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Farefare language

Farefare or Frafra, also known by the regional name of Gurenne (Gurene), is the language of the Frafra people of northern Ghana, particularly the Upper East Region, and southern Burkina Faso. It is a national language of Ghana, and is closely related to Dagbani and other languages of Northern Ghana, and also related to Mossi, also known as Mooré, the national language of Burkina Faso.

Farefare
Frafra
Native toGhana, Burkina Faso
EthnicityFrafra people
Native speakers
720,000[1] (2003)[2]
Niger–Congo?
Dialects
  • Gurenɛ
  • Nankani
  • Booni
Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-3gur
Glottologfare1241

Frafra consists of three principal dialects, Gurenɛ (also written Gurunɛ, Gudenne, Gurenne, Gudeni, Zuadeni), Nankani (Naane, Nankanse, Ninkare), and Boone. Nabit and Talni have been mistakenly reported to be Frafra dialects.[3]

Names

The general and accepted name for the language is Farefare or Frafra. The varieties in Ghana are usually called "Gurene", and those in Burkina-Faso are called "Ninkare".[4]

Orthography

The Frafra language uses the letters of the Latin alphabet except for c, j, q, x, and with the addition of ɛ, ɩ, ŋ, ɔ, and ʋ. The tilde is used for showing nasalization in Burkina Faso, but in Ghana it is shown using the letter n.[5] The two nasal vowels /ɛ̃/ and /ɔ̃/ are spelt with ẽ and õ respectively.[4] All long nasal vowels only get their tilde written on the first letter.

Acute, grave, circumflex, caron, and macron are sometimes used in grammar books to indicate tone, but not in general-purpose texts.[6] The apostrophe is used to indicate the glottal stop.[7]

Examples of Gurunɛ orthography
Sound Representation Example Meaning
/a/ a ya /ja/ houses
/a:/ aa gaarɛ /ga:ɹɛ/ a type of bean cake
/ɛ/ ɛ ɛkɛ /ɛkɛ/Northern to fly
/e/ e zoore /zo:ɹe:/ mountain/hill
/ɛ̃/ tẽŋa city
/ɪ/ ɩ taablɩ /ta:blɪ/ table (French borrowing)
/i/ i piika /pi:ka/ little
/ɔ/ ɔ ɔɔrɔ /ɔ:ɹɔ/ cold
/o/ o toma toma /to:.ma.to:.ma/ a greeting similar to "hi"
/ʊ/ ʋ teebʋl /te:bʊl/ table (English borrowing)
/u/ uu buulika /bu:lika/ morning

Phonology

Consonants

Frafra has a system of 17 phonemes (or 19, counting /ɣ/, an allophone of /g/, and /ɾ/, an allophone of /d/):[4]

The sound /ŋ/ appears in front of some words starting with /w/, leading them to change into the /j/ sound. /h/ only appears in loanwords, exclamations, and as an allophone of /f/. An example of both of these sound changes are weefo and yeho (both meaning "horse"). The only consonants Frafra words may end in are the two nasals /m/ and /n/.

Glottal stop

Glottal stops appear at the initial vowel of a word, but are not transcribed. Word-medially, vowel nasalization continues over the glottal stop. In rapid speech, the glottal stop is usually dropped, similar to how vowel hiatus gets dropped in Spanish.

Word medial glottal stops must be marked in writing.

Allophones

Allophones of /r/

[d] and [ɾ] are two phonetic realizations of the same phoneme. [d] occurs at the beginning of words, and [ɾ] is its counterpart everywhere else.

Allophones of /g/

[ɣ] is an allophone of /g/ that occurs after certain vowels. It is mostly written "g." Usage of the letter "ɣ" is quite rare.

Allophones of /j/

[ɲ] is an allophone of /j/ that occurs before a nasal vowel. It is always written as "y."

Sandhi

This section will describe all the morpho-phonological sandhi processes that affect Frafra.

Nasals

Nasal consonants undergo assimilation, coalescence, and elision.

Assimilation at Point of Articulation

Nasals assimilate to the point of articulation of the occlusive the proceed.

  • /m/ goes before /p/ and /b/
  • /n/ goes before /t/ and /d/
  • /ŋ/ goes before /k/
Coalescence

When a nasal is followed by /g/, the two consonants amalgamate.

  • /n/ + /g/ = /ŋ/

This rule does not apply to compound words (e.g. tẽŋgãnnɛ "sacred land") or loanwards (e.g. maŋgo "mango")

Elision

Nasals disappear when they go before /f/

  • /m/ + /f/ = /f/
  • /n/ + /f/ = /f/
Stops

Two voiced stops become their unvoiced foNorthernrm. Remember that [ɾ] is the word-medial allophone of /d/

  • /g/ + /g/ = /k/
  • /r/ + /r/ = /t/

Sonorants

Vibrant assimilation

Vibrant consonants, also called taps, assimilate to a preceding lateral or nasal.

