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Southern Oromo language

Southern Oromo, or Borana (after one of its dialects), is a variety of Oromo spoken in southern Ethiopia and northern Kenya by the Borana people. Günther Schlee also notes that it is the native language of a number of related peoples, such as the Sakuye.[2]

Southern Oromo
Borana
RegionKenya, Ethiopia, Somalia
EthnicityBorana Oromo, Sakuye
Native speakers
9.6 million (2019–2024)[1]
Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-3gax
Glottologbora1271

Dialects are Borana proper (Boran, Borena), possibly Arsi (Arussi, Arusi) and Guji (Gujji, Jemjem) in Ethiopia and, in Kenya, Karayu, Salale (Selale), and Gabra (Gabbra, Gebra).

Boraana Oromo edit

Boraana Oromo is one of the many Oromo languages spoken amongst Ethiopians and Kenyans. Boraana Oromo (Southern Oromo) derives from the Afrosiatic language family whilst belonging to the Cushitic branch. Oromo has the largest number of speakers out the Cushitic branch at an estimated 37 million.[3] Out of the 37 million Oromo speakers up to 18 million are speaking Boraana Oromo.[4] The Boraana speakers and people are solely based in the southern region (Oromia) of Ethiopia and the northern frontier district of Kenya. Most Kenyan Boraana people can be found in towns like Tula, Garba, Isiolo and Marsabit. Young Ethiopians that have migrated to Marsabit have very strong knowledge of the Boraana language. Boraana is a major dialect of the Oromo language but as of yet does not have extensive easily accessible information documented.

Commonly Boraana is referred to locally as Afaan Borana and has been spelled and described several different ways (Borana, Boraana, Borena, Booranaa, Southern Oromo).The Gadaa system (an age-grading system) also known as generation grading, has been practiced without interruption by the Boraana people.[5] This Gadaa practice can only be found within a handful of Cushitic speaking societes in Ethiopia. The Boraana people, practices and language are fascinating and even in current times only a couple books written have a clear in depth description on the topic of Boraana Oromo phonology and morhphology (Harry Stroomers Grammar of Boraana Oromo and his other Studies of Oromo in general).

The Boraana dialect of Oromo is an extremely important depiction of Southern Oromo and has very unique systems that make up the language. Though Boraana is so unique in its own systems, it does share some cluster simplification rules in the verb paradigm with Orma (another Southern Oromo dialect). Previously B. W. Andrzejewski conducted a studies of Boraana Oromo particularly in tone, phonetics, phonology as well as plural formations (1957, 1960, 1962, 1972).[6] In 1973 an informative Boraana dictionary, Dizionario Borana-Italiano, was written and published by Venturino but unfortunately lacked consistent transcription.[6] In 1978 the Bible Society of Kenya published Wold'ak'isaa Haraa Afaan Boranatiin T'aafani (The New Testament in Borana) and Kitaana Uumama, the Boraana Genesis translation.[6] In both 1980 and 1982 Owens conducted mentionable and important studies on 'case' and 'tone' in Boraana. Overall a few scholars have conducted valuable contributions to the overall available written text on Boraana Oromo.

Brief Oromo History edit

Oromo is valued as an important African language, and according to Grover Hudson it is "one of the five or six most important languages in Africa".[7][8] Previously the Oromo population were referred to as "Galla" (the term description disputed) but have adapted the self name Oromo to indicate themselves, or make use of their tribe name. The Oromo are more than 7000 years old and originated in southern Ethiopia expanding once the Oromo migrations began near 1530.[9] There are 15 Oromo dialects with the possibility of more that have not been documented. These dialects are split into 3 major groups, Western, Eastern and Southern. Ethiopia has the largest amount of Oromo speakers with 33.8% or around 27 million,[10] whilst Kenya has a relatively lower amount around 300,000 and Somalia with a mentionable 45,000.[11] Oromo is one of the official languages in Ethiopia but brings mixed reactions among its use. Kenya does not recognize Oromo as an official language and continues to keep its distance as a whole. Though the elder Kenyans still use Oromo the younger generation operate solely on Swahili and English, the two officially recognized languages.

Dialects edit

Oromo can be divided into three dialect groups: west central, eastern, and southern.[12][13]

  • West Central Oromo
    • Raya
    • Wollo
    • Salale
    • Shoa/Tulama
    • Wellegga/Mecha
  • Eastern Oromo
    • Harar
    • Arussi
  • Southern Oromo
    • Kereyu
    • Arsi
    • Barentu
    • Guji
    • Boraana
    • Gabra
    • Orma
    • Sakuye
    • Munyo

Alphabet edit

This alphabetical order is used in the Boraana English vocabulary.

Southern Oromo alphabet[14]
Letter Sample Word Translation
A a abbaa father; owner
B b baana to speak, to say
C c caacii church
C' c' c'aba to break
D d daraaraa flower, leaves
D' d' d'ak'aba to reach a place, near to
E e eesuma maternal uncle
F f falfalta to say bad things, do wrong
G g gummii a group of people
H h hink'irfad'd'a to hiccup
I i ideemtuu traveller, guest
J j jaalala to love, to like
K k kitaaba book
K' k' k'at'aamura crossroad, zigzag
L l labbaa baby, small child
M m maa? what?
N n naanaa food, sweets
Ny ny nyaaba foreigner
O o obsaa officer
P p pikipiki motorbike
P' p' -- --
R r rifeensa hair
S s sookoo market
Sh sh shambaa farm, garden
T t tabad'd'a to play, amuse one self
T' t' t'unnalee a kind of honey
U u ula clean
W w warabeesa hyeena
Y y yammoo cold, cold weather
Z z -- --

Numerals edit

"Numerals follow the noun. Cardinal and ordinal numbers do not take subject suffixes. After a noun in subject position, cardinal and ordinal numerals are in the base form."[15]

Cardinal Numbers[16]
Number Southern Oromo
1 tokko, tokkoca
2 lamma
3 sadii
4 afuri
5 shani
6 jaa
7 torba
8 saddeeti
9 sagali
10 kud'aani
20 diddamii
30 soddomii
40 afurtama
50 shantama
60 jaatama
70 torbaatama
80 saddeetama
90 sagaltama
100 d'ibba (tokko)
200 d'ibba (lamma)
300 d'ibba (sadii)
400 d'ibba (afuri)

When counting above the number 10 you must attach the added number that replaces the 0 from the 1-9 numbers in order to form the complete number as shown in the graph above for numbers 100, 200, 300, 400. This rule applies for all numbers above 10.

The deicitic elements kaa (m) and taa (f) express gender in ordinal numbers. These elements are only obligatory from 20th onwards but for 1st - 19th there is dialect divergence in the use of these elements.[17]

Ordinal Numbers[18]
Number Southern Oromo
1st k'araa, kwansaa
2nd lammeeso
3rd sadeesoo
4th afreesoo
5th shaneesoo
6th jaeesoo
7th torbeesoo
8th saddeesoo, saddeeteesoo
9th sagaleesoo, kud'a(a)neesoo
10th kurneesoo, kud'a(a)neesoo
etc.
20th kaa diddamaa
21st kaa diddamii tokkoo

Phonology edit

Within the Boraana language there are consonants, allophones of consonants, vowels and stress. Boraana Oromo is a tonal language and is very unique but have common similarities with some of the other dialects of Oromo. The smallest unit of meaningful sound are called phonemes and are present within the Boraana language. Boraana contains 6 passive articulators which may differ in areas yet some merge into each other.

