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Eastern Sudanic languages

In most classifications, the Eastern Sudanic languages are a group of nine families of languages that may constitute a branch of the Nilo-Saharan language family. Eastern Sudanic languages are spoken from southern Egypt to northern Tanzania.

Eastern Sudanic
(disputed)
Geographic
distribution
Egypt, Sudan, South Sudan, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Chad, Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda
Linguistic classificationNilo-Saharan?
  • Eastern Sudanic
Subdivisions
ISO 639-5sdv
GlottologNone
Eastern Sudanic languages:
* Group k (orange)
* Group n (yellow)

Nubian (and possibly Meroitic) gives Eastern Sudanic some of the earliest written attestations of African languages. However, the largest branch by far is Nilotic, spread by extensive and comparatively recent conquests throughout East Africa. Before the spread of Nilotic, Eastern Sudanic was centered in present-day Sudan. The name "East Sudanic" refers to the eastern part of the region of Sudan where the country of Sudan is located, and contrasts with Central Sudanic and Western Sudanic (modern Mande, in the Niger–Congo family).

Lionel Bender (1980) proposes several Eastern Sudanic isoglosses (defining words), such as *kutuk "mouth", *(ko)TVS-(Vg) "three", and *ku-lug-ut or *kVl(t) "fish".

In older classifications, such as that of Meinhof (1911), the term was used for the eastern Sudanic languages, largely equivalent to modern Nilo-Saharan sans Nilotic, which is the largest constituent of modern Eastern Sudanic.

Güldemann (2018) considers East Sudanic to be undemonstrated at the current state of research. He only accepts the evidence for a connection between the Nilotic and Surmic languages as "robust", while he states that Rilly's evidence (see below) for the northern group comprising Nubian, Nara, Nyima, Taman and Meroitic "certainly look[s] promising".[1] Glottolog (2023) does not accept even a Surmic–Nilotic relationship.

Internal classification edit

There are several different classifications of East Sudanic languages.

Bender (2000) edit

Lionel Bender assigns the languages into two branches, depending on whether the 1sg pronoun ("I") has a /k/ or an /n/:

Eastern 
Sudanic 
Northern
 (k languages) 
Southern
 (n languages) 

Rilly (2009) edit

Claude Rilly (2009:2)[2] provides the following internal structure for the Eastern Sudanic languages.

Starostin (2015) edit

Starostin, using lexicostatistics, finds strong support for Bender's Northern branch, but none for the Southern branch.[3] Eastern Sudanic as a whole is rated a probable working model, pending proper comparative work, while the relationship between Nubian, Tama, and Nara is beyond reasonable doubt.

Eastern 
Sudanic 

Nyima is not part of the northern group, though it appears to be closest to it. (For one thing, its pronouns align well with the northern (Astaboran) branches.) Surmic, Nilotic, and Temein share a number of similarities, including in their pronouns, but not enough to warrant classifying them together in opposition to Astaboran without proper comparative work. Jebel and Daju also share many similarities with Surma and Nilotic, though their pronominal systems are closer to Astaboran.

Inclusion of Kuliak and Berta is not supported. Similarities with Kuliak may be due to both being Nilo-Saharan families, whereas Berta and Jebel form a sprachbund.

A similar classification was given in Starostin (2014):[4]

  • Eastern Sudanic
    • Tama-Nara-Nubian branch
    • Surmic branch
      • Northern Surmic (= Majang)
      • Southern Surmic
        • Southwest Surmic
        • Southeast Surmic
    • Nilotic branch
      • Northern Nilotic
        • Western Nilotic
        • Eastern Nilotic
      • Southern Nilotic
    • Daju
    • Nyimang
    • Temein
    • Jebel

Blench (2019, 2021) edit

Roger Blench (2019)[5]: 18  and (2021),[6] like Starostin, only finds support for Bender's Northern branch. Blench proposes the following internal structure, supported by morphological evidence.