  • /l/ + /r/ = /ll/
  • /n/ + /r/ = /nn/
  • /m/ + /r/ = either /nn/ or /mn/
Lateral assimilation
  • /n/ + /l/ = /nn/
  • /m/ + /l/ = /nn/
Combination of these processes

C designates any consonant, and N designates any nasal.

  • Cm + r = Cn
  • Cl + r = Cl

Vowels

Frafra has 9 oral vowels and 5 nasal vowels.

Front Central Back
lax tense lax tense
Close ɪ i, ĩ ʊ u, ũ
Mid ɛ, ɛ̃ e ɔ, ɔ̃ o
Open a, ã
Diphthongs

All Frafra vowels have a long form.

Vowel harmony

Like many Mande languages, Frafra features vowel harmony.[4] When suffixes are added to word roots, the vowel in the root selects whether the suffix will use the tense or lax form. The exception is suffixes ending in "-a" because /a/ is neutral in Frafra, meaning that it is only one form. Prefixes do not exist in Frafra.

Where all vowels must be in harmony

In disyllabic words, both vowels are always in harmony. The same applies in vowel sequences.

Mid vowels

The lax vowel -a in noun and verb endings will change the tense vowels /e/ and /o/ to lax vowels /ɛ/ and /ɔ/.

Close vowels

When a suffix's vowel is close, and stem's vowel is close and tense, it causes the suffix's vowel to become tense.

For example, the locative postposition "-ʋm" becomes "-um" after the vowels /i/, /ĩ/, /u/, and /ũ/.

  • pʋʋrɛ ("belly") > pʋʋrʋm ("inside the belly")
  • nifo ("eye") > nifum ("inside the eye")

However, tense vowels that are not close do not affect "ʋm". Therefore poore ("back") becomes poorʋm ("behind").

The particle "nɩ," which goes after a verbs to mark the incomplete aspect, becomes "ni" after /i/, /ĩ/, /u/, and /ũ/.

Grammar

Tone

Guren​ɛ marks a high and a low tone. Changes in tone have an impact on either the lexical or grammatical function of a particular word.[8]

Lexical Function

With low tones the word becomes a verb, whereas with high tones it is a noun.

vàlèŋà

vàlèŋà

„waist bead.“[8]

váléŋá

váléŋá

„spider“[8]

Grammatical Function

The low tone on the preverbal tense marker indicates future, while the high tone on the same element indicates aspect.

Átáŋá

Ataŋa

FUT

nyù

drink

kò'òm

water

lá.

DEF

Átáŋá wà nyù kò'òm lá.

Ataŋa FUT drink water DEF

„Ataŋa will drink the water.“[9]

Átáŋá

Ataŋa

ASP

nyù

drink

kò'òm

water

lá.

DEF

Átáŋá wá nyù kò'òm lá.

Ataŋa ASP drink water DEF

„Ataŋa definitely drank the water.“[9]

Noun Classes

Nouns in Gurunɛ have different "classes" with regard to plurals:

Frafra Plurals
Genre Class #s (sg./pl.) Singular Plural Examples Meaning
1st 1 / 2 -a -ba nẽra > nẽrba person > people
-dõma dɛɛma > dɛɛndõma

naba > na'adõma

yaaba > yaabdõma

in-law(s)

chief(s)

ancestor(s)

Loanwords ãnkɔra > ãnkɔrdõma

biki > bikidõma

nõtɩ > nõtɩdõma

sɛɛtɛ > sɛɛtɛdõma

water barrel(s) [Twi]

ballpoint pen(s) [French]

nut(s) [English]

shirt(s) [English]

2nd 3 / 4 -a -sɩ tɩa > tɩɩsɩ tree(s)
-ga yɩbga > yɩbsɩ younger sibling(s)
3rd 5 / 6 -go -ro boko > bogro

võogɔ > võorɔ

wɔbgɔ > wɔbrɔ

hole(s)

leaf > leaves

elephant(s)

-to deego > deto

zuugo > zuto

room(s) / hut(s) / house(s)

head(s)

-ko -gro bɔkɔ > bɔgrɔ shoulder(s)
-lgo -llo bakolgo > bakollo soothsayer's fetish(es)
-ŋo -nno Filippiŋɔ > Filippinno

sõŋɔ > sõnnɔ

Tɩntɩŋɔ > Tɩntɩnnɔ

island in the Philippines > The Philippines

mat(s)

one of the Netherlands > The Netherlands

4th 7/8 -le

(if the stem ends in /l/)

-a wille > wila

zelle > zɛla

branch(es)

egg(s)