Consonants edit

Labial Dental/
Alveolar
Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m n ɲ (ŋ)
Stop/
Affricate
voiceless (p) t t͡ʃ k
voiced b d d͡ʒ
ejective t͡ʃʼ
implosive ɗ
Fricative voiceless f s ʃ h
voiced (z)
Rhotic r
Lateral l
Approximant w j
  • /k, kʼ/ can be heard as fricatives [x, xʼ] when in intervocalic position.
  • /n/ can be heard as [ŋ] when occurring before velar sounds.
  • /ɗ/ can also have a retroflex allophone [ɖ] and can also be heard as a tap [ɾ] in intervocalic position.
  • [p] and [z] only occur in loanwords.

Consonants can be short or long (with the exception of sh, p', ny, and h).[19] When it comes to the spelling the short consonants use the letter once while the long consonants are written twice causing the similar word to have completely different meaning.

Consonant (Short vs. Long)[20]
Short Consonant Translation Long Consonant Translation
boroo backside (of a hut) borroo 1 particular stone of a fireplace (consisting of 3 stones)
daara nakedness, nudity daarraa ashes
d'araa lie d'araa to long for, to crave
maaga to regret maagaa intestinal worms
obaa act of watering cattle obbaa to be finished

Consonants occur single in initial position; intervocalically they occur single, double, or in a cluster of two different consonants but do not occur in word final position. Phonemically, all words end in a vowel.[21]

Distribution and Allophones of consonants edit

In some words there is a free alternation between b and p'. This pattern of free variation has also been observed between initial j and y in some instances.[22]

  • albaa, alp'aa 'to have diarrhea'
  • kobee, kop'ee 'shoes'
  • c'abana, c'ap'ana 'a girl pregnant before marriage'
  • jidduu, yidduu 'between'

While the ejective voiceless palatal c' occurs in medial and initial position the voiceless palatal c only occurs in initial and medial position in loanwords.

Initial and medial distribution
Phoneme Initial Medial
c capaatii 'chapati' nyeenca 'lion'
c' c'ia 'to jump' hanc'aa 'to be elastic/flexible'
d dubbii 'word, thing' farda 'horse'
d'~ d'agaraa, agaraa 'small axe'
d'eegee~eegee 'tail'[23]
d'uumma, uumma 'peninsula'[24]

Some instances of initial d' can alternate with null. Similar variation occurs in Wellegga Oromo.[25][26]

Consonant clusters within morphemes edit

Consonant clusters have been found within l, m, n, and r. Overall, consonant clusters with l, m, n, or r as a second consonant are possible but less frequent.[27]

Consonant clusters[27]
C1
l m n r
C2
b jilba gomboo arba
c bakalca k'ancaraa k'arcaasa
d jaldeesa ogomdii gandii ardaa
d' mald'ad'd'a hand'ura bard'adaa
g galgala gamgama hangaafa arga
k halkini bonkoo harka
k' hilk'aa k'oonk'oo hak'uuk'a
n humna nn kurneesoo
p' jalp'aa kulump'aa surp'up'a
s domsoo dansaa farsoo

Vowels edit

Vowel sounds /i, e, a, o/ can also be heard as [ɪ, ɛ, ʌ, ɔ].[28] Vowels can be long or short in final position, medial and initial. All words end with a short or long vowel.


Initial position contrast [29]

  • aalaa - a kind of grass
  • eelee - pan
  • oola - to spend the day
  • ummuu - amber necklace

Medial position contrast [29]

  • fiit'aa - family/relatives
  • keenna - our
  • koorree - Samburu (tribe)
  • fuloo - gate, entrance

Final position contrast [29]

  • garaa - belly
  • beela - hunger
  • daara - nakedness
  • gari - somewhere

Short and long vowels edit

The short vowel in Boraana are i, e, a, o. All of these short vowels are pronounced with little muscular effort having a phonetically lax realization. This occurs before a double consonant or cluster, before a consonant plus final short vowel, and also before an ejective or an implosive consonant.[29] The vowel u is excluded because it is realized as itself in all environments, therefore not changing. When a short vowel is at the end of a word it becomes voiceless. This process is practiced with words like gara (place, side) and nad'eeni (woman). Andrzejewski (1957) gave a description of voiceless vowels in Boraana: "Thus during the articulation of these sounds the tongue and lips are in the same position as during the articulation of vowels, but breath is substituted for voice".[30] Long vowels are essentially double vowels, ii, ee, aa, oo, uu in the initial and medial position.[31] Occasionally a [ɛɛ] will occur but there is no specification to decipher whether [ɛɛ] is an allophone of long vowel ee but most tend to assume exactly that due to lack of finality on the topic. Final position vowels are phonetically short and are realized as a vowel plus glottal stop plus voiceless vowel or as a short vowel plus voiceless vowel.[31]

Long Vowel Examples:

  • himbeeka - I know, he knows
  • kurneesoo - tenth

This is also the case for Orma Oromo

Example:

  • saddeecaa - eigth[clarify]
  • nad'eeni - woman

Stress edit

In the following text and descriptions stress will be indicated by []. For instance [i], [e], [a], [ii], etc. Stress functions as a property of morphemes and as a property of sentences.[31]

Stress as a property of morphemes edit

In Boraana Oromo short vowel noun endings have penultimate or ultimate stress (with exception to the final phonetically voiceless vowel) depending on whether they are feminine (penultimate) or masculine (ultimate).

Examples:

  • intala (f) "girl, daughter"
  • d[u]kana (f) "darkness"
  • h[a]nd'ura (f) "navel, umbilical cord"
  • gal[a]ana (m) "river"

Exceptions occur:

  • [i]bidda (m) "fire"[32]

"Nouns ending in -ii, -ee, -oo, -uu are generally feminine."[32] As noted before feminine nouns mostly have penultimate stress due to ending in a short vowel.

Examples:

  • k'urt'[u]mmii (f) "fish"
  • simp'[i]rree (f) "bird"[32]

It's important to note that the -aa noun endings can be masculine or feminine. This is also the case for Orma and Waata Oromo.