Dimmendaal & Jakobi (< 2020) edit

Dimmendaal & Jakobi (2020:394),[7] published in 2020 but written some times earlier, retains Bender's Southern branch; they also accept Berta:

Numerals edit

Comparison of numerals in individual languages (excluding Nilotic and Surmic languages):[8]

Classification Language 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Nara Nara (Nera) dōkkūū àriɡáà sāāná ʃōōná wiita dáátà jāāriɡáà (5+ 2)  ? dèssèná (5+ 3) ? lùfūttá-màdāā (10–1)  ? lùfūk
Nubian, Western Midob Nubian pàrci ə̀ddí táasí èejí téccí kórcí òlòttì ídíyí úkúdí / úfúdí tímmíjí
Nubian, Northern Nobiin (1) weː˥r u˥wwo˥ tu˥sko˥ ke˥mso˥ di˧dʒ ɡo˥rdʒo˥ ko˧lo˧d i˥dwo˥ o˧sko˧d di˥me˥
Nubian, Northern Nobiin (2) wèer/ wéer úwwó túskú / tískó kémsó dìj / dìjì ɡórjó kòlòd ídwó òskòd / òskòdi dímé
Nubian, Central, Hill, Kadaru-Ghulfan Kadaru bèè òró tèɟɟúk kèɲɟú tìccʊ́ kɔ́rʃʊ́ kɔ́ladʊ́ ɪ̀d̪d̪ɔ́ wìɪd̪ɔ́ bùɽè
Nubian, Central, Hill, Kadaru-Ghulfan Ghulfan bɛr óra tóǰuk kɪ́ɲu ʈiʃú kwúrʃu kwalát ɪ́ddu wìít buɽé
Nubian, Central, Hill, Unclassified Dilling bee oree tujjuŋ j = dʒ or ɟ ? kimmiɲi ticci c = tʃ or c ? kʷarcu kʷalad ɪddɪ wit bure
Nyimang Afitti àndá àrmák àcúp kòrsík múl màndár màrám dùvá àdìsól òtúmbùrà
Nyimang Ama (Nyimang) ɲálā ārbā āsá kùd̪ò mūl kūrʃ kūlād̪ èd̪ò wìèd̪ò fòɽó
Tama, Mararit Mararit (Mararet) kára~kún / karre warɪ / warre ètte~ítí / ataye kow / ɡaw máai / maye túur / tuur kul / kuuri kàkàwák / kokuak (4+ 4) kàrkʌ́s / kekeris tók / toɡ
Tama, Tama-Sungor Sungor (Assangori) kur wári écà kús mási tɔ̀r kál kíbís úkù mɛ̀r
Tama, Tama-Sungor Tama (1) kúˑr wárí íɕí kús /kus massi / masi tɔˑ́r kâl kímís úkū mír
Tama, Tama-Sungor Tama (2) kʊ́rʊ́ wɛ̀rːɛ̀ ɪ̀cːáʔ kʊʃ masɛː t̪ɔ́rː kəl kíbìs ʊ́kːʊ́ mɛ̀ːr
Daju, Eastern Daju Liguri Daju (Logorik) nɔhɔrɔk pɛtdax kɔdɔs tɛspɛt mdɛk kɔskɔdɔs (2 x 3) tɛspɛtkɔdɔs (4 + 3) tɛspɛttɛspɛt (4 + 4) mdɛktɛspɛt (5 + 4) saʔasɛɲ
Daju, Eastern Daju Shatt Damam núuxù pɨ̀dàx kòdòs tèspèt mɨ̀dɨ̀k áaràn pàxtíndìɲ kòs(s)èndàŋ tèspédèspè {four.four} dábàs(s)éndàŋ ~bây.núuxù àsìɲ
Daju, Western Daju Dar Dadju Daju mùnɡún fìdà /pîda kòdɔ̀s tɛ̀spɛ̀t mòdùk àràŋ fàktíndí kòsóndá bìstóndá àsíŋ
Daju, Western Daju Dar Sila Daju (1) ùŋɡʊ̀n bìdàk kòdòs tìʃɛ̀t mùdùk (ʔ)àràn ~ (ʔ)àrân fáktíndì kòohándà bìstándà àsîŋ
Daju, Western Daju Dar Sila Daju (2) ʊ́ŋɡʊ́n bíd̪ák kɔ̀d̪ɔs t̪ɪ̀ʃɛ́ːθ múd̪uk árān̪ fáθɪ́nd̪ɪ́ kɔ̀ánd̪a bɪ̀sθánd̪a ásːɪŋ
Eastern Jebel, Gaam Gaahmɡ (Tabi) (1) t̪āmán d̪áāɡɡ ɔ́ðɔ̄ yə̄ə̄sə́ áás-ááman (lit: 'hand') t̪ə́ld̪ìɡɡ íd̪iɡɡ-ɔ́ðɔ̄ (lit: 'eyes-two') íd̪iɡ-dáāɡɡ (lit: 'eyes-three') íd̪iɡ-yə̄ə̄sə́ (lit: 'eyes-four') ə́sēɡ-dí (lit: 'hands-also')
Eastern Jebel, Gaam Gaahmɡ (Tabi) (2) taman diɔk / diak oða / ʔoda yɛsu /yɛzan ʌsumʌn tɛltɛk /tɛldɛk tauðuk / idakʼdiak (5 + 2) kurbaiti /idukʼʔoda (5 + 3) akaitɛn / idukʼyɛsu (5 + 4) ʔasiɡdi