-ne

(if the stem ends in /m/ or /n/)

bẽmnɛ > bẽma

dũnne > dũma

gɩgnɛ > gɩgma

kãnnɛ > kãna

mã'anɛ > mã'ana

yẽnnɛ > yẽna

calabash drum(s)

knee(s)

lion(s)

spear(s)

piece(s) of okra

tooth > teeth

-re busre > busa

dĩire > dĩa

gere > gɛa

kũure > kũa

loore > lɔa

nõorɛ > nõa

pʋʋrɛ > pʋa

sore > sɔa

sũure > sũa

tʋbrɛ > tʋba

yam(s)

forehead(s)

thigh(s)

hoe(s)

vehicle(s)

mouth(s)

belly > bellies

road(s) / trail(s)

heart(s)

ear(s)

-te

(if the stem ends in /r/)

tagtɛ > tagra

watɛ > wara

watɛ > wara

sandal(s)

brick(s)

cloud(s)

5th

(stem vowels change)

9/10 -fo -i lagfɔ > ligri

mu'ufo > mũi

naafɔ - niigi

nifo > nini

weefo/yeho > wiiri/yiri

yoofo > yũuni

cowry shell > money

rice grain > rice

bovine(s)

eye(s)

horse(s)

shea nut(s)

- sĩfo > sĩm

zũfo > zũma

bee(s)

fish(es)

6th

(mostly animals and diminutives)

11/12 -la -nto bʋdibla > bʋdimto

bʋtɩla > bʋtɩtɔ

kɩɩla > kɩɩntɔ

niila > niinto

pɩɩla > pɩɩntɔ

pugla > pugunto

boy(s)

billy goat(s)

guinea fowl(s)

chick(s)

lamb(s)

girl(s)

(No distinction between plural and singular) Class 13 -bo kɩ'ɩbɔ

bo'obo / bɔ'a

soap

gift

Uncountable nouns Class 14 -m bɛglʋm

bĩ'isũm

dãam

dabeem

dõndʋ'ʋrʋm

gẽem

ɩɩlʋm

kaam

ko'om

kɔm

kũm

mẽelʋm

nõŋlʋm

nõtõorʋm

tɩɩm

valʋm

yaarʋm

yɛm

zẽem

zɩɩm

zom

mud

breastmilk

beer, alcohol

fear

urine

sleep

milk

oil

water

hunger

death

dew

love

saliva

medicine, remedy

shame

salt

intelligence

potash

blood

flour

Pronouns[8]

Personal Pronouns

Person Subject/Possessor Object Emphatic
SG PL SG PL SG PL
1st ma/n tu ma tu mam tumam
2nd fu ya fu ya fum yamam
3rd a ba e ba eŋa bamam

Emphatic Pronouns

Only emphatic pronouns can appear in focus positions, whereas all other pronouns cannot appear in those positions. Emphatic pronouns are used in exclusive contexts, in which the speaker indicates that only one thing is true and not the other.

Mam

1SG.EMPH

ti

FOC

a

1SG

dikɛ

take

bo.

give

Mam ti a dikɛ bo.

1SG.EMPH FOC 1SG take give

„It is me that he gave it to.“[8]

Yamam

2PL.EMPH

n

FOC

sagum

destroy

loore

lorry

lá.

DEF

Yamam n sagum loore lá.

2PL.EMPH FOC destroy lorry DEF

„It is you guys (not us) who destroyed the lorry.“[8]

Reciprocal Pronoun

The reciprocal pronoun is taaba and occurs postverbally.

Budaa

man

DEF

pɔka

woman

DEF

nɔŋɛ

love

taaba

RECP

mɛ.

FOC

Budaa lá pɔka lá nɔŋɛ taaba mɛ.

man DEF woman DEF love RECP FOC

„The man and the woman love each other.“[8]

Reflexive Pronouns

To form a reflexive pronoun in Gurenɛ the morphem -miŋa for singular or -misi for plural is attached to a particular personal pronoun. While in other Gur languages, the reflexive morphem is not sensitive to number, in Gurenɛ there exist two forms, one for each number.

Person Reflexive Morphem SG Personal Pronoun SG Reflexive Pronoun SG Reflexive Morphem PL Personal Pronoun PL Reflexive Pronoun PL
1st -miŋa n nmiŋa -misi tu tumisi
2nd -miŋa fu fumiŋa -misi ya yamisi
3rd -miŋa a amiŋa -misi ba bamisi

Amaa

but

mami

1SG

daa

PST

guri

hold.PST

nmiŋa.

1SG.REFL

Amaa mami daa guri nmiŋa.

but 1SG PST hold.PST 1SG.REFL

„But I restrained myself.“[8]

Ba

3PL

ka

NEG

le

again

ŋmɛ

beat

bamisi.

3PL.REFL

Ba ka le ŋmɛ bamisi.

3PL NEG again beat 3PL.REFL

„They will not beat themselves again.“[8]

Relative Pronouns

There are two relative pronouns, ti and n. The former relativizes subjects, while the latter is used to relativize objects. Both pronouns are not sensitive to number or animacy, while this is the case in other Gur languages such as Dagbani for instance.