Examples:

  • ag[a]rtaa (f) "pupil of the eye"
  • m[a]taam mat[a]a (m) "head"
  • m[a]k'aa, mak'[a]a (m) "name"[32]

"Nouns ending in the singulative suffixes -(e)esa, -(e)ensa, -(i)isa, -(i)ca, have stress on the first syllable."[33]

Examples:

  • b[i]neesa - "animals"
  • [o]rbobiisa - "spider, crab"
  • d[i]randisa - "cattle tick"[33]

"Nouns ending in -ni have ultimate or penultimate stress in free variation. The final phonetically voiceless vowel is not counted."[33]

Examples:

  • [a]faani or af[a]ani - "mouth"
  • [i]lkaani or ilk[a]ani - "teeth"[33]

Adjectives follow the same stress patterns as nouns.[33]

Fixed Stress edit

Fixed stress is found on the linker clitic, the linker clitic plus -fi, the subject marking suffixes -t[i]i and -[i]i, and also in verb inflection and derivation (middle voice imperative suffixes, negative imperative suffixes, negative past subordinate suffixes and the first syllable of a verb stem with some exceptions).[34]

Examples:

-Linker clitic in genitive function-

(the word preceding it loses its base form stress pattern in this process)

  • f[i]it'ee muk[a]a
  • (f[i]it'ee m[u]ka'[a]a)
  • top tree LIN=GEN (Linker clitic functioning as genitive)

"the top of the tree"[35]

-Verb inflection-

(First syllable of a verb stem except in the case of main clause affirmative verbs and in verb forms containing a stressed suffix)

Examples[36]
himb[e]eku I do not know, He does not know
himb[e]enne that I don't know, that he doesnt' know
b[e]eku that I know, that he knows
d'[a]gai hear

Stress as a property of sentences edit

With the exclusion of preverbal short final vowels, usually preverbal syllables in present and past affirmative statements have stress. Differentiation between the preverbal stress rule or the presence of a stressed linker clitic is not always possible when determining how the preverbal stress formed. For example the stress pattern of the word gabayaa:

  • [a]ani y[a]a kalee b[i]llaa gabay[a]a bitad'd'e[37]

interpretation 1:

  • (aani yaa kalee billaa gabaya[a] bit+ad'd'+e)
  • I (SUBJ) FOC yesterday knife market (w/ preverbal stress) buy+MIVO+1sgPAST

interpretation 2:

  • (aani yaa kalee billaa gab[a]yaa bit+ad'd'+e)
  • I (SUBJ) FOC yesterday knife market LIN=SCOPE buy+MIVO+1sgPAST
  • "Yesterday I bought a knife at the market"[37]

Context

  • SUBJ = Subject
  • FOC = Focus
  • MIVO = Middle voice verb extension
  • 1sgPAST = First singlular past tense
  • LIN=SCOPE = Linker clitic indicating scope[37]

Morphology edit

There are many morphological processes that take place within Boraana Oromo. Consonant clusters across morpheme boundaries originate in verb forms, nouns, adjectives occasionally having two realizations due to free variation, a gap in data, or a semantic block on one of the variants. Due to these processes the input consonant differs from the output consonant.

Summary of consonant clusters morphophonemic process:[38]

1. final consonant + t b + t = bt, d' + t = tt, g + t = dd

2. final consonant + n b + n = mn, d + n = nn, g + n =nn

3. final consonant + s d + s =c, d' + s = s, k' + s = ns

4. (h)[i]n- or (h)in- + initial consonant[39]

Within Boraana Oromo there are morphophonemic changes involving vowels and glides, changes in vowels across morpheme boundaries, change of n into zero, epenthetic consonants and vowels, inversions of consonant clusters and lengthening of short vowels in a closed syllable.[40]

Noun Phrase edit

A noun may be modified by a possessive, an adjective, and a demonstrative and they are also gender sensitive with the following order taking place.

NOUN - POSSESSIVE - ADJECTIVE - DEMONSTRATIVE[41]

haattii ijoolle tana afraanii guddoo hiyeettii

(haad'a + tii ijoollee tana afraani ii guddoo hiyeettii)

mother + SUBJ children these four LIN=GEN very poor

"The mother of these four children is very poor"

In some instances the numeral can come between the noun and adjective, between the possessive and the adjective, and between the adjective and demonstrative or at the end of the noun phrase. "Nouns, adjectives, numerals, demonstratives, personal pronouns, possessives, reflexive and reciprocal pronouns and postpositions have a "base" form in direct object position, predicate position, in temporal and locative expressions, before postpositions and suffixes and in word-by-word elicitation."[42] There is also subject marking which varies the noun phrase categories. Adjectives and nouns are marked for subject by suffixes while demonstrative and personal pronouns have separate forms.

woraabesii
(woraabesa + ii)
hyena + SUBJ
"hyena"

Any other grammatical relations not going through the processes previously mentioned are expressed by the linker clitic. A combination of linker clitic and suffix also express grammatical relations with one relation being able to be expressed in the last element of a noun phrase.[42]

mina ciifaa
(mina ciifa aa)
house chief LIN=GEN
"The house of the chief"

Noun edit

Isolated nouns are in the base form which is composed of the root alone or the root plus an extension (plural, singulative or derivational suffixes). It is also important to divide nouns according to their final vowels.[43]

Nouns ending in:
a) a short vowel a or i:

mina - "house"
harka - "hand"
nad'eeni - "woman"
yaak'a - "Baobab-tree"

b) a long vowel:
niitii - "woman"
eegee - "tail"
mak'aa - "name"
aduu - "sun"
[43]

Nouns ending in a long vowel are generally feminine whilst nouns ending in short vowels are masculine. Proper names behave like nouns.[44]

Gender
Feminine nous long vowel ending Feminine nouns ending in -a, or -i Masculine words long vowel ending Masculine words short vowel ending
dubbii - Word/matter dook'a - gem mataa - Head saa d'alaa - Cow
simp'irree - Bird maala - Dewlap gurbaa - boy korma lukuu - Male chicken
buyyoo - Grass nad'eeni - Women - dannabaa arbaa - Female elephant
aduu - Sun lafa - Earth, ground - -

[44]

Numbers can be specified or unspecified by plural and singulative suffixes but more often than not nouns are unspecified by number. In a sense this means sometimes you will have no way to decifer what is one or plenty in number but the context can provide this information.[45] There are some restrictions with masculine nouns ending in -ni and due to their plural concord must be recognized as plural such as aanani - milk, bisaani - water. Nouns with plural suffixes generally refer to counted or countable groups of items while nouns denoting animate beings can take singulative suffixes.


Summary of attested plural suffixes
1 -oollee
2 -llee
3 -oota
4 -ootee
5 -ii
6 -yyii
7 -yyee
8 -(a)ani
9 -(o)wa(a)ni
10 -oo
11 -eeni

A reduction of attested plural suffixes are -oo, -ee, -aa, -ti, -ni, -ii, -ll.

Singulative suffixes edit

-ttii (f) and -ca (m) are the singulative suffixes for nouns denoting animate beings, in particular ethnonyms, and are proceed by the epenthetic vowel i. Nouns with a singulative suffix lost their singulative meaning and return to a group of words unspecified for number.[46] -sa (m) and -ttii (f) are found in limited groups of nouns that have a root ending in -ee. Original singulative meaning can be traced but in some instances they are untraced.

sidamtica - An Ethiopian man
sidamtittii - An Ethiopian woman
obbolee - brothers and sisters
obboleesa - brother(s)
obboleettii - sister(s)

Nouns are not marked for definiteness but demonstratives are used instead for this purpose and Indefiniteness is expressed by tokko "one" (namica tokko - a man).[47] There are denominal, deverbal and de-adjectival nouns which can be derived from nouns, from adjectives and from verbs by means of suffixes.

Adjectives edit

Adjectives usually end in a long vowel in the base form which consist of a root or a root plus an extension. Adjectives also can be masculine or feminine agreeing in gender with the noun they modify whilst some adjectives possess no gender. One can determine the gender by looking at the adjectival ending. Masculine endings are -aa, -ca, -sa and feminine endings are -oo, -tuu, -ttii.[48]

Gender sensitive Adjectival Endings
Masculine -aa Masculine -ca Masculine -sa Feminine -oo Feminine -tuu Feminine -ttii
k'allaa - Narrow,thin dullaca - old gogeesa - dry k'alloo - narrow, thin baartuu - healthy dullattii - old
huk'aa - thin, slender gurraaca - black dureesa - rich huk'oo - thin, slender diimtuu - red gurraattii - black

Personal, Reflexive and Reciprocal Pronouns edit

Personal pronouns in the base form: Singular
1 - naa, anaa
2 - sii
3m - isa, iisa
3f - isii, ishii

Plural
1 - nuu
2 - isani
3 - isaani, worra
[49]

An example of personal pronouns in the base form:
in Direct Object Position
aani takka iisa hingarre
(aani takka iisa hin+gar+ne)
I (SUBJ) once him NEG + see + NEG. PAST
"I never met (lit. saw) him"

in Predicate position
obboleesa kiya k'arooni iisa
(obboleesa kiya k'aroo+ni iisa)
brother my clever + SUBJ him
"He is my clever(est) brother"

Reflexive and reciprocal pronouns are invariant for person, gender and number and therefore behave like nouns with forms ufi (self) and woli (together, each other).The word Wolini itself means together.[50]

Example:

innii daawitii keesaani ufi arge - He saw himself in the mirror
isiini d'iirsa ufii ufi d'aatuu k'abdi - She had her own husband near her
guyyoo*fi galgaloo woli argani - Guyyo and Galgalo saw each other

Possessives edit

Possessives can be masculine or feminine depending on head noun gender and they follow the head noun.

Possessives
SG headnoun (m) SG heanoun (f) PL headnoun (m) PL headnoun (f) Gloss
1st kiy(y)a 1st tiy(y)a 1st keenna 1st teenna SG - my, PL - our
2nd kee, kankee 2nd tee, tantee 2nd keesani 2nd teesani SG - your, PL your
3rd(m) isaa 3rd(f) isaa 3rd isaanii 3rd isaanii SG - his, PL - their
3rd(f) isii 3rd(f) isii worraa worraa SG her, their

[51]

anini obboleettii tiya arge - I saw my sister
guyyoo obboleesa kiya - Guyyo is my brother
obboleettiini tiya worra jirti - My sister is home

Verb edit

"The irreducible element of any verbal form is termed the verb root".[52] The root conveys lexical meaning and can be extended with suffixes to the verb stem and reduplicative extensions prefixed to the verb stem. Both the simple and the extended verb stem have suffixed markers associated with categories of number, person, gender, tense and affirmation/negation.


Preverbal elements are:[53]

(h)in-
Optional stressed clitic that immediately precedes main clause present and past affirmative verbs with emphasis on the predicate.
obboleettini tiya bori ind'ufti

obboleettii-ni

sister-SUBJ

tiya

my

bori

tomorrow

(h)in-d'uf-ti

FOC-come-3.F.SG.PRES

obboleettii-ni tiya bori (h)in-d'uf-ti

sister-SUBJ my tomorrow FOC-come-3.F.SG.PRES

"My sister will come tomorrow"

(h)in-
Unstressed obligatory clitic that immediately precedes the negative verb forms in main and subordinate clauses in present, past and imperative.
hind'aabini

hin-d'aab-in(n)i

NEG-cook-NEG.IMP

hin-d'aab-in(n)i

NEG-cook-NEG.IMP

"Don't cook (it)"

yaa (yaayuu, laa)-
This element can precede a main clause past affirmative verb.
aani yaa kalee billaa gabayaa bitad'd'e

aani

I.SUBJ

yaa

FOC

kalee

yesterday

billaa

knife

gabayaa

market

bit-ad'd'-e

buy-MID-1.SG.PST

aani yaa kalee billaa gabayaa bit-ad'd'-e

I.SUBJ FOC yesterday knife market buy-MID-1.SG.PST

"Yesterday I bought a knife at the market"

haa (aa)-
This element precedes a present subordinate affirmative verb and indicates the adhortative.
inni haa mana isaa seenu

inni

he.SUBJ

haa

ADH

mana

house

isa

him

aa

LK.GEN

seen-u

enter-3.SG.PRES.SUBORD

inni haa mana isa aa seen-u

he.SUBJ ADH house him LK.GEN enter-3.SG.PRES.SUBORD

"May he enter his house"

References edit

  1. ^ Southern Oromo at Ethnologue (27th ed., 2024)  
  2. ^ Schlee, Günther (1985). "Interethnic Clan Identities among Cushitic-Speaking Pastoralists". Africa. 55 (1): 21. doi:10.2307/1159837. JSTOR 1159837. S2CID 143858455.
  3. ^ Southern Oromo language at Ethnologue (24th ed., 2021)  
  4. ^ Stroomer 1995, Introduction.
  5. ^ Legesse, Asmarom (1973). GADA: Three Approaches to the Study of African Society. New York: The Free Press. LCCN 72-87783.
  6. ^ a b c Stroomer 1995, p. 5.
  7. ^ Gragg 1982, p. v
  8. ^ Stroomer 1995, p. 1.
  9. ^ Lewis 1966.
  10. ^ "Population and Housing Census 2007 – National Statistical" (PDF). Ethiopian Statistics Agency. Retrieved 5 June 2022.
  11. ^ Gutman, Alejandro; Avanzati, Beatriz (2013). "Oromo". The Language Gulper.
  12. ^ Blench, Roger (2006-11-14). "The Afro-Asiatic Languages: Classification and Reference List" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2012-11-16. Retrieved 2022-06-08.
  13. ^ Janko, Kebede Hordofa (2012). Towards the Genetic Classification of the Afaan Oromoo Dialects. Köln: Rüdiger Köppe Verlag. ISBN 978-3-89645-487-4.
  14. ^ Stroomer 1995, pp. 149–227.
  15. ^ Stroomer 1995, p. 58.
  16. ^ Stroomer 1995, p. 59.
  17. ^ Stroomer 1987, p. 108.
  18. ^ Stroomer 1987, p. 109.
  19. ^ Stroomer 1995, p. 8.
  20. ^ Stroomer 1995, pp. 145–227.
  21. ^ Stroomer 1995, pp. 8–9.
  22. ^ Stroomer 1995, p. 9.
  23. ^ Gragg 1982, pp. 122, 133.
  24. ^ Gragg 1982, p. 132.
  25. ^ Stroomer 1995, p. 10.
  26. ^ Gragg 1982.
  27. ^ a b Stroomer 1995, pp. 12–13.
  28. ^ Stroomer 1995.
  29. ^ a b c d Stroomer 1995, p. 15.
  30. ^ Andrzejewski 1957, p. 364.
  31. ^ a b c Stroomer 1995, p. 16.
  32. ^ a b c d Stroomer 1995, p. 17.
  33. ^ a b c d e Stroomer 1995, p. 18.
  34. ^ Stroomer 1995, pp. 18–20.
  35. ^ Stroomer 1995, p. 19.
  36. ^ Stroomer 1995, p. 20.
  37. ^ a b c Stroomer 1995, p. 21.
  38. ^ Stroomer 1995, pp. 22–27.
  39. ^ Stroomer 1987, p. 38.
  40. ^ Stroomer 1995, pp. 26–32.
  41. ^ Stroomer 1995, p. 33.
  42. ^ a b Stroomer 1995, p. 35.
  43. ^ a b Stroomer 1995, p. 37.
  44. ^ a b Stroomer 1995, pp. 38–39.
  45. ^ Stroomer 1995, p. 39.
  46. ^ Stroomer 1995, p. 47.
  47. ^ Stroomer 1995, p. 48.
  48. ^ Stroomer 1995, p. 54.
  49. ^ Stroomer 1995, p. 67.
  50. ^ Stroomer 1995, pp. 69–70.
  51. ^ Stroomer 1995, p. 68.
  52. ^ Stroomer 1995, p. 71.
  53. ^ Stroomer 1995, p. 74.

Bibliography edit

  • Gragg (1982). Oromo Dictionary. African Studies Center, Michigan State University in cooperation with Oriental Institute, University of Chicago.
  • Lewis, Herbert S. (1966). "The Origins of the Galla and Somali". The Journal of African History. 7 (1). Cambridge University Press: 27–46. doi:10.1017/S0021853700006058.
  • Stroomer, Harry (1987). A comparative study or three Southern Oromo dialects in Kenya: phonology, morphology, and vocabulary. Hamburg: Buske.
  • Stroomer, Harry (1995). A grammar of Boraana Oromo (Kenya): phonology, morphology, vocabularies. Kuschitische Sprachstudien. Köln: Köppe. ISBN 978-3-927620-27-8.

southern, oromo, language, southern, oromo, borana, after, dialects, variety, oromo, spoken, southern, ethiopia, northern, kenya, borana, people, günther, schlee, also, notes, that, native, language, number, related, peoples, such, sakuye, southern, oromoboran. Southern Oromo or Borana after one of its dialects is a variety of Oromo spoken in southern Ethiopia and northern Kenya by the Borana people Gunther Schlee also notes that it is the native language of a number of related peoples such as the Sakuye 2 Southern OromoBoranaRegionKenya Ethiopia SomaliaEthnicityBorana Oromo SakuyeNative speakers9 6 million 2019 2024 1 Language familyAfro Asiatic CushiticLowland EastOromoidOromoSouthern OromoWriting systemLatinLanguage codesISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code gax class extiw title iso639 3 gax gax a Glottologbora1271Dialects are Borana proper Boran Borena possibly Arsi Arussi Arusi and Guji Gujji Jemjem in Ethiopia and in Kenya Karayu Salale Selale and Gabra Gabbra Gebra Contents 1 Boraana Oromo 2 Brief Oromo History 3 Dialects 4 Alphabet 5 Numerals 6 Phonology 6 1 Consonants 6 2 Distribution and Allophones of consonants 6 3 Consonant clusters within morphemes 6 4 Vowels 6 4 1 Short and long vowels 6 4 2 Stress 6 4 2 1 Stress as a property of morphemes 6 4 3 Fixed Stress 6 4 4 Stress as a property of sentences 7 Morphology 7 1 Noun Phrase 7 2 Noun 7 2 1 Singulative suffixes 7 3 Adjectives 7 4 Personal Reflexive and Reciprocal Pronouns 7 5 Possessives 7 6 Verb 8 References 9 BibliographyBoraana Oromo editBoraana Oromo is one of the many Oromo languages spoken amongst Ethiopians and Kenyans Boraana Oromo Southern Oromo derives from the Afrosiatic language family whilst belonging to the Cushitic branch Oromo has the largest number of speakers out the Cushitic branch at an estimated 37 million 3 Out of the 37 million Oromo speakers up to 18 million are speaking Boraana Oromo 4 The Boraana speakers and people are solely based in the southern region Oromia of Ethiopia and the northern frontier district of Kenya Most Kenyan Boraana people can be found in towns like Tula Garba Isiolo and Marsabit Young Ethiopians that have migrated to Marsabit have very strong knowledge of the Boraana language Boraana is a major dialect of the Oromo language but as of yet does not have extensive easily accessible information documented Commonly Boraana is referred to locally as Afaan Borana and has been spelled and described several different ways Borana Boraana Borena Booranaa Southern Oromo The Gadaa system an age grading system also known as generation grading has been practiced without interruption by the Boraana people 5 This Gadaa practice can only be found within a handful of Cushitic speaking societes in Ethiopia The Boraana people practices and language are fascinating and even in current times only a couple books written have a clear in depth description on the topic of Boraana Oromo phonology and morhphology Harry Stroomers Grammar of Boraana Oromo and his other Studies of Oromo in general The Boraana dialect of Oromo is an extremely important depiction of Southern Oromo and has very unique systems that make up the language Though Boraana is so unique in its own systems it does share some cluster simplification rules in the verb paradigm with Orma another Southern Oromo dialect Previously B W Andrzejewski conducted a studies of Boraana Oromo particularly in tone phonetics phonology as well as plural formations 1957 1960 1962 1972 6 In 1973 an informative Boraana dictionary Dizionario Borana Italiano was written and published by Venturino but unfortunately lacked consistent transcription 6 In 1978 the Bible Society of Kenya published Wold ak isaa Haraa Afaan Boranatiin T aafani The New Testament in Borana and Kitaana Uumama the Boraana Genesis translation 6 In both 1980 and 1982 Owens conducted mentionable and important studies on case and tone in Boraana Overall a few scholars have conducted valuable contributions to the overall available written text on Boraana Oromo Brief Oromo History editOromo is valued as an important African language and according to Grover Hudson it is one of the five or six most important languages in Africa 7 8 Previously the Oromo population were referred to as Galla the term description disputed but have adapted the self name Oromo to indicate themselves or make use of their tribe name The Oromo are more than 7000 years old and originated in southern Ethiopia expanding once the Oromo migrations began near 1530 9 There are 15 Oromo dialects with the possibility of more that have not been documented These dialects are split into 3 major groups Western Eastern and Southern Ethiopia has the largest amount of Oromo speakers with 33 8 or around 27 million 10 whilst Kenya has a relatively lower amount around 300 000 and Somalia with a mentionable 45 000 11 Oromo is one of the official languages in Ethiopia but brings mixed reactions among its use Kenya does not recognize Oromo as an official language and continues to keep its distance as a whole Though the elder Kenyans still use Oromo the younger generation operate solely on Swahili and English the two officially recognized languages Dialects editOromo can be divided into three dialect groups west central eastern and southern 12 13 West Central Oromo Raya Wollo Salale Shoa Tulama Wellegga Mecha Eastern Oromo Harar Arussi Southern Oromo Kereyu Arsi Barentu Guji Boraana Gabra Orma Sakuye MunyoAlphabet editThis alphabetical order is used in the Boraana English vocabulary Southern Oromo alphabet 14 Letter Sample Word TranslationA a abbaa father ownerB b baana to speak to sayC c caacii churchC c c aba to breakD d daraaraa flower leavesD d d ak aba to reach a place near toE e eesuma maternal uncleF f falfalta to say bad things do wrongG g gummii a group of peopleH h hink irfad d a to hiccupI i ideemtuu traveller guestJ j jaalala to love to likeK k kitaaba bookK k k at aamura crossroad zigzagL l labbaa baby small childM m maa what N n naanaa food sweetsNy ny nyaaba foreignerO o obsaa officerP p pikipiki motorbikeP p R r rifeensa hairS s sookoo marketSh sh shambaa farm gardenT t tabad d a to play amuse one selfT t t unnalee a kind of honeyU u ula cleanW w warabeesa hyeenaY y yammoo cold cold weatherZ z Numerals edit Numerals follow the noun Cardinal and ordinal numbers do not take subject suffixes After a noun in subject position cardinal and ordinal numerals are in the base form 15 Cardinal Numbers 16 Number Southern Oromo1 tokko tokkoca2 lamma3 sadii4 afuri5 shani6 jaa7 torba8 saddeeti9 sagali10 kud aani20 diddamii30 soddomii40 afurtama50 shantama60 jaatama70 torbaatama80 saddeetama90 sagaltama100 d ibba tokko 200 d ibba lamma 300 d ibba sadii 400 d ibba afuri When counting above the number 10 you must attach the added number that replaces the 0 from the 1 9 numbers in order to form the complete number as shown in the graph above for numbers 100 200 300 400 This rule applies for all numbers above 10 The deicitic elements kaa m and taa f express gender in ordinal numbers These elements are only obligatory from 20th onwards but for 1st 19th there is dialect divergence in the use of these elements 17 Ordinal Numbers 18 Number Southern Oromo1st k araa kwansaa2nd lammeeso3rd sadeesoo4th afreesoo5th shaneesoo6th jaeesoo7th torbeesoo8th saddeesoo saddeeteesoo9th sagaleesoo kud a a neesoo10th kurneesoo kud a a neesooetc 20th kaa diddamaa21st kaa diddamii tokkooPhonology editWithin the Boraana language there are consonants allophones of consonants vowels and stress Boraana Oromo is a tonal language and is very unique but have common similarities with some of the other dialects of Oromo The smallest unit of meaningful sound are called phonemes and are present within the Boraana language Boraana contains 6 passive articulators which may differ in areas yet some merge into each other Consonants edit Labial Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar GlottalNasal m n ɲ ŋ Stop Affricate voiceless p t t ʃ kvoiced b d d ʒejective pʼ tʼ t ʃʼ kʼimplosive ɗFricative voiceless f s ʃ hvoiced z Rhotic rLateral lApproximant w j k kʼ can be heard as fricatives x xʼ when in intervocalic position n can be heard as ŋ when occurring before velar sounds ɗ can also have a retroflex allophone ɖ and can also be heard as a tap ɾ in intervocalic position p and z only occur in loanwords Consonants can be short or long with the exception of sh p ny and h 19 When it comes to the spelling the short consonants use the letter once while the long consonants are written twice causing the similar word to have completely different meaning Consonant Short vs Long 20 Short Consonant Translation Long Consonant Translationboroo backside of a hut borroo 1 particular stone of a fireplace consisting of 3 stones daara nakedness nudity daarraa ashesd araa lie d araa to long for to cravemaaga to regret maagaa intestinal wormsobaa act of watering cattle obbaa to be finishedConsonants occur single in initial position intervocalically they occur single double or in a cluster of two different consonants but do not occur in word final position Phonemically all words end in a vowel 21 Distribution and Allophones of consonants edit In some words there is a free alternation between b and p This pattern of free variation has also been observed between initial j and y in some instances 22 albaa alp aa to have diarrhea kobee kop ee shoes c abana c ap ana a girl pregnant before marriage jidduu yidduu between While the ejective voiceless palatal c occurs in medial and initial position the voiceless palatal c only occurs in initial and medial position in loanwords Initial and medial distribution Phoneme Initial Medialc capaatii chapati nyeenca lion c c ia to jump hanc aa to be elastic flexible d dubbii word thing farda horse d d agaraa agaraa small axe d eegee eegee tail 23 d uumma uumma peninsula 24 Some instances of initial d can alternate with null Similar variation occurs in Wellegga Oromo 25 26 Consonant clusters within morphemes edit Consonant clusters have been found within l m n and r Overall consonant clusters with l m n or r as a second consonant are possible but less frequent 27 Consonant clusters 27 C1l m n rC2b jilba gomboo arbac bakalca k ancaraa k arcaasad jaldeesa ogomdii gandii ardaad mald ad d a hand ura bard adaag galgala gamgama hangaafa argak halkini bonkoo harkak hilk aa k oonk oo hak uuk an humna nn kurneesoop jalp aa kulump aa surp up as domsoo dansaa farsooVowels edit Front Central BackClose i iː u uːMid e eː o oːOpen a aːVowel sounds i e a o can also be heard as ɪ ɛ ʌ ɔ 28 Vowels can be long or short in final position medial and initial All words end with a short or long vowel Initial position contrast 29 aalaa a kind of grass eelee pan oola to spend the day ummuu amber necklaceMedial position contrast 29 fiit aa family relatives keenna our koorree Samburu tribe fuloo gate entranceFinal position contrast 29 garaa belly beela hunger daara nakedness gari somewhereShort and long vowels edit The short vowel in Boraana are i e a o All of these short vowels are pronounced with little muscular effort having a phonetically lax realization This occurs before a double consonant or cluster before a consonant plus final short vowel and also before an ejective or an implosive consonant 29 The vowel u is excluded because it is realized as itself in all environments therefore not changing When a short vowel is at the end of a word it becomes voiceless This process is practiced with words like gara place side and nad eeni woman Andrzejewski 1957 gave a description of voiceless vowels in Boraana Thus during the articulation of these sounds the tongue and lips are in the same position as during the articulation of vowels but breath is substituted for voice 30 Long vowels are essentially double vowels ii ee aa oo uu in the initial and medial position 31 Occasionally a ɛɛ will occur but there is no specification to decipher whether ɛɛ is an allophone of long vowel ee but most tend to assume exactly that due to lack of finality on the topic Final position vowels are phonetically short and are realized as a vowel plus glottal stop plus voiceless vowel or as a short vowel plus voiceless vowel 31 Long Vowel Examples himbeeka I know he knows kurneesoo tenthThis is also the case for Orma OromoExample saddeecaa eigth clarify nad eeni womanStress edit In the following text and descriptions stress will be indicated by For instance i e a ii etc Stress functions as a property of morphemes and as a property of sentences 31 Stress as a property of morphemes edit In Boraana Oromo short vowel noun endings have penultimate or ultimate stress with exception to the final phonetically voiceless vowel depending on whether they are feminine penultimate or masculine ultimate Examples intala f girl daughter d u kana f darkness h a nd ura f navel umbilical cord gal a ana m river Exceptions occur i bidda m fire 32 Nouns ending in ii ee oo uu are generally feminine 32 As noted before feminine nouns mostly have penultimate stress due to ending in a short vowel Examples k urt u mmii f fish simp i rree f bird 32 It s important to note that the aa noun endings can be masculine or feminine This is also the case for Orma and Waata Oromo Examples ag a rtaa f pupil of the eye m a taam mat a a m head m a k aa mak a a m name 32 Nouns ending in the singulative suffixes e esa e ensa i isa i ca have stress on the first syllable 33 Examples b i neesa animals o rbobiisa spider crab d i randisa cattle tick 33 Nouns ending in ni have ultimate or penultimate stress in free variation The final phonetically voiceless vowel is not counted 33 Examples a faani or af a ani mouth i lkaani or ilk a ani teeth 33 Adjectives follow the same stress patterns as nouns 33 Fixed Stress edit Fixed stress is found on the linker clitic the linker clitic plus fi the subject marking suffixes t i i and i i and also in verb inflection and derivation middle voice imperative suffixes negative imperative suffixes negative past subordinate suffixes and the first syllable of a verb stem with some exceptions 34 Examples Linker clitic in genitive function the word preceding it loses its base form stress pattern in this process f i it ee muk a a f i it ee m u ka a a top tree LIN GEN Linker clitic functioning as genitive the top of the tree 35 Verb inflection First syllable of a verb stem except in the case of main clause affirmative verbs and in verb forms containing a stressed suffix Examples 36 himb e eku I do not know He does not knowhimb e enne that I don t know that he doesnt knowb e eku that I know that he knowsd a gai hearStress as a property of sentences edit With the exclusion of preverbal short final vowels usually preverbal syllables in present and past affirmative statements have stress Differentiation between the preverbal stress rule or the presence of a stressed linker clitic is not always possible when determining how the preverbal stress formed For example the stress pattern of the word gabayaa a ani y a a kalee b i llaa gabay a a bitad d e 37 interpretation 1 aani yaa kalee billaa gabaya a bit ad d e I SUBJ FOC yesterday knife market w preverbal stress buy MIVO 1sgPASTinterpretation 2 aani yaa kalee billaa gab a yaa bit ad d e I SUBJ FOC yesterday knife market LIN SCOPE buy MIVO 1sgPAST Yesterday I bought a knife at the market 37 Context SUBJ Subject FOC Focus MIVO Middle voice verb extension 1sgPAST First singlular past tense LIN SCOPE Linker clitic indicating scope 37 Morphology editThere are many morphological processes that take place within Boraana Oromo Consonant clusters across morpheme boundaries originate in verb forms nouns adjectives occasionally having two realizations due to free variation a gap in data or a semantic block on one of the variants Due to these processes the input consonant differs from the output consonant Summary of consonant clusters morphophonemic process 38 1 final consonant t b t bt d t tt g t dd2 final consonant n b n mn d n nn g n nn3 final consonant s d s c d s s k s ns4 h i n or h in initial consonant 39 Within Boraana Oromo there are morphophonemic changes involving vowels and glides changes in vowels across morpheme boundaries change of n into zero epenthetic consonants and vowels inversions of consonant clusters and lengthening of short vowels in a closed syllable 40 Noun Phrase edit A noun may be modified by a possessive an adjective and a demonstrative and they are also gender sensitive with the following order taking place NOUN POSSESSIVE ADJECTIVE DEMONSTRATIVE 41 haattii ijoolle tana afraanii guddoo hiyeettii haad a tii ijoollee tana afraani ii guddoo hiyeettii mother SUBJ children these four LIN GEN very poor The mother of these four children is very poor In some instances the numeral can come between the noun and adjective between the possessive and the adjective and between the adjective and demonstrative or at the end of the noun phrase Nouns adjectives numerals demonstratives personal pronouns possessives reflexive and reciprocal pronouns and postpositions have a base form in direct object position predicate position in temporal and locative expressions before postpositions and suffixes and in word by word elicitation 42 There is also subject marking which varies the noun phrase categories Adjectives and nouns are marked for subject by suffixes while demonstrative and personal pronouns have separate forms woraabesii woraabesa ii hyena SUBJ hyena Any other grammatical relations not going through the processes previously mentioned are expressed by the linker clitic A combination of linker clitic and suffix also express grammatical relations with one relation being able to be expressed in the last element of a noun phrase 42 mina ciifaa mina ciifa aa house chief LIN GEN The house of the chief Noun edit Isolated nouns are in the base form which is composed of the root alone or the root plus an extension plural singulative or derivational suffixes It is also important to divide nouns according to their final vowels 43 Nouns ending in a a short vowel a or i mina house harka hand nad eeni woman yaak a Baobab tree b a long vowel niitii woman eegee tail mak aa name aduu sun 43 Nouns ending in a long vowel are generally feminine whilst nouns ending in short vowels are masculine Proper names behave like nouns 44 Gender Feminine nous long vowel ending Feminine nouns ending in a or i Masculine words long vowel ending Masculine words short vowel endingdubbii Word matter dook a gem mataa Head saa d alaa Cowsimp irree Bird maala Dewlap gurbaa boy korma lukuu Male chickenbuyyoo Grass nad eeni Women dannabaa arbaa Female elephantaduu Sun lafa Earth ground 44 Numbers can be specified or unspecified by plural and singulative suffixes but more often than not nouns are unspecified by number In a sense this means sometimes you will have no way to decifer what is one or plenty in number but the context can provide this information 45 There are some restrictions with masculine nouns ending in ni and due to their plural concord must be recognized as plural such as aanani milk bisaani water Nouns with plural suffixes generally refer to counted or countable groups of items while nouns denoting animate beings can take singulative suffixes Summary of attested plural suffixes 1 oollee2 llee3 oota4 ootee5 ii6 yyii7 yyee8 a ani9 o wa a ni10 oo11 eeniA reduction of attested plural suffixes are oo ee aa ti ni ii ll Singulative suffixes edit ttii f and ca m are the singulative suffixes for nouns denoting animate beings in particular ethnonyms and are proceed by the epenthetic vowel i Nouns with a singulative suffix lost their singulative meaning and return to a group of words unspecified for number 46 sa m and ttii f are found in limited groups of nouns that have a root ending in ee Original singulative meaning can be traced but in