References edit

  1. ^ Güldemann, Tom (2018). "Historical linguistics and genealogical language classification in Africa". In Güldemann, Tom (ed.). The Languages and Linguistics of Africa. The World of Linguistics series. Vol. 11. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton. pp. 299–308. doi:10.1515/9783110421668-002. ISBN 978-3-11-042606-9. S2CID 133888593.
  2. ^ Rilly, Claude. 2009. From the Yellow Nile to the Blue Nile: The quest for water and the diffusion of Northern East Sudanic languages from the fourth to the first millennia BCE. Paper presented at ECAS 2009 (3rd European Conference on African Studies, Panel 142: African waters – water in Africa, barriers, paths, and resources: their impact on language, literature and history of people) in Leipzig, 4 to 7 June 2009.
  3. ^ George Starostin (2015) The Eastern Sudanic hypothesis tested through lexicostatistics: current state of affairs (Draft 1.0)
  4. ^ Starostin, Georgiy C. 2014. Языки Африки. Опыт построения лексикостатистической классификации. Т. 2: Восточносуданские языки / Languages of Africa: an attempt at a lexicostatistical classification. Volume 2: Eastern Sudanic languages. Moscow: Языки славянской культуры / LRC Press. 736 p.
  5. ^ Blench, Roger. 2019. Morphological evidence for the coherence of East Sudanic. Paper submitted for a Special Issue of Dotawo. Also presented at the 14th Nilo-Saharan Linguistics Colloquium Department of African Studies, University of Vienna, 31 May 2019.
  6. ^ Blench, Roger. 2023. In defence of Nilo-Saharan.
  7. ^ Dimmendaal, Gerrit J. and Angelika Jakobi. 2020. Eastern Sudanic. In: Vossen, Rainer and Gerrit J. Dimmendaal (eds.). 2020. The Oxford Handbook of African Languages, 392–407. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  8. ^ Chan, Eugene (2019). "The Nilo-Saharan Language Phylum". Numeral Systems of the World's Languages.

Bibliography edit

  • Bender, M. Lionel. 2000. "Nilo-Saharan". In: Bernd Heine and Derek Nurse (eds.), African Languages: An Introduction. Cambridge University Press.
  • Bender, M. Lionel. 1981. "Some Nilo-Saharan isoglosses". In: Thilo Schadeberg, M. L. Bender (eds.), Nilo-Saharan: Proceedings of the First Nilo-Saharan Linguistics Colloquium, Leiden, Sept. 8–10, 1980. Dordrecht: Foris Publications.
  • Temein languages[permanent dead link] (Roger Blench, 2007).
  • Starostin, George (2015). Языки Африки. Опыт построения лексикостатистической классификации. Том II. Восточносуданские языки [The Languages of Africa. The experience of building a lexiostatistical classification.] (in Russian). Vol. II: The Eastern Sudanic Languages. Moscow: Languages of Slavic culture. ISBN 9785457890718.
  • Starostin, George. 2015. Proto-East Sudanic ʽtreeʼ on the East Sudanic tree. 10th Annual Conference on Comparative-Historical Linguistics (in memory of Sergei Starostin).

eastern, sudanic, languages, most, classifications, group, nine, families, languages, that, constitute, branch, nilo, saharan, language, family, spoken, from, southern, egypt, northern, tanzania, eastern, sudanic, disputed, geographicdistributionegypt, sudan, . In most classifications the Eastern Sudanic languages are a group of nine families of languages that may constitute a branch of the Nilo Saharan language family Eastern Sudanic languages are spoken from southern Egypt to northern Tanzania Eastern Sudanic disputed GeographicdistributionEgypt Sudan South Sudan Eritrea Ethiopia Chad Kenya Tanzania UgandaLinguistic classificationNilo Saharan Eastern SudanicSubdivisionsNorthern k languages Nubian Nara Nyima Taman Meroitic Southern n languages Nilotic Surmic Jebel Temein Daju Kuliak rarely included Berta rarely included ISO 639 5sdvGlottologNoneEastern Sudanic languages Group k orange Group n yellow Nubian and possibly Meroitic gives Eastern Sudanic some of the earliest written attestations of African languages However the largest branch by far is Nilotic spread by extensive and comparatively recent conquests throughout East Africa Before the spread of Nilotic Eastern Sudanic was centered in present day Sudan The name East Sudanic refers to the eastern part of the region of Sudan where the country of Sudan is located and contrasts with Central Sudanic and Western Sudanic modern Mande in the Niger Congo family Lionel Bender 1980 proposes several Eastern Sudanic isoglosses defining words such as kutuk mouth ko TVS Vg three and ku lug ut or kVl t fish In older classifications such as that of Meinhof 1911 the term was used for the eastern Sudanic languages largely equivalent to modern Nilo Saharan sans Nilotic which is the largest constituent of modern Eastern Sudanic Guldemann 2018 considers East Sudanic to be undemonstrated at the current state of research He only accepts the evidence for a connection between the Nilotic and Surmic languages as robust while he states that Rilly s evidence see below for the northern group comprising Nubian Nara Nyima Taman and Meroitic certainly look s promising 1 Glottolog 2023 does not accept even a Surmic Nilotic relationship Contents 1 Internal classification 1 1 Bender 2000 1 2 Rilly 2009 1 3 Starostin 2015 1 4 Blench 2019 2021 1 5 Dimmendaal amp Jakobi lt 2020 2 Numerals 3 References 4 BibliographyInternal classification editThere are several different classifications of East Sudanic languages Bender 2000 edit Lionel Bender assigns the languages into two branches depending on whether the 1sg pronoun I has a k or an n Eastern Sudanic Northern k languages Nubian Nara Nyima Taman Southern n languages Surmic Eastern Jebel Temein Nuba Hills Daju Nilotic Rilly 2009 edit Claude Rilly 2009 2 2 provides the following internal structure for the Eastern Sudanic languages Eastern Sudanic Northern Eastern Sudanic Nyima Taman Nara Meroitic Nubian Nilotic Surmic Jebel Temein Daju Starostin 2015 edit Starostin using lexicostatistics finds strong support for Bender s Northern branch but none for the Southern branch 3 Eastern Sudanic as a whole is rated a probable working model pending proper comparative work while the relationship between Nubian Tama and Nara is beyond reasonable doubt Eastern Sudanic NNT Nubian Nara Taman Nyima Surmic Jebel Temein Daju Nilotic Nyima is not part of the northern group though it appears to be closest to it For one thing its pronouns align well with the northern Astaboran branches Surmic Nilotic and Temein share a number of similarities including in their pronouns but not enough to warrant classifying them together in opposition to Astaboran without proper comparative work Jebel and Daju also share many similarities with Surma and Nilotic though their pronominal systems are closer to Astaboran Inclusion of Kuliak and Berta is not supported Similarities with Kuliak may be due to both being Nilo Saharan families whereas Berta and Jebel form a sprachbund A similar classification was given in Starostin 2014 4 Eastern Sudanic Tama Nara Nubian branch Tama Nara Nubian Nara Nubian Surmic branch Northern Surmic Majang Southern Surmic Southwest Surmic Southeast Surmic Nilotic branch Northern Nilotic Western Nilotic Eastern Nilotic Southern Nilotic Daju Nyimang Temein Jebel Blench 2019 2021 edit Roger Blench 2019 5 18 and 2021 6 like Starostin only finds support for Bender s Northern branch Blench proposes the following internal structure supported by morphological evidence East Sudanic Nilotic Surmic Eastern Jebel Daju Temein Northeast Sudanic Nubian Nara Taman Ama Dimmendaal amp Jakobi lt 2020 edit Dimmendaal amp Jakobi 2020 394 7 published in 2020 but written some times earlier retains Bender s Southern branch they also accept Berta Eastern Sudanic Northern Taman Meroitic Nubian Nara Nyima Southern Berta Jebel Daju Temeinian Surmic NiloticNumerals editComparison of numerals in individual languages excluding Nilotic and Surmic languages 8 Classification Language 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Nara Nara Nera dōkkuu ariɡaa saana ʃōōna wiita daata jaariɡaa 5 2 dessena 5 3 lufutta madaa 10 1 lufuk Nubian Western Midob Nubian parci e ddi taasi eeji tecci korci olotti idiyi ukudi ufudi timmiji Nubian Northern Nobiin 1 weː r u wwo tu sko ke mso di dʒ ɡo rdʒo ko lo d i dwo o sko d di me Nubian Northern Nobiin 2 weer weer uwwo tusku tisko kemso dij diji ɡorjo kolod idwo oskod oskodi dime Nubian Central Hill Kadaru Ghulfan Kadaru bee oro teɟɟuk keɲɟu ticcʊ kɔ rʃʊ kɔ ladʊ ɪ d d ɔ wiɪd ɔ buɽe Nubian Central Hill Kadaru Ghulfan Ghulfan bɛr ora toǰuk kɪ ɲu ʈiʃu kwurʃu kwalat ɪ ddu wiit buɽe Nubian Central Hill Unclassified Dilling bee oree tujjuŋ j dʒ or ɟ kimmiɲi ticci c tʃ or c kʷarcu kʷalad ɪddɪ wit bure Nyimang Afitti anda armak acup korsik mul mandar maram duva adisol otumbura Nyimang Ama Nyimang ɲala arba asa kud o mul kurʃ kulad ed o wied o foɽo Tama Mararit Mararit Mararet kara kun karre warɪ warre ette iti ataye kow ɡaw maai maye tuur tuur kul kuuri kakawak kokuak 4 4 karkʌ s kekeris tok toɡ Tama Tama Sungor Sungor Assangori kur wari eca kus masi tɔ r kal kibis uku mɛ r Tama Tama Sungor Tama 1 kuˑr wari iɕi kus kus massi masi tɔˑ r kal kimis uku mir Tama Tama Sungor Tama 2 kʊ rʊ wɛ rːɛ ɪ cːaʔ kʊʃ masɛː t ɔ rː kel kibis ʊ kːʊ mɛ ːr Daju Eastern Daju Liguri Daju Logorik nɔhɔrɔk pɛtdax kɔdɔs tɛspɛt mdɛk kɔskɔdɔs 2 x 3 tɛspɛtkɔdɔs 4 3 tɛspɛttɛspɛt 4 4 mdɛktɛspɛt 5 4 saʔasɛɲ Daju Eastern Daju Shatt Damam nuuxu pɨ dax kodos tespet mɨ dɨ k aaran paxtindiɲ kos s endaŋ tespedespe four four dabas s endaŋ bay nuuxu asiɲ Daju Western Daju Dar Dadju Daju munɡun fida pida kodɔ s tɛ spɛ t moduk araŋ faktindi kosonda bistonda asiŋ Daju Western Daju Dar Sila Daju 1 uŋɡʊ n bidak kodos tiʃɛ t muduk ʔ aran ʔ aran faktindi koohanda bistanda asiŋ Daju Western Daju Dar Sila Daju 2 ʊ ŋɡʊ n bid ak kɔ d ɔs t ɪ ʃɛ ː8 mud uk aran fa8ɪ nd ɪ kɔ and a bɪ s8and a asːɪŋ Eastern Jebel Gaam Gaahmɡ Tabi 1 t aman d aaɡɡ ɔ dɔ ye e se aas aama n lit hand t e ld iɡɡ id iɡɡ ɔ dɔ lit eyes two id iɡ daaɡɡ lit eyes three id iɡ ye e se lit eyes four e seɡ di lit hands also Eastern Jebel Gaam Gaahmɡ Tabi 2 taman diɔk diak oda ʔoda yɛsu yɛzan ʌsumʌn tɛltɛk tɛldɛk tauduk idakʼdiak 5 2 kurbaiti idukʼʔoda 5 3 akaitɛn idukʼyɛsu 5 4 ʔasiɡdiReferences edit Guldemann Tom 2018 Historical linguistics and genealogical language classification in Africa In Guldemann Tom ed The Languages and Linguistics of Africa The World of Linguistics series Vol 11 Berlin De Gruyter Mouton pp 299 308 doi 10 1515 9783110421668 002 ISBN 978 3 11 042606 9 S2CID 133888593 Rilly Claude 2009 From the Yellow Nile to the Blue Nile The quest for water and the diffusion of Northern East Sudanic languages from the fourth to the first millennia BCE Paper presented at ECAS 2009 3rd European Conference on African Studies Panel 142 African waters water in Africa barriers paths and resources their impact on language literature and history of people in Leipzig 4 to 7 June 2009 George Starostin 2015 The Eastern Sudanic hypothesis tested through lexicostatistics current state of affairs Draft 1 0 Starostin Georgiy C 2014 Yazyki Afriki Opyt postroeniya leksikostatisticheskoj klassifikacii T 2 Vostochnosudanskie yazyki Languages of Africa an attempt at a lexicostatistical classification Volume 2 Eastern Sudanic languages Moscow Yazyki slavyanskoj kultury LRC Press 736 p Blench Roger 2019 Morphological evidence for the coherence of East Sudanic Paper submitted for a Special Issue of Dotawo Also presented at the 14th Nilo Saharan Linguistics Colloquium Department of African Studies University of Vienna 31 May 2019 Blench Roger 2023 In defence of Nilo Saharan Dimmendaal Gerrit J and Angelika Jakobi 2020 Eastern Sudanic In Vossen Rainer and Gerrit J Dimmendaal eds 2020 The Oxford Handbook of African Languages 392 407 Oxford Oxford University Press Chan Eugene 2019 The Nilo Saharan Language Phylum Numeral Systems of the World s Languages Bibliography edit nbsp Linguistics portal nbsp Languages portal Bender M Lionel 2000 Nilo Saharan In Bernd Heine and Derek Nurse eds African Languages An Introduction Cambridge University Press Bender M Lionel 1981 Some Nilo Saharan isoglosses In Thilo Schadeberg M L Bender eds Nilo Saharan Proceedings of the First Nilo Saharan Linguistics Colloquium Leiden Sept 8 10 1980 Dordrecht Foris Publications Temein languages permanent dead link Roger Blench 2007 Starostin George 2015 Yazyki Afriki Opyt postroeniya leksikostatisticheskoj klassifikacii Tom II Vostochnosudanskie yazyki The Languages of Africa The experience of building a lexiostatistical classification in Russian Vol II The Eastern Sudanic Languages Moscow Languages of Slavic culture ISBN 9785457890718 Starostin George 2015 Proto East Sudanic ʽtreeʼ on the East Sudanic tree 10th Annual Conference on Comparative Historical Linguistics in memory of Sergei Starostin Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eastern Sudanic languages amp oldid 1215519311, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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