Budaa

man

DEF

n

REL

wa'am

come

kalam

here

de

COP

FOC

ma

1SG

sɔ.

father

Budaa lá n wa'am kalam de là ma sɔ.

man DEF REL come here COP FOC 1SG father

„The man who came here is my father.“[8]

Budaa

man

DEF

ti

REL

fu

2SG

nyɛ

see

FOC

de

COP

FOCɛ

ma

1SG

sɔ.

father

Budaa lá ti fu nyɛ là de là ma sɔ.

man DEF REL 2SG see FOC COP FOCɛ 1SG father

„The man that you saw is my father.“[8]

Interrogative Pronouns

Interrogative pronouns can either occur sentence-initially or sentence-finally.

Ani

who

n

FOC

di

eat.PFV

dia

food

lá?

DEF

Ani n di dia lá?

who FOC eat.PFV food DEF

„Who ate the food?“[8]

Sukuu

school

kɔma

children

DEF

siŋɛ

do

FOC

?

where

Sukuu kɔma lá siŋɛ là ?

school children DEF do FOC where

„Where did the students go?“[8]

Beni

what

dia

food

ti

that

ba

3PL

kɔɔsa

sell

da'a?

market

Beni dia ti ba kɔɔsa da'a?

what food that 3PL sell market

„What food are they selling at the market?“[8]

Naafu

cow

DEF

de

COP

FOC

alɛ?

how.much

Naafu lá de là alɛ?

cow DEF COP FOC how.much

„How much is the price of the cow?“[8]

Demonstrative Pronouns

Each demonstrative pronoun refers to a single noun class.

Number Gurenɛ Gloss
SG ina (CL1) that/this
kana (CL4) that/this
dina (CL5) that/this
kuna (CL7) that/this
PL bana (CL2) these/those
sina (CL4) these/those
tuna (CL8) these/those
buna (CL9) these/those

Syntax

Word Order

The word order in Gurenɛ is strictly SVO.[8]

N

1SG

wan

FUT

kule

go.home

beere.

tomorrow

N wan kule beere.

1SG FUT go.home tomorrow

„I will go home tomorrow.“[8]

Dɔgeta

doctor

DEF

wan

FUT

lu

inject

ma.

1SG

Dɔgeta lá wan lu ma.

doctor DEF FUT inject 1SG

„The doctor will inject me.“[8]

À

3SG

bo

give

ma

1SG

ligeri

money

lá.

DEF

À bo ma ligeri lá.

3SG give 1SG money DEF

„S/he gave me the money.“[8]

Verb Phrase

The verb phrase (VP) consists of pre- and postverbal particles surrounding the verb. Preverbal particles encode aspect, tense, negation, and mood, such as imperative and conditional. Postverbal particles also encode aspect and tense, but in addition to that they can also encode focus. The order of particles within the VP is strictly organized as shown below. Moreover, the maximal amount of pre- and postverbal particles is also strictly defined. There can be at maximum five preverbal and two postverbal particles within one clause in Gurenɛ.

Time > Tense > Conditional > Aspectual > Future > Negation > Emphatic > Epistemic > Purpose > Verb > Tense > Focus/Affirmative/Completive/Directional[9]

Nɛreba

people

DEF

zaamtext1

yesterday

nyaa2

then

k​ɔ'​ɔm3

just

sirum4

surely

ta5

in.order

iŋɛ

do

ba'asum1

certainly

gaŋɛ

more

2.

AFF

Nɛreba lá zaamtext1 nyaa2 k​ɔ'​ɔm3 sirum4 ta5 iŋɛ ba'asum1 gaŋɛ mɛ2.

people DEF yesterday then just surely in.order do certainly more AFF

„The people yesterday certainly did more than what was just expected.“[9]

Particles

There are a lot of particles in Gurenɛ, such that the total number is not fully clear.[10] The following table provides an overview of the most common particles.[9]

Aspect Gurenɛ
now, after this nyaa
in a determined way wa
intention ta
an action/event still lasts naŋ
only kɔ'ɔm
even pugum
again le
already pìlum
just k​ɔ'​ɔm
rather tugum
necessairly yɛrum
instead yi
ever tabelɛ
as usual ya'am
habitual
Tense
past daa
two days ago daarɛ
three days ago datata
years ago yuum
the next day dagi
Imperative
must ta
need wa
Conditional
if san

Verb

The verb in Gurenɛ consists of an obligatory stem or root, that can take one or more morphems.[9] Verbs appear either in the perfective or imperfective form, depending on its aspect. The perfective expresses actions in the present, whereas the imperfective denotes actions in the past or progressive.[11]

Root/Stem/Infinitive Perfective -ri Imperfective -ra
(single) closed event open event
Gurenɛ Gloss follows Object/Adverb follows Pronominal
nyu drink nyuuri nyuura
da' buy da'ari da'ara
lebe return leberi lebera
dikɛ take dikɛri dikɛra
pagesɛ imitate pagesɛri pagesɛra
pa'alɛ teach pa'ali pa'ala
di eat diti dita
darɛ disturb dati data
parɛ be a lot pati pata
kiŋɛ go kini kina
siŋɛ walk sini sina
sigum come down sigeni sigena

Question Formation

There are several ways of forming a question in Gurenɛ, but importantly the strict word order SVO is always to obey.

