speakers of the Proto Bantu language began a series of migrations eastward and southward carrying agriculture with them This Bantu expansion came to dominate Sub Saharan Africa east of Cameroon an area where Bantu peoples now constitute nearly the entire population 19 20 Some other sources estimate the Bantu Expansion started closer to 3000 BC 21 The technical term Bantu meaning human beings or simply people was first used by Wilhelm Bleek 1827 1875 as the concept is reflected in many of the languages of this group A common characteristic of Bantu languages is that they use words such as muntu or mutu for human being or in simplistic terms person and the plural prefix for human nouns starting with mu class 1 in most languages is ba class 2 thus giving bantu for people Bleek and later Carl Meinhof pursued extensive studies comparing the grammatical structures of Bantu languages Classification EditMain article Guthrie classification of Bantu languages See also List of Bantu languages The approximate locations of the sixteen Guthrie Bantu zones including the addition of a zone J around the Great Lakes The Jarawan languages are spoken in Nigeria The most widely used classification is an alphanumeric coding system developed by Malcolm Guthrie in his 1948 classification of the Bantu languages It is mainly geographic The term narrow Bantu was coined by the Benue Congo Working Group to distinguish Bantu as recognized by Guthrie from the Bantoid languages not recognized as Bantu by Guthrie 22 In recent times when the distinctiveness of Narrow Bantu as opposed to the other Southern Bantoid languages has been called into doubt cf Piron 1995 Williamson amp Blench 2000 Blench 2011 but the term is still widely used There is no true genealogical classification of the Narrow Bantu languages Until recently when most attempted classifications only considered languages that happen to fall within traditional Narrow Bantu but there seems to be a continuum with the related languages of South Bantoid 23 At a broader level the family is commonly split in two depending on the reflexes of proto Bantu tone patterns Many Bantuists group together parts of zones A through D the extent depending on the author as Northwest Bantu or Forest Bantu and the remainder as Central Bantu or Savanna Bantu The two groups have been described as having mirror image tone systems where Northwest Bantu has a high tone in a cognate Central Bantu languages generally have a low tone and vice versa Northwest Bantu is more divergent internally than Central Bantu and perhaps less conservative due to contact with non Bantu Niger Congo languages Central Bantu is likely the innovative line cladistically Northwest Bantu is clearly not a coherent family but even for Central Bantu the evidence is lexical with little evidence that it is a historically valid group Another attempt at a detailed genetic classification to replace the Guthrie system is the 1999 Tervuren proposal of Bastin Coupez and Mann 24 However it relies on lexicostatistics which because of its reliance on overall similarity rather than shared innovations may predict spurious groups of conservative languages that are not closely related Meanwhile Ethnologue has added languages to the Guthrie classification which Guthrie overlooked while removing the Mbam languages much of zone A and shifting some languages between groups much of zones D and E to a new zone J for example and part of zone L to K and part of M to F in an apparent effort at a semi genetic or at least semi areal classification This has been criticized for sowing confusion in one of the few unambiguous ways to distinguish Bantu languages Nurse amp Philippson 2006 evaluate many proposals for low level groups of Bantu languages but the result is not a complete portrayal of the family 22 11 Glottolog has incorporated many of these into their classification 25 The languages