some instances they are untraced sidamtica An Ethiopian mansidamtittii An Ethiopian womanobbolee brothers and sistersobboleesa brother s obboleettii sister s Nouns are not marked for definiteness but demonstratives are used instead for this purpose and Indefiniteness is expressed by tokko one namica tokko a man 47 There are denominal deverbal and de adjectival nouns which can be derived from nouns from adjectives and from verbs by means of suffixes Adjectives edit Adjectives usually end in a long vowel in the base form which consist of a root or a root plus an extension Adjectives also can be masculine or feminine agreeing in gender with the noun they modify whilst some adjectives possess no gender One can determine the gender by looking at the adjectival ending Masculine endings are aa ca sa and feminine endings are oo tuu ttii 48 Gender sensitive Adjectival Endings Masculine aa Masculine ca Masculine sa Feminine oo Feminine tuu Feminine ttiik allaa Narrow thin dullaca old gogeesa dry k alloo narrow thin baartuu healthy dullattii oldhuk aa thin slender gurraaca black dureesa rich huk oo thin slender diimtuu red gurraattii blackPersonal Reflexive and Reciprocal Pronouns edit Personal pronouns in the base form Singular 1 naa anaa 2 sii 3m isa iisa 3f isii ishiiPlural 1 nuu 2 isani 3 isaani worra 49 An example of personal pronouns in the base form in Direct Object Positionaani takka iisa hingarre aani takka iisa hin gar ne I SUBJ once him NEG see NEG PAST I never met lit saw him in Predicate positionobboleesa kiya k arooni iisa obboleesa kiya k aroo ni iisa brother my clever SUBJ him He is my clever est brother Reflexive and reciprocal pronouns are invariant for person gender and number and therefore behave like nouns with forms ufi self and woli together each other The word Wolini itself means together 50 Example innii daawitii keesaani ufi arge He saw himself in the mirrorisiini d iirsa ufii ufi d aatuu k abdi She had her own husband near herguyyoo fi galgaloo woli argani Guyyo and Galgalo saw each other Possessives edit Possessives can be masculine or feminine depending on head noun gender and they follow the head noun Possessives SG headnoun m SG heanoun f PL headnoun m PL headnoun f Gloss1st kiy y a 1st tiy y a 1st keenna 1st teenna SG my PL our2nd kee kankee 2nd tee tantee 2nd keesani 2nd teesani SG your PL your3rd m isaa 3rd f isaa 3rd isaanii 3rd isaanii SG his PL their3rd f isii 3rd f isii worraa worraa SG her their 51 anini obboleettii tiya arge I saw my sisterguyyoo obboleesa kiya Guyyo is my brotherobboleettiini tiya worra jirti My sister is home Verb edit The irreducible element of any verbal form is termed the verb root 52 The root conveys lexical meaning and can be extended with suffixes to the verb stem and reduplicative extensions prefixed to the verb stem Both the simple and the extended verb stem have suffixed markers associated with categories of number person gender tense and affirmation negation Preverbal elements are 53 h in Optional stressed clitic that immediately precedes main clause present and past affirmative verbs with emphasis on the predicate obboleettini tiya bori ind uftiobboleettii nisister SUBJtiyamyboritomorrow h in d uf tiFOC come 3 F SG PRESobboleettii ni tiya bori h in d uf tisister SUBJ my tomorrow FOC come 3 F SG PRES My sister will come tomorrow h in Unstressed obligatory clitic that immediately precedes the negative verb forms in main and subordinate clauses in present past and imperative hind aabinihin d aab in n iNEG cook NEG IMPhin d aab in n iNEG cook NEG IMP Don t cook it yaa yaayuu laa This element can precede a main clause past affirmative verb aani yaa kalee billaa gabayaa bitad d eaaniI SUBJyaaFOCkaleeyesterdaybillaaknifegabayaamarketbit ad d ebuy MID 1 SG PSTaani yaa kalee billaa gabayaa bit ad d eI SUBJ FOC yesterday knife market buy MID 1 SG PST Yesterday I bought a knife at the market haa aa This element precedes a present subordinate affirmative verb and indicates the adhortative inni haa mana isaa seenuinnihe SUBJhaaADHmanahouseisahimaaLK GENseen uenter 3 SG PRES SUBORDinni haa mana isa aa seen uhe SUBJ ADH house him LK GEN enter 3 SG PRES SUBORD May he enter his house References edit Southern Oromo at Ethnologue 27th ed 2024 nbsp Schlee Gunther 1985 Interethnic Clan Identities among Cushitic Speaking Pastoralists Africa 55 1 21 doi 10 2307 1159837 JSTOR 1159837 S2CID 143858455 Southern Oromo language at Ethnologue 24th ed 2021 nbsp Stroomer 1995 Introduction Legesse Asmarom 1973 GADA Three Approaches to the Study of African Society New York The Free Press LCCN 72 87783 a b c Stroomer 1995 p 5 Gragg 1982 p v Stroomer 1995 p 1 Lewis 1966 Population and Housing Census 2007 National Statistical PDF Ethiopian Statistics Agency Retrieved 5 June 2022 Gutman Alejandro Avanzati Beatriz 2013 Oromo The Language Gulper Blench Roger 2006 11 14 The Afro Asiatic Languages Classification and Reference List PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2012 11 16 Retrieved 2022 06 08 Janko Kebede Hordofa 2012 Towards the Genetic Classification of the Afaan Oromoo Dialects Koln Rudiger Koppe Verlag ISBN 978 3 89645 487 4 Stroomer 1995 pp 149 227 Stroomer 1995 p 58 Stroomer 1995 p 59 Stroomer 1987 p 108 Stroomer 1987 p 109 Stroomer 1995 p 8 Stroomer 1995 pp 145 227 Stroomer 1995 pp 8 9 Stroomer 1995 p 9 Gragg 1982 pp 122 133 Gragg 1982 p 132 Stroomer 1995 p 10 Gragg 1982 a b Stroomer 1995 pp 12 13 Stroomer 1995 a b c d Stroomer 1995 p 15 Andrzejewski 1957 p 364 sfn error no target CITEREFAndrzejewski1957 help a b c Stroomer 1995 p 16 a b c d Stroomer 1995 p 17 a b c d e Stroomer 1995 p 18 Stroomer 1995 pp 18 20 Stroomer 1995 p 19 Stroomer 1995 p 20 a b c Stroomer 1995 p 21 Stroomer 1995 pp 22 27 Stroomer 1987 p 38 Stroomer 1995 pp 26 32 Stroomer 1995 p 33 a b Stroomer 1995 p 35 a b Stroomer 1995 p 37 a b Stroomer 1995 pp 38 39 Stroomer 1995 p 39 Stroomer 1995 p 47 Stroomer 1995 p 48 Stroomer 1995 p 54 Stroomer 1995 p 67 Stroomer 1995 pp 69 70 Stroomer 1995 p 68 Stroomer 1995 p 71 Stroomer 1995 p 74 Bibliography editGragg 1982 Oromo Dictionary African Studies Center Michigan State University in cooperation with Oriental Institute University of Chicago Lewis Herbert S 1966 The Origins of the Galla and Somali The Journal of African History 7 1 Cambridge University Press 27 46 doi 10 1017 S0021853700006058 Stroomer Harry 1987 A comparative study or three Southern Oromo dialects in Kenya phonology morphology and vocabulary Hamburg Buske Stroomer Harry 1995 A grammar of Boraana Oromo Kenya phonology morphology vocabularies Kuschitische Sprachstudien Koln Koppe ISBN 978 3 927620 27 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Southern Oromo language amp oldid 1216844073, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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