Ex situ

In subject questions the question word occurs as the first element of the clause and can either function as the subject or as the agent of the clause.

Ani

who

n

FOC

tum?

work.PFV

Ani n tum?

who FOC work.PFV

„Who worked?“[10]

Ani

who

n

FOC

tun-i?

work-IPFV

Ani n tun-i?

who FOC work-IPFV

„Who is working?“[10]

In situ

In general, questions are formed by raising intonation of the final tone. Questions without an explicit question word have a clause-final question marker .

2SG

nyɛ

see

ʔí-ì?

3SG-Q

Fʊ nyɛ ʔí-ì?

2SG see 3SG-Q

„Did you see him?“[11]

2SG

n

FOC

nyɛ

see

ʔí.

3SG

Fʊ n nyɛ ʔí.

2SG FOC see 3SG

„You saw him.“[11]

Embedded

Questions can be embedded and are then preceded by the complementizer .

1SG

m

FOC

sokè

ask

ʔì

3SG

SUBR

3SG

3SG

nyɛ

see

Ádʊŋɔ.

Adongo

Má m sokè ʔì tí 3SG nyɛ Ádʊŋɔ.

1SG FOC ask 3SG SUBR 3SG see Adongo

„I asked him whether he had seen Adongo.“[11]

1SG

m

FOC

sokè

ask

ʔì

3SG

lá-à

TOP-Q

ánɪ

whom

SUBR

à

3SG

nyɛ-ɛ`.

see-Q

Má m sokè ʔì lá-à ánɪ tì à nyɛ-ɛ`.

1SG FOC ask 3SG TOP-Q whom SUBR 3SG see-Q

„I asked him whom he saw.“[11]

Multiple Questions

Question can also be formed by more than one question word. In these cases one question word occurs ex situ and the other(s) in situ. Again, a question word can only appear ex situ, if it replaces the subject or agent of the clause.

Ani

who

n

FOC

da

buy.PFV

(*là)

FOC

beni?

what

Ani n da (*là) beni?

who FOC buy.PFV FOC what

„Who bought what?“[10]

*Beni

what

ti

FOC

ani

who

da?

buy.PFV

*Beni ti ani da?

what FOC who buy.PFV

„*What bought who?“[10]

Napari

Napari

*(n)

FOC

da

buy.PFV

yire.

house

Napari *(n) da yire.

Napari FOC buy.PFV house

„Napari bought a house..“[10]


Long distance extraction

Question words in Gurenɛ can also cross clause boundaries, such that they originated in the embedded clause and have been fronted to the clause-initial position.

Beni

what

ti

FOC

Ama

Ama

soke

ask

ti

SUBR

John

John

k​õregɛ

slaughter

ya

COMPL

*(là).

FOC

Beni ti Ama soke ti John k​õregɛ ya *(là).

what FOC Ama ask SUBR John slaughter COMPL FOC

„What did Ama ask that John slaughtered?“[10]

Beni

what

ti

FOC

Ama

Ama

spoke

ask

ti

SUBR

John

John

k​õregɛ-ri/-*ra

slaughter-IPFV

ya

COMPL

*(là)?

FOC

Beni ti Ama spoke ti John k​õregɛ-ri/-*ra ya *(là)?

what FOC Ama ask SUBR John slaughter-IPFV COMPL FOC

„What did Ama ask that John is slaughtering?“[10]

Beni

what

ti

FOC

Ama

Ama

bɔta

want

ti

SUBR

John

John

k​õregɛ?

slaughter

Beni ti Ama bɔta ti John k​õregɛ?

what FOC Ama want SUBR John slaughter

„What did Ama ask that John slaughtered?“[10]


Greetings

Gurunɛ Phonetic English
Bulika /bulika/ morning (Greeting in the morning)
Wuntɛɛŋa /wʊn.tɛ:.ŋa/ sun (Greeting around noon)
Zaanuurɛ /za:jʋɻɛ/ Evening (Greeting in the evening)
Zaare /za:r̝e/ Welcome
Tooma Tooma /to:.ma.to:.ma/ a greeting similar to "Hello" (every time of the day)
Nambaa /ˈnaːm.ba:/ Response to these greetings

Geography

Continents
English Gurunɛ
Africa Afrika
America Amerika
Antarctica Antartika
Asia Asia
Australia Australia
Europe Europa
Oceania Okeania

Solemitẽŋa means "land of the white man" and is used to refer to all non-African countries.

Soleminɛ is theoretically referring to all non-African languages, however it is only used to refer to English.

Notes

  1. ^ Allophone of /g/ between lax vowels and is rarely represented in writing.

References

  1. ^ Excluding ?30,000 Nabit and ?100,000 Talni
  2. ^ Farefare at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  3. ^ ISO change request
  4. ^ a b c d Niggli (2007). "Equisse grammaticale du ninkãrɛ au Burkina Faso" (PDF). SIL International Burkina Faso. p. 14. Retrieved 24 November 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  5. ^ Niggli 2007, p. 85.
  6. ^ Niggli 2007, p. 84.
  7. ^ Niggli 2007, p. 94.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Bodomo, Adams; Abubakari, Hasiyatu; Issah, Samuel Alhassan (2020). Handbook of the Mabia Languages of West Africa. Glienicke: Galda Verlag.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Atintono, Samuel (2011). Verb Morphology: Phrase structure in a Gur Language (Gurenɛ). Saarbrücken: Lambert Academic Publishing.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i "The VP-periphery in Mabia languages | Gurene". The VP-periphery in Mabia languages. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
  11. ^ a b c d e Kropp-Dakubu, M.E. (2009). Parlons farefari (gurenè): langue et culture de Bolgatanga (Ghana) et ses environs. Paris: L`Harmattan.

Bibliography

  • Atintono, Samuel (2011). Verb Morphology: Phrase structure in a Gur Language (Gurenɛ). Saarbrücken: Lambert Academic Publishing.
  • Bodomo, Adams, Hasiyatu Abubakari & Samuel Alhassan Issah (2020). Handbook of the Mabia Languages of West Africa. Glienicke: Galda Verlag
  • Kropp-Dakubu,M.E., S. Awinkene Antintono, and E. Avea Nsoh, A Gurenɛ–English Dictionary and accompanying English–Gurenɛ Glossary
  • Kropp-Dakubu, M.E. (2009). Parlons farefari (gurenè): langue et culture de Bolgatanga (Ghana) et ses environs. Paris: L`Harmattan
  • Niggli, Idda; Niggli, Urs (2007). De la phonologie à l'orthographe : Le ninkãrɛ au Burkina Faso. SIL.
  • Ninkare Frafra Dictionary

External links

  • "Ninkare | SIL Burkina Faso". sil-burkina.org. Retrieved 2021-07-29.
  • The VP-periphery in Mabia languages

farefare, language, farefare, frafra, also, known, regional, name, gurenne, gurene, language, frafra, people, northern, ghana, particularly, upper, east, region, southern, burkina, faso, national, language, ghana, closely, related, dagbani, other, languages, n. Farefare or Frafra also known by the regional name of Gurenne Gurene is the language of the Frafra people of northern Ghana particularly the Upper East Region and southern Burkina Faso It is a national language of Ghana and is closely related to Dagbani and other languages of Northern Ghana and also related to Mossi also known as Moore the national language of Burkina Faso FarefareFrafraNative toGhana Burkina FasoEthnicityFrafra peopleNative speakers720 000 1 2003 2 Language familyNiger Congo Atlantic CongoGurNorthernOti VoltaMoore DagbaniMooreFarefareDialectsGurenɛ Nankani BooniWriting systemLatinLanguage codesISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code gur class extiw title iso639 3 gur gur a Glottologfare1241Frafra consists of three principal dialects Gurenɛ also written Gurunɛ Gudenne Gurenne Gudeni Zuadeni Nankani Naane Nankanse Ninkare and Boone Nabit and Talni have been mistakenly reported to be Frafra dialects 3 Contents 1 Names 2 Orthography 3 Phonology 3 1 Consonants 3 1 1 Glottal stop 3 1 2 Allophones 3 1 2 1 Allophones of r 3 1 2 2 Allophones of g 3 1 2 3 Allophones of j 3 1 3 Sandhi 3 1 3 1 Nasals 3 1 3 1 1 Assimilation at Point of Articulation 3 1 3 1 2 Coalescence 3 1 3 1 3 Elision 3 1 3 2 Stops 3 1 4 Sonorants 3 1 4 1 Vibrant assimilation 3 1 4 2 Lateral assimilation 3 1 4 3 Combination of these processes 3 2 Vowels 3 2 1 Vowel harmony 3 2 1 1 Where all vowels must be in harmony 3 2 1 2 Mid vowels 3 2 1 3 Close vowels 4 Grammar 4 1 Tone 4 1 1 Lexical Function 4 1 2 Grammatical Function 4 2 Noun Classes 4 3 Pronouns 8 4 3 1 Personal Pronouns 4 3 2 Emphatic Pronouns 4 3 3 Reciprocal Pronoun 4 3 4 Reflexive Pronouns 4 3 5 Relative Pronouns 4 3 6 Interrogative Pronouns 4 3 7 Demonstrative Pronouns 5 Syntax 5 1 Word Order 5 2 Verb Phrase 5 2 1 Particles 5 2 2 Verb 5 3 Question Formation 5 3 1 Ex situ 5 3 2 In situ 5 3 3 Embedded 5 3 4 Multiple Questions 5 3 5 Long distance extraction 6 Greetings 7 Geography 8 Notes 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksNames EditThe general and accepted name for the language is Farefare or Frafra The varieties in Ghana are usually called Gurene and those in Burkina Faso are called Ninkare 4 Orthography EditThe Frafra language uses the letters of the Latin alphabet except for c j q x and with the addition of ɛ ɩ ŋ ɔ and ʋ The tilde is used for showing nasalization in Burkina Faso but in Ghana it is shown using the letter n 5 The two nasal vowels ɛ and ɔ are spelt with ẽ and o respectively 4 All long nasal vowels only get their tilde written on the first letter Acute grave circumflex caron and macron are sometimes used in grammar books to indicate tone but not in general purpose texts 6 The apostrophe is used to indicate the glottal stop 7 Examples of Gurunɛ orthography Sound Representation Example Meaning a a ya ja houses a aa gaarɛ ga ɹɛ a type of bean cake ɛ ɛ ɛkɛ ɛkɛ Northern to fly e e zoore zo ɹe mountain hill ɛ ẽ tẽŋa city ɪ ɩ taablɩ ta blɪ table French borrowing i i piika pi ka little ɔ ɔ ɔɔrɔ ɔ ɹɔ cold o o toma toma to ma to ma a greeting similar to hi ʊ ʋ teebʋl te bʊl table English borrowing u uu buulika bu lika morningPhonology EditConsonants Edit Frafra has a system of 17 phonemes or 19 counting ɣ an allophone of g and ɾ an allophone of d 4 Labial Alveolar Velar GlottalNasal m n ŋPlosive fortis p t k ʔlenis b d ɡTap ɾ Fricative fortis f s hlenis v z ɣ a Approximant w jThe sound ŋ appears in front of some words starting with w leading them to change into the j sound h only appears in loanwords exclamations and as an allophone of f An example of both of these sound changes are weefo and yeho both meaning horse The only consonants Frafra words may end in are the two nasals m and n Glottal stop Edit Glottal stops appear at the initial vowel of a word but are not transcribed Word medially vowel nasalization continues over the glottal stop In rapid speech the glottal stop is usually dropped similar to how vowel hiatus gets dropped in Spanish Word medial glottal stops must be marked in writing Allophones Edit Allophones of r Edit d and ɾ are two phonetic realizations of the same phoneme d occurs at the beginning of words and ɾ is its counterpart everywhere else Allophones of g Edit ɣ is an allophone of g that occurs after certain vowels It is mostly written g Usage of the letter ɣ is quite rare Allophones of j Edit ɲ is an allophone of j that occurs before a nasal vowel It is always written as y Sandhi Edit This section will describe all the morpho phonological sandhi processes that affect Frafra Nasals Edit Nasal consonants undergo assimilation coalescence and elision Assimilation at Point of Articulation Edit Nasals assimilate to the point of articulation of the occlusive the proceed m goes before p and b n goes before t and d ŋ goes before k Coalescence Edit When a nasal is followed by g the two consonants amalgamate n g ŋ This rule does not apply to compound words e g tẽŋgannɛ sacred land or loanwards e g maŋgo mango Elision Edit Nasals disappear when they go before f m f f n f f Stops Edit Two voiced stops become their unvoiced foNorthernrm Remember that ɾ is the word medial allophone of d g g k r r t Sonorants Edit Vibrant assimilation Edit Vibrant consonants also called taps assimilate to a preceding lateral or nasal l r ll n r nn m r either nn or mn Lateral assimilation Edit n l nn m l nn Combination of these processes Edit C designates any consonant and N designates any nasal Cm r Cn Cl r ClVowels Edit Frafra has 9 oral vowels and 5 nasal vowels Front Central Backlax tense lax tenseClose ɪ i ĩ ʊ u ũMid ɛ ɛ e ɔ ɔ oOpen a aDiphthongsAll Frafra vowels have a long form Vowel harmony Edit Like many Mande languages Frafra features vowel harmony 4 When suffixes are added to word roots the vowel in the root selects whether the suffix will use the tense or lax form The exception is suffixes ending in a because a is neutral in Frafra meaning that it is only one form Prefixes do not exist in Frafra Where all vowels must be in harmony Edit In disyllabic words both vowels are always in harmony The same applies in vowel sequences Mid vowels Edit The lax vowel a in noun and verb endings will change the tense vowels e and o to lax vowels ɛ and ɔ Close vowels Edit When a suffix s vowel is close and stem s vowel is close and tense it causes the suffix s vowel to become tense For example the locative postposition ʋm becomes um after the vowels i ĩ u and ũ pʋʋrɛ belly gt pʋʋrʋm inside the belly nifo eye gt nifum inside the eye However tense vowels that are not close do not affect ʋm Therefore poore back becomes poorʋm behind The particle nɩ which goes after a verbs to mark the incomplete aspect becomes ni after i ĩ u and ũ Grammar EditTone Edit Guren ɛ marks a high and a low tone Changes in tone have an impact on either the lexical or grammatical function of a particular word 8 Lexical Function Edit With low tones the word becomes a verb whereas with high tones it is a noun valeŋavaleŋa waist bead 8 valeŋavaleŋa spider 8 Grammatical Function Edit The low tone on the preverbal tense marker wa indicates future while the high tone on the same element indicates aspect AtaŋaAtaŋawaFUTnyudrinkko omwaterla DEFAtaŋa wa nyu ko om la Ataŋa FUT drink water DEF Ataŋa will drink the water 9 AtaŋaAtaŋawaASPnyudrinkko omwaterla DEFAtaŋa wa nyu ko om la Ataŋa ASP drink water DEF Ataŋa definitely drank the water 9 Noun Classes Edit Nouns in Gurunɛ have different classes with regard to plurals Frafra Plurals Genre Class s sg pl Singular Plural Examples Meaning1st 1 2 a ba nẽra gt nẽrba person gt people doma dɛɛma gt dɛɛndoma naba gt na adomayaaba gt yaabdoma in law s chief s ancestor s Loanwords ankɔra gt ankɔrdoma biki gt bikidomanotɩ gt notɩdomasɛɛtɛ gt sɛɛtɛdoma water barrel s Twi ballpoint pen s French nut s English shirt s English 2nd 3 4 a sɩ tɩa gt tɩɩsɩ tree s ga yɩbga gt yɩbsɩ younger sibling s 3rd 5 6 go ro boko gt bogro voogɔ gt voorɔwɔbgɔ gt wɔbrɔ hole s leaf gt leaveselephant s to deego gt deto zuugo gt zuto room s hut s house s head s ko gro bɔkɔ gt bɔgrɔ shoulder s lgo llo bakolgo gt bakollo soothsayer s fetish es ŋo nno Filippiŋɔ gt Filippinno soŋɔ gt sonnɔTɩntɩŋɔ gt Tɩntɩnnɔ island in the Philippines gt The Philippines mat s one of the Netherlands gt The Netherlands4th 7 8 le if the stem ends in l a wille gt wila zelle gt zɛla branch es egg s ne if the stem ends in m or n bẽmnɛ gt bẽma dũnne gt dũmagɩgnɛ gt gɩgmakannɛ gt kanama anɛ gt ma anayẽnnɛ gt yẽna calabash drum s knee s lion s spear s piece s of okratooth gt teeth re busre gt busa dĩire gt dĩagere gt gɛakũure gt kũaloore gt lɔanoorɛ gt noapʋʋrɛ gt pʋasore gt sɔasũure gt sũatʋbrɛ gt tʋba yam s forehead s thigh s hoe s vehicle s mouth s belly gt belliesroad s trail s heart s ear s te if the stem ends in r tagtɛ gt tagra watɛ gt warawatɛ gt wara sandal s brick s cloud s 5th stem vowels change 9 10 fo i lagfɔ gt ligri mu ufo gt mũinaafɔ niiginifo gt niniweefo yeho gt wiiri yiriyoofo gt yũuni cowry shell gt money rice grain gt ricebovine s eye s horse s shea nut s sĩfo gt sĩm zũfo gt zũma bee s fish es 6th mostly animals and diminutives 11 12 la nto bʋdibla gt bʋdimto bʋtɩla gt bʋtɩtɔkɩɩla gt kɩɩntɔniila gt niintopɩɩla gt pɩɩntɔpugla gt pugunto boy s billy goat s guinea fowl s chick s lamb s girl s No distinction between plural and singular Class 13 bo kɩ ɩbɔ bo obo bɔ a soap giftUncountable nouns Class 14 m bɛglʋm bĩ isũmdaamdabeemdondʋ ʋrʋmgẽemɩɩlʋmkaamko omkɔmkũmmẽelʋmnoŋlʋmnotoorʋmtɩɩmvalʋmyaarʋmyɛmzẽemzɩɩmzom mud breastmilkbeer alcoholfearurinesleepmilkoilwaterhungerdeathdewlovesalivamedicine remedyshamesaltintelligencepotashbloodflourPronouns 8 Edit Personal Pronouns Edit Person Subject Possessor Object EmphaticSG PL SG PL SG PL1st ma n tu ma tu mam tumam2nd fu ya fu ya fum yamam3rd a ba e ba eŋa bamamEmphatic Pronouns Edit Only emphatic pronouns can appear in focus positions whereas all other pronouns cannot appear in those positions Emphatic pronouns are used in exclusive contexts in which the speaker indicates that only one thing is true and not the other Mam1SG EMPHtiFOCa1SGdikɛtakebo giveMam ti a dikɛ bo 1SG EMPH FOC 1SG take give It is me that he gave it to 8 Yamam2PL EMPHnFOCsagumdestroyloorelorryla DEFYamam n sagum loore la 2PL EMPH FOC destroy lorry DEF It is you guys not us who destroyed the lorry 8 Reciprocal Pronoun Edit The reciprocal pronