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Bilen language

The Bilen language (ብሊና b(ɨ)lina or ብሊን b(ɨ)lin) is spoken by the Bilen people in and around the city of Keren in Eritrea . It is the only Agaw (Central Cushitic) language spoken in Eritrea. It is spoken by about 120,000 people.

Bilen
ብሊና, ብሊን
Regioncentral Eritrea
EthnicityBilen people
Native speakers
91,000 (2006)[1]
Geʽez script
Language codes
ISO 639-2byn
ISO 639-3byn
Glottologbili1260
ELPBilen
Linguistic map of Eritrea; Bilen is spoken in the dark blue region
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Spelling of the name

"Blin" is the English spelling preferred by native speakers,[citation needed] but Bilin and Bilen are also commonly used. Bilin is the reference name arbitrarily used in the current initial English editions of ISO 639-3, but Blin is also listed as an equivalent name without preference. In the English list of ISO 639-2, Blin is listed in first position in both English and French lists, when Bilin is listed as an alternate name in the English list, and Bilen is the alternate name in the French list. The Ethnologue report lists Bilen as the preferred name, but also Bogo, Bogos, Bilayn, Bilin, Balen, Beleni, Belen, Bilein, Bileno, North Agaw as alternative names.

Phonology

It is not clear if Bilen has tone. It may have pitch accent (Fallon 2004) as prominent syllables always have a high tone, but not all words have such a syllable.

Vowels

Vowel phonemes
Front Central Back
High i ɨ u
Mid e ə o
Low a

Consonants

Note: /tʃ/ is found in loans, and the status of /ʔ/ as a phoneme is uncertain.

/r/ is typically realised as a tap when it is medial and a trill when it is in final position.

Fallon (2001, 2004) notes intervocalic lenition, such as /b/[β]; syncope, as in the name of the language, /bɨlín/[blín]; debuccalization with secondary articulation preserved, as in /dérekʷʼa/[dɛ́rɛʔʷa] 'mud for bricks'. Intriguingly, the ejectives have voiced allophones, which according to Fallon (2004) "provides an important empirical precedent" for one of the more criticized aspects of the glottalic theory of Indo-European. For example,

Ejective consonant Voiced allophone Gloss
/laħátʃʼɨna/ [laħádʒɨna] 'to bark'
/kʼaratʃʼna/ [kʼaradʒna] 'to cut'
/kʷʼakʷʼito/ [ɡʷaʔʷito] 'he was afraid'

Writing system

Ge'ez abugida

A writing system for Bilen was first developed by missionaries who used the Ge'ez abugida and the first text was published in 1882. Although the Ge'ez script is usually used for Semitic languages, the phonemes of Bilen are very similar (7 vowels, labiovelar and ejective consonants). The script therefore requires only a slight modification (the addition of consonants for ŋ and ŋʷ) to make it suitable for Bilen. Some of the additional symbols required to write Bilen with this script are in the "Ethiopic Extended" Unicode range rather than the "Ethiopic" range.

Blin Ethiopic Characters
IPA e u i a ie ɨ/- o ʷe ʷi ʷa ʷie ʷɨ/-
h  
l  
ħ  
m  
s  
ʃ  
r  
ʁ
b  
t  
n  
ʔ  
k
x
w  
ʕ  
j  
d  
 
ɡ
ŋ
 
tʃʼ  
f  
z  
ʒ  
 
ɲ  
 
 
p  
v  
IPA e u i a ie ɨ/- o ʷe ʷi ʷa ʷie ʷɨ/-

Latin alphabet

In 1985 the Eritrean People's Liberation Front decided to use the Latin script for Bilen and all other non-Semitic languages in Eritrea. This was largely a political decision: the Ge'ez script is associated with Christianity because of its liturgical use. The Latin alphabet is seen as being more neutral and secular. In 1993 the government set up a committee to standardize the Bilen language and the Latin-based orthography. "This overturned a 110-year tradition of writing Blin in Ethiopic script." (Fallon, Bilen Orthography [2])

As of 1997, the alphabetic order was:

e, u, i, a, é, o, b, c, d, f, g, h, j, k, l, m, n, p, q, r, s, t, v, w, x, y, z, ñ, ñw, th, ch, sh, kh, kw, hw, qw, gw.

Also khw.

Their values are similar to the IPA apart from the following:

Letter Value
é ɨ
c ʕ
j
q
x ħ
y j
ñ ŋ
th
ch tʃʼ
sh ʃ
kh x

See also

References

  1. ^ Bilen at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. ^ Paul D. Fallon (18 September 2006). "Blin Orthography: A History and an Assessment" (PDF). Retrieved 1 June 2014.
  • Consonant Mutation and Reduplication in Blin Singulars and Plurals
  • Language, Education, and Public Policy in Eritrea
  • Daniels, Peter T.; Bright, William, eds. (1996). "Ethiopic Writing". The World's Writing Systems. Oxford University Press, Inc. p. 573. ISBN 978-0-19-507993-7.
  • "Some Standardization of Blin Writing" (PDF). Retrieved 20 February 2012.
  • "Principles and Specification for Mnemonic Ethiopic Keyboards" (PDF). Retrieved 20 February 2012.

External links

    Further reading

    • David L. Appleyard. 2007. "Bilin Morphology". In Alan S. Kaye (ed.), Morphologies of Asia and Africa. Winona Lake, Indiana: Eisenbrauns (pp. 481–504).
    • Paul Fallon. 2001. "Some phonological processes in Bilin". In Simpso (ed.), Proceedings of the 27th annual meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society.
    • Paul Fallon. 2004. "The best is not good enough". In Akinlabi & Adesola (eds), Proceedings: 4th World Congress of African Linguistics
    • F.R. Palmer. 1957. "The Verb in Bilin," Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 19:131-159.
    • F.R. Palmer. 1958. "The Noun in Bilin," Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 21:376-391.
    • F.R. Palmer. 1965. "Bilin 'to be' and 'to have'." African Language Studies 6:101-111.
    • Leo Reinisch. 1882. Die Bilin-Sprache in Nordost-Afrika. Sitzungsberichte der phil.-hist. Classe der kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften, vol. 99; Vienna: Carl Gerold's Sohn.
    • Leo Reinisch. 1883. Texte der Bilin Sprache. Leipzig: Grieben.
    • Leo Reinisch. 1884. Wörterbuch der Bilin-Sprache. Vienna: Alfred Hölder.
    • A.N. Tucker & M.A. Bryan. 1966. Linguistic Analyses: The Non-Bantu Languages of North-Eastern Africa. London: Oxford University Press.

    bilen, language, ብሊና, lina, ብሊን, spoken, bilen, people, around, city, keren, eritrea, only, agaw, central, cushitic, language, spoken, eritrea, spoken, about, people, bilenብሊና, ብሊንregioncentral, eritreaethnicitybilen, peoplenative, speakers91, 2006, language, . The Bilen language ብሊና b ɨ lina or ብሊን b ɨ lin is spoken by the Bilen people in and around the city of Keren in Eritrea It is the only Agaw Central Cushitic language spoken in Eritrea It is spoken by about 120 000 people Bilenብሊና ብሊንRegioncentral EritreaEthnicityBilen peopleNative speakers91 000 2006 1 Language familyAfro Asiatic CushiticAgawNorthernBilenWriting systemGeʽez scriptLanguage codesISO 639 2 span class plainlinks byn span ISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code byn class extiw title iso639 3 byn byn a Glottologbili1260ELPBilenLinguistic map of Eritrea Bilen is spoken in the dark blue regionThis article contains IPA phonetic symbols Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Unicode characters For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA This article contains Ethiopic text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Ethiopic characters Contents 1 Spelling of the name 2 Phonology 2 1 Vowels 2 2 Consonants 3 Writing system 3 1 Ge ez abugida 3 2 Latin alphabet 4 See also 5 References 6 External links 7 Further readingSpelling of the name Edit Blin is the English spelling preferred by native speakers citation needed but Bilin and Bilen are also commonly used Bilin is the reference name arbitrarily used in the current initial English editions of ISO 639 3 but Blin is also listed as an equivalent name without preference In the English list of ISO 639 2 Blin is listed in first position in both English and French lists when Bilin is listed as an alternate name in the English list and Bilen is the alternate name in the French list The Ethnologue report lists Bilen as the preferred name but also Bogo Bogos Bilayn Bilin Balen Beleni Belen Bilein Bileno North Agaw as alternative names Phonology EditIt is not clear if Bilen has tone It may have pitch accent Fallon 2004 as prominent syllables always have a high tone but not all words have such a syllable Vowels Edit Vowel phonemes Front Central BackHigh i ɨ uMid e e oLow aConsonants Edit Note tʃ is found in loans and the status of ʔ as a phoneme is uncertain r is typically realised as a tap when it is medial and a trill when it is in final position Consonant phonemes Labial Alveolar Palato alveolar Velar Pharyn geal Glottalplain labializedPlosive Affricate voiceless t tʃ k kʷ ʔ voiced b d dʒ ɡ ɡʷejective tʼ tʃʼ kʼ kʷʼNasal m n ŋ ŋʷFricative voiceless f s ʃ x xʷ ħ hvoiced z ʕRhotic rApproximant l j wFallon 2001 2004 notes intervocalic lenition such as b b syncope as in the name of the language bɨlin blin debuccalization with secondary articulation preserved as in derekʷʼa dɛ rɛʔʷa mud for bricks Intriguingly the ejectives have voiced allophones which according to Fallon 2004 provides an important empirical precedent for one of the more criticized aspects of the glottalic theory of Indo European For example Ejective consonant Voiced allophone Gloss laħatʃʼɨna laħadʒɨna to bark kʼaratʃʼna kʼaradʒna to cut kʷʼakʷʼito ɡʷaʔʷito he was afraid Writing system EditGe ez abugida Edit See also Geʽez script Adaptations to other languages A writing system for Bilen was first developed by missionaries who used the Ge ez abugida and the first text was published in 1882 Although the Ge ez script is usually used for Semitic languages the phonemes of Bilen are very similar 7 vowels labiovelar and ejective consonants The script therefore requires only a slight modification the addition of consonants for ŋ and ŋʷ to make it suitable for Bilen Some of the additional symbols required to write Bilen with this script are in the Ethiopic Extended Unicode range rather than the Ethiopic range Blin Ethiopic Characters IPA e u i a ie ɨ o ʷe ʷi ʷa ʷie ʷɨ h ሀ ሁ ሂ ሃ ሄ ህ ሆ l ለ ሉ ሊ ላ ሌ ል ሎ ħ ሐ ሑ ሒ ሓ ሔ ሕ ሖ m መ ሙ ሚ ማ ሜ ም ሞ s ሰ ሱ ሲ ሳ ሴ ስ ሶ ʃ ሸ ሹ ሺ ሻ ሼ ሽ ሾ r ረ ሩ ሪ ራ ሬ ር ሮ kʼ ቀ ቁ ቂ ቃ ቄ ቅ ቆ ቈ ቊ ቋ ቌ ቍʁ ቐ ቑ ቒ ቓ ቔ ቕ ቖ ቘ ቚ ቛ ቜ ቝb በ ቡ ቢ ባ ቤ ብ ቦ t ተ ቱ ቲ ታ ቴ ት ቶ n ነ ኑ ኒ ና ኔ ን ኖ ʔ አ ኡ ኢ ኣ ኤ እ ኦ k ከ ኩ ኪ ካ ኬ ክ ኮ ኰ ኲ ኳ ኴ ኵx ኸ ኹ ኺ ኻ ኼ ኽ ኾ ዀ ዂ ዃ ዄ ዅw ወ ዉ ዊ ዋ ዌ ው ዎ ʕ ዐ ዑ ዒ ዓ ዔ ዕ ዖ j የ ዩ ዪ ያ ዬ ይ ዮ d ደ ዱ ዲ ዳ ዴ ድ ዶ dʒ ጀ ጁ ጂ ጃ ጄ ጅ ጆ ɡ ገ ጉ ጊ ጋ ጌ ግ ጎ ጐ ጒ ጓ ጔ ጕŋ ጘ ጙ ጚ ጛ ጜ ጝ ጞ ⶓ ⶔ ጟ ⶕ ⶖtʼ ጠ ጡ ጢ ጣ ጤ ጥ ጦ tʃʼ ጨ ጩ ጪ ጫ ጬ ጭ ጮ f ፈ ፉ ፊ ፋ ፌ ፍ ፎ z ዘ ዙ ዚ ዛ ዜ ዝ ዞ ʒ ዠ ዡ ዢ ዣ ዤ ዥ ዦ tʃ ቸ ቹ ቺ ቻ ቼ ች ቾ ɲ ኘ ኙ ኚ ኛ ኜ ኝ ኞ sʼ ጸ ጹ ጺ ጻ ጼ ጽ ጾ pʼ ጰ ጱ ጲ ጳ ጴ ጵ ጶ p ፐ ፑ ፒ ፓ ፔ ፕ ፖ v ቨ ቩ ቪ ቫ ቬ ቭ ቮ IPA e u i a ie ɨ o ʷe ʷi ʷa ʷie ʷɨ Latin alphabet Edit In 1985 the Eritrean People s Liberation Front decided to use the Latin script for Bilen and all other non Semitic languages in Eritrea This was largely a political decision the Ge ez script is associated with Christianity because of its liturgical use The Latin alphabet is seen as being more neutral and secular In 1993 the government set up a committee to standardize the Bilen language and the Latin based orthography This overturned a 110 year tradition of writing Blin in Ethiopic script Fallon Bilen Orthography 2 As of 1997 the alphabetic order was e u i a e o b c d f g h j k l m n p q r s t v w x y z n nw th ch sh kh kw hw qw gw Also khw Their values are similar to the IPA apart from the following Letter Valuee ɨc ʕj dʒq kʼx ħy jn ŋth tʼch tʃʼsh ʃkh xSee also EditBilen peopleReferences Edit Bilen at Ethnologue 18th ed 2015 subscription required Paul D Fallon 18 September 2006 Blin Orthography A History and an Assessment PDF Retrieved 1 June 2014 Consonant Mutation and Reduplication in Blin Singulars and Plurals Language Education and Public Policy in Eritrea Daniels Peter T Bright William eds 1996 Ethiopic Writing The World s Writing Systems Oxford University Press Inc p 573 ISBN 978 0 19 507993 7 Some Standardization of Blin Writing PDF Retrieved 20 February 2012 Principles and Specification for Mnemonic Ethiopic Keyboards PDF Retrieved 20 February 2012 External links EditOnline Blin language tutorialFurther reading EditDavid L Appleyard 2007 Bilin Morphology In Alan S Kaye ed Morphologies of Asia and Africa Winona Lake Indiana Eisenbrauns pp 481 504 Paul Fallon 2001 Some phonological processes in Bilin In Simpso ed Proceedings of the 27th annual meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society Paul Fallon 2004 The best is not good enough In Akinlabi amp Adesola eds Proceedings 4th World Congress of African Linguistics F R Palmer 1957 The Verb in Bilin Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 19 131 159 F R Palmer 1958 The Noun in Bilin Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 21 376 391 F R Palmer 1965 Bilin to be and to have African Language Studies 6 101 111 Leo Reinisch 1882 Die Bilin Sprache in Nordost Afrika Sitzungsberichte der phil hist Classe der kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften vol 99 Vienna Carl Gerold s Sohn Leo Reinisch 1883 Texte der Bilin Sprache Leipzig Grieben Leo Reinisch 1884 Worterbuch der Bilin Sprache Vienna Alfred Holder A N Tucker amp M A Bryan 1966 Linguistic Analyses The Non Bantu Languages of North Eastern Africa London Oxford University Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bilen language amp oldid 1149166768, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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