that share Dahl s law may also form a valid group Northeast Bantu The infobox at right lists these together with various low level groups that are fairly uncontroversial though they continue to be revised The development of a rigorous genealogical classification of many branches of Niger Congo not just Bantu is hampered by insufficient data 26 13 Computational phylogenetic classifications Edit Simplified phylogeny of northwestern branches of Bantu by Grollemund 2012 27 Bantu Northwest Northwest 1 Northwest 1a A40 50 60 70 Basaa languages Bafia languages Mbam languages Beti languageA10 20 30 Sawabantu languages Manenguba languagesNorthwest 1b A80 90 Makaa Njem languagesB20 Kele languagesNorthwest 2 B10 Myene languageB30 Tsogo languagesCentral Central 1 Central 1a C10 20 30 Ngondi Ngiri languages Mboshi languages Bangi Ntomba languagesC40 D20 D32 Bati Angba languages Lega Binja languages Bira languageCentral 1b B80 C60 70 80 Boma Dzing languages Soko languages Tetela languages Bushoong languagesB40 H10 30 B50 60 70 Sira languages Kongo languages Yaka languages Nzebi languages Mbete languages Teke languagesL10 H40 Pende languages Hungana languageCentral 2 C50 D10 Soko languages Lengola languageD10 20 30 40 JD50 Mbole Enya languages Komo Bira languages Shi Havu languagesOther computational phylogenetic analyses of Bantu include Currie et al 2013 28 Grollemund et al 2015 29 Rexova et al 2006 30 Holden et al 2016 31 and Whiteley et al 2018 32 Glottolog classification Edit Glottolog 2021 does not consider the older geographic classification by Guthrie relevant for its ongoing classification based on more recent linguistic studies and Divides Bantu into four main branches Bantu A B10 B20 B30 Central Western Bantu East Bantu and Mbam Bube Jarawan 33 Language structure EditGuthrie reconstructed both the phonemic inventory and the vocabulary of Proto Bantu 3 The most prominent grammatical characteristic of Bantu languages is the extensive use of affixes see Sotho grammar and Ganda noun classes for detailed discussions of these affixes Each noun belongs to a class and each language may have several numbered classes somewhat like grammatical gender in European languages The class is indicated by a prefix that is part of the noun as well as agreement markers on verb and qualificative roots connected with the noun Plural is indicated by a change of class with a resulting change of prefix 18 13 All Bantu languages are agglutinative The verb has a number of prefixes though in the western languages these are often treated as independent words 34 In Swahili for example Mtoto mdogo amekisoma for comparison Kamwana kadoko karikuverenga in Shona language means The small child has read it a book Mtoto child governs the adjective prefix m representing the diminutive form of the word and the verb subject prefix a Then comes perfect tense me and an object marker ki agreeing with implicit kitabu book from Arabic kitab Pluralizing to children gives Watoto wadogo wamekisoma Vana vadoko varikuverenga in Shona and pluralizing to books vitabu gives watoto wadogo wamevisoma 21 Bantu words are typically made up of open syllables of the type CV consonant vowel with most languages having syllables exclusively of this type The Bushong language recorded by Vansina however has final consonants 35 while slurring of the final syllable though written is reported as common among the Tonga of Malawi 36 The morphological shape of Bantu words is typically CV VCV CVCV VCVCV etc that is any combination of CV with possibly a V syllable at the start In other words a strong claim for this language family is that almost all words end in a vowel precisely because closed syllables CVC are not permissible in most of the documented languages as far as is understood 37 23 This tendency to avoid consonant clusters in some positions is important when words are imported from English or other non Bantu languages An example from Chewa the word school borrowed from English and then transformed to fit the sound patterns of this language is sukulu That is sk has been broken up by inserting an epenthetic u u has also been added at the end of the word Another example is buledi for bread Similar effects are seen in loanwords for other non African CV languages like Japanese However a clustering of sounds at the beginning of a syllable can be readily observed in such languages as Shona 38 and the Makua languages 39 With few exceptions such as Kiswahili and Rutooro Bantu languages are tonal and have two to four register tones Reduplication Edit Reduplication is a common morphological phenomenon in Bantu languages and is usually used to indicate frequency or intensity of the action signalled by the unreduplicated verb stem 37 Example in Swahili piga means strike pigapiga means strike repeatedly Well known words and names that have reduplication include Bafana Bafana a football team Chipolopolo a football team Eric Djemba Djemba a footballer Lomana LuaLua a footballerRepetition emphasizes the repeated word in the context that it is used For instance Mwenda pole hajikwai while Pole pole ndio mwendo has two to emphasize the consistency of slowness of the pace The meaning of the former in translation is He who goes slowly doesn t trip and that of the latter is A slow but steady pace wins the race Haraka haraka would mean hurrying just for the sake of hurrying reckless hurry as in Njoo Haraka haraka come here Hurry hurry In contrast there are some words in some of the languages in which reduplication has the opposite meaning It usually denotes short durations and or lower intensity of the action and also means a few repetitions or a little bit more Example 1 In Xitsonga and Chi Shona famba means walk while famba famba means walk around Example 2 in isiZulu and SiSwati hamba means go hambahamba means go a little bit but not much Example 3 in both of the above languages shaya means strike shayashaya means strike a few more times lightly but not heavy strikes and not too many times Example 4 In Shona kwenya means scratch Kwenyakwenya means scratch excessively or a lot Noun class Edit The following is a list of nominal classes in Bantu languages 40 Singular classes Plural classes Typical meaning s Number Prefix Number Prefix1 mʊ 2 ba Humans animate3 mu 4 mi Plants inanimate5 dɪ 6 ma Various class 6 for liquids mass nouns 7 ki 8 bɪ Various diminutives manner way language9 n 10 n Animals inanimate11 du Abstract nouns12 ka 13 tu Diminutives14 bu Abstract nouns15 ku Infinitives16 pa Locatives proximal exact 17 ku Locatives distal approximate 18 mu Locatives interior 19 pɪ DiminutivesSyntax Edit Virtually all Bantu languages have a Subject verb object word order with some exceptions such as the Nen language which has a Subject Object Verb word order 41 By country EditFurther information List of Bantu peoples Following is an incomplete list of the principal Bantu languages of each country 42 Included are those languages that constitute at least 1 of the population and have at least 10 the number of speakers of the largest Bantu language in the country Most languages are referred to in English without the class prefix Swahili Tswana Ndebele but are sometimes seen with the language specific prefix Kiswahili Setswana Sindebele In a few cases prefixes are used to distinguish languages with the same root in their name such as Tshiluba and Kiluba both Luba Umbundu and Kimbundu both Mbundu The prefixless form typically does not occur in the language itself but is the basis for other words based on the ethnicity So in the country of Botswana the people are the Batswana one person is a Motswana and the language is Setswana and in Uganda centred on the kingdom of Buganda the dominant ethnicity are the Baganda singular Muganda whose language is Luganda Lingua franca Swahili Kiswahili 350 000 tens of millions as L2 Angola South Mbundu Umbundu 4 million Central North Mbundu Kimbundu 3 million North Bakongo Kikongo 576 800 Ovambo Ambo Oshiwambo 500 000 Luvale Chiluvale 500 000 Chokwe Chichokwe 500 000 Botswana Tswana Setswana 1 6 million Kalanga Ikalanga 150 000 Burundi Swahili is recognized national languageKirundi 8 5 10 5 million Cameroon Beti 1 7 million 900 000 Bulu 600 000 Ewondo 120 000 Fang 60 000 Eton 30 000 Bebele Basaa 230 000 Duala 350 000 Manenguba languages 230 000 Central African Republic Mbati 60 000 Aka 30 000 Pande 8 870 Ngando 5 000 Ukhwejo Kako Mpiemo Bodo KariDemocratic Republic of the Congo Swahili is recognized national languageLingala Ngala 2 million 7 million with L2 speakers Luba Kasai Tshiluba 6 5 million Kituba 4 5 million a Bantu creole Kongo Kikongo 3 5 million Luba Katanga Kiluba 1 5 million Songe Lusonge 1 million Nande Orundandi 1 million Tetela Otetela 800 000 Yaka Iyaka 700 000 Shi 700 000 Yombe Kiyombe 670 000 Lele Bashilele 26 000 Equatorial Guinea Beti Fang 300 000 Bube 40 000 Eswatini formerly Swaziland Swazi Siswati 1 million Gabon Baka Barama Bekwel Benga Bubi Bwisi Duma Fang 500 000 Kendell Kanin Sake Sangu Seki Sighu Simba Sira Northern Teke Western Teke Tsaangi Tsogo Vili 3 600 Vumbu Wandji Wumbvu Yangho YasaKenya Swahili and English are national languagesGikuyu 8 million Luhya 6 8 million Kamba 4 million Meru Kimeru 2 7 million Gusii 2 million Mijikenda Taita Embu Mbeere GiriamaLesotho Sesotho 1 8 million Zulu Isizulu 300 000 Malawi Chewa Nyanja Chichewa 7 million Tumbuka 1 million Yao 1 million Mozambique Swahili is recognized national languageMakhuwa 4 million 7 4 million all Makua Tsonga Xitsonga 3 1 million Shona Ndau 1 6 million Lomwe 1 5 million Sena 1 3 million Tswa 1 2 million Chuwabu 1 0 million Chopi 800 000 Ronga 700 000 Chewa Nyanja Chichewa 600 000 Yao Chiyao 500 000 Nyungwe Cinyungwe Nhungue 400 000 Tonga 400 000 Makonde 400 000 Nathembo 25 000 Namibia Ovambo Ambo Oshiwambo 1 500 000 Herero 200 000 Nigeria Jarawa 250 000 Mbula Bwazza 100 000 Kulung 40 000 Bile 38 000 Lame 10 000 Mama 2 000 3 000 Shiki 1 200 Gwa Labir DulbuRepublic of the Congo Congo Brazzaville Kituba 1 2 million a Bantu creole Kongo Kikongo 1 0 million Teke languages 500 000 Yombe 350 000 Suundi 120 000 Mbosi 110 000 Lingala 100 000 L2 speakers Rwanda Swahili Kinyarwanda English and French are official languagesKinyarwanda Kinyarwanda 10 12 million Somalia Swahili Mwini dialect Chimwini MushunguluSouth Africa According to the South African National Census of 2011 43 full citation needed Zulu Isizulu 11 587 374 43 Xhosa Isixhosa 8 154 258 43 Northern Sotho Sesotho sa Leboa 4 618 576 43 Tswana Setswana 4 067 248 43 Sotho Sesotho 3 849 563 43 Tsonga Xitsonga 2 277 148 43 Swazi Siswati 1 297 046 43 Venda Tshivenda 1 209 388 43 Southern Ndebele Transvaal Ndebele 1 090 223 43 Total Nguni 22 406 049 61 98 Total Sotho Tswana 13 744 775 38 02 Total official indigenous language speakers 36 150 824 69 83 43 Tanzania Swahili is the national languageSukuma 5 5 million Gogo 1 5 million Haya Kihaya 1 3 million Chaga Kichaga 1 2 million 600 000 Mochi 300 000 Machame 300 000 Vunjo Nyamwezi 1 0 million Makonde 1 0 million Ha 1 0 million Nyakyusa 800 000 Hehe 800 000 Luguru 700 000 Bena 600 000 Shambala 650 000 Nyaturu 600 000 Uganda Swahili and English are official languagesLuganda 9 295 300 Runyankore 4 436 000 Lusoga 3 904 600 Rukiga 3 129 000 Masaba Lumasaba 2 7 million Runyoro 1 273 000 Konjo 1 118 000 Rutooro 1 111 000 Lugwere 816 000 Kinyarwanda 750 000 Samia 684 000 Ruuli 250 000 Talinga Bwisi 133 000 Gungu 110 000 Amba 56 000 SingaZambia Aushi Unknown Bemba 3 3 million Tonga 1 0 million Chewa Nyanja Chichewa 800 000 Kaonde 240 000 Lozi Silozi 600 000 Lala Bisa 600 000 Nsenga 550 000 Tumbuka Chitumbuka 500 000 Lunda 450 000 Nyiha 400 000 Mambwe Lungu 400 000 Zimbabwe Shona languages 15 million incl Karanga Zezuru Korekore Ndau Manyika Northern Ndebele IsiNdebele estimated 2 million Tonga Chewa Nyanja Chichewa ChiNyanja Venda KalangaGeographic areas EditMap 1 shows Bantu languages in Africa and map 2 a magnification of the Benin Nigeria and Cameroon area as of July 2017 citation needed Localization of the Niger Congo languagesBantu words popularised in western cultures EditA case has been made out for borrowings of many place names and even misremembered rhymes chiefly from one of the Luba varieties in the USA 44 Some words from various Bantu languages have been borrowed into western languages These include This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Boma Bomba Bongos Bwana Candombe Chimpanzee Gumbo Hakuna matata Impala Indaba Jenga Jumbo Kalimba Kwanzaa Mamba Mambo Mbira Marimba Rumba Safari Samba Simba UbuntuWriting systems EditAlong with the Latin script and Arabic script orthographies there are also some modern indigenous writing systems used for Bantu languages The Mwangwego alphabet is an abugida created in 1979 that is sometimes used to write the Chewa language and other languages of Malawi The Mandombe script is an abugida that is used to write the Bantu languages of the Democratic Republic of the Congo mainly by the Kimbanguist movement The Isibheqe Sohlamvu or Ditema tsa Dinoko script is a featural syllabary used to write the siNtu or Southern Bantu languages See also EditMeeussen s rule Nguni languages Proto Bantu Swadesh listReferences Edit Wells John C 2008 Longman Pronunciation Dictionary 3rd ed Longman ISBN 978 1 4058 8118 0 Jones Daniel 2011 Roach Peter Setter Jane Esling John eds Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary 18th ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 15255 6 a b Guthrie 1967 71 names some 440 Bantu varieties Grimes 2000 has 501 minus a few extinct or almost extinct Bastin et al 1999 have 542 Maho this volume has some 660 and Mann et al 1987 have c 680 Derek Nurse 2006 Bantu Languages in the Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics p 2 Ethnologue report for Southern Bantoid Archived 2012 10 16 at the Wayback Machine lists a total of 535 languages The count includes 13 Mbam languages which are not always included under Narrow Bantu McWhorter J 2001 The Power of Babel pp 81 82 New York Freeman Times Henry Holt Total population cannot be established with any accuracy due to the unavailability of precise census data from Sub Saharan Africa A number just above 200 million was cited in the early 2000s see Niger Congo languages subgroups and numbers of speakers for a 2007 compilation of data from SIL Ethnologue citing 210 million Population estimates for West Central Africa were recognized as significantly too low by the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs in 2015 World Population Prospects The 2016 Revision Key Findings and Advance Tables PDF United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division July 2016 Archived from the original PDF on 26 June 2019 Retrieved 26 June 2017 Population growth in Central West Africa as of 2015 is estimated at between 2 5 and 2 8 p a for an annual increase of the Bantu population by about 8 to 10 million Swahili Archived 2018 08 08 at the Wayback Machine Ethnologue 18th ed 2015 47 000 000 in Tanzania all users L1 users 15 000 000 2012 increasing L2 users 32 000 000 2015 D Nurse Total users in all countries 98 310 110 as L1 16 010 110 as L2 82 300 000 Ethnologue Zulu Ethnologue Archived from the original on 2018 06 15 Retrieved 2017 03 05 Ethnologue Shona Archived from the original on 2016 12 28 Retrieved 2017 03 06 Statistical Summaries Ethnologue Archived from the original on 2013 02 02 Retrieved 2012 06 29 R Blench Archaeology Language and the African Past 2006 p 119 Archived 2018 06 27 at the Wayback Machine a b Silverstein Raymond O January 1968 A note on the term Bantu as first used by W H I Bleek African Studies 27 4 211 212 doi 10 1080 00020186808707298 R K Herbert and R Bailey in Rajend Mesthrie ed Language in South Africa 2002 p 50 Archived 2018 06 27 at the Wayback Machine a b c Studies in African Linguistics Supplement Issues 3 4 Department of Linguistics and the African Studies Center University of California Los Angeles 1969 p 7 Joshua Wantate Sempebwa The Ontological and Normative Structure in the Social Reality of a Bantu Society A Systematic Study of Ganda Ontology and Ethics 1978 p 71 Addendum South African Journal of African Languages 4 Suppl 1 120 1 January 1984 doi 10 1080 02572117 1984 10587452 Molefi Kete Asante Ama Mazama Encyclopedia of African Religion 2009 p 173 Archived 2018 06 27 at the Wayback Machine David William Cohen The Historical Tradition of Busoga Mukama and Kintu 1972 Joseph B R Gaie Sana Mmolai The Concept of Botho and HIV AIDS in Botswana 2007 p 2 Archived 2018 06 27 at the Wayback Machine a b c as in Noverino N Canonici A Manual of Comparative Kintu Studies Zulu Language and Literature University of Natal 1994 a b Philip J Adler Randall L Pouwels World Civilizations To 1700 Volume 1 of World Civilizations Cengage Learning 2007 p 169 Toyin Falola Aribidesi Adisa Usman Movements borders and identities in Africa University Rochester Press 2009 p 4 a b Gemma Berniell Lee et al Genetic and Demographic Implications of the Bantu Expansion Insights from Human Paternal Lineages Archived 2011 04 16 at the Wayback Machine Oxford Journals a b Bostoen Koen 2004 Linguistics for the use of African history and the comparative study of Bantu pottery vocabulary OCLC 803473571 a b Dalby David January 1976 The Prehistorical Implications of Guthrie s Comparative Bantu Part II Interpretation of Cultural Vocabulary The Journal of African History 17 1 1 27 doi 10 1017 s0021853700014742 ISSN 0021 8537 S2CID 163068049 The Guthrie Tervuren and SIL lists are compared side by side in Maho 2002 Hammarstrom Harald Forke Robert Haspelmath Martin Bank Sebastian eds 2020 Narrow Bantu Glottolog 4 3 Archived from the original on 2020 11 04 Retrieved 2020 12 02 Bryan M A compiled by The Bantu Languages of Africa Published for the International African Institute Oxford University Press 1959 Grollemund Rebecca 2012 Nouvelles approches en classification Application aux langues bantu du Nord Ouest Archived 2020 06 18 at the Wayback Machine Ph D Dissertation Universite Lumiere Lyon 2 Lyon 550 pp Currie Thomas E Andrew Meade Myrtille Guillon Ruth Mace 2013 Cultural phylogeography of the Bantu Languages of sub Saharan Africa Archived 2018 07 18 at the Wayback Machine Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 2013 Volume 280 issue 1762 doi 10 1098 rspb 2013 0695 Grollemund Rebecca Simon Branford Koen Bostoen Andrew Meade Chris Venditti and Mark Pagel 2015 Bantu expansion shows that habitat alters the route and pace of human dispersals Archived 2018 07 18 at the Wayback Machine PNAS October 27 2015 112 43 13296 13301 doi 10 1073 pnas 1503793112 Rexova K Bastin Y Frynta D 2006 Cladistic analysis of Bantu languages a new tree based on combined lexical and grammatical data Naturwissenschaften 93 189 194 Holden C Meade A Pagel M 2016 Comparison of MP and Bayesian Bantu Trees Chp 4 In The Evolution of Cultural Diversity a Phylogenetic Approach Ruth Mace Clare Holden Stephen Shennan eds Amazon Look Inside in Britain 1st published by UCL Press 2005 Whiteley P M Ming Xue Wheeler W C 2018 Revising the Bantu tree Cladistics 1 20 amnh org Glottolog 4 5 Narrow Bantu Derek Nurse 2008 Tense and aspect in Bantu p 70 fn In many of the Zone A including Mbam the verbs are clearly analytic Vansina J Esquisse de Grammaire Bushong Commission de Linguistique Africaine Tervuren Belgique 1959 Turner Rev Wm Y Tumbuka Tonga 1 2 3ictionEnglish Dictionary Hetherwick Press Blantyre Malawi 1952 pages i ii a b Abdulaziz Lodhi Verbal extensions in Bantu the case of Swahili and Nyamwezi Africa amp Asia 2002 2 4 26 Goteborg University Doke Clement M A Comparative Study in Shona Phonetics University of Witwatersrand Johannesburg 1931 Relatorio do I Seminario sobre a Padronizacao da Ortografia de Linguas Mocambicanas NELIMO Universidade Eduardo Mondlane 1989 Les classes nominales en bantu Archived from the original on 2017 11 01 Retrieved 2005 04 26 Nurse Derek 3 July 2008 Tense and Aspect in Bantu ISBN 978 0 19 923929 0 According to Ethnologue Ethnologue org Archived from the original on 2012 06 16 Retrieved 2012 06 29 a b c d e f g h i j k South African National Census of 2011 Vass Winifred Kellersberger 1979 The Bantu Speaking Heritage of the United States Center for Afro American Studies University of California p 73 ISBN 9780934934015 Archived from the original on 30 March 2021 Retrieved 7 September 2014 Here we go looby loo here we go looby la or looby light Here we go looby loo all on a Saturday night Both of these Luba words lubilu quickly in a hurry and lubila a shout are words still in common usage in the Republic of Zaire Bibliography EditBiddulph Joseph Bantu Byways Pontypridd 2001 ISBN 978 1 897999 30 1 Finck Franz Nikolaus 1908 Die Verwandtschaftsverhaltnisse der Bantusprachen Vandenhoek und Ruprecht Retrieved 25 August 2012 Guthrie Malcolm 1948 The classification of the Bantu languages London Oxford University Press for the International African Institute doi 10 4324 9781315105536 Guthrie Malcolm 1971 Comparative Bantu Vol 2 Farnborough Gregg International Heine Bernd 1973 Zur genetische Gliederung der Bantu Sprachen Afrika und Ubersee Sprachen Kulturen in German 56 3 164 185 Maho Jouni F 2001 The Bantu area towards clearing up a mess Africa amp Asia 1 40 49 Maho Jouni F 2002 Bantu lineup comparative overview of three Bantu classifications Goteborg University Department of Oriental and African Languages Nurse Derek Philippson Gerard 2006 The Bantu Languages London Routledge Piron Pascale 1995 Identification lexicostatistique des groupes Bantoides stables Journal of West African Languages 25 2 3 39 Archived from the original on 2013 01 15 Stanford 2013 Kiswahili Retrieved 2013 06 20 subscription required full citation needed Further reading EditDe Blois K F 1970 The augment in the Bantu languages Africana Linguistica 4 85 165 doi 10 3406 aflin 1970 879 KNAPPERT JAN The Bantu Languages An Appraisal In European Journal of Sociology Archives Europeennes de Sociologie Europaisches Archiv Fur Soziologie vol 28 no 2 1987 pp 177 91 JSTOR http www jstor org stable 23997575 Accessed 20 Nov 2022 External links EditArte da lingua de Angola oeferecida sic a virgem Senhora N do Rosario may Senhora dos mesmos pretos The art of the language of Angola by Father Pedro Dias 1697 Lisbon artedalinguadean Comparative Bantu Online Dictionary linguistics berkeley edu includes comprehensive bibliography Maho Jouni Filip NUGL Online The online version of the New Updated Guthrie List a referential classification of the Bantu languages goto glocalnet net 4 June 2009 120pp Guthrie 1948 in detail with subsequent corrections and corresponding ISO codes Bantu online resources bantu languages com Jacky Maniacky 7 July 2007 including List of Bantu noun classes with reconstructed Proto Bantu prefixes bantu languages com in French Ehret s compilation of classifications by Klieman Bastin himself and others pp 204 09 ucla edu 24 June 2012 Contini Morava Ellen Noun Classification in Swahili 1994 Virginia edu List of Bantu language names with synonyms ordered by Guthrie number linguistics berkeley edu 529 names Introduction to the languages of South Africa salanguages com Narrow Bantu Journal of West African Languages Uganda Bantu Languages ugandatravelguide com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bantu languages amp oldid 1144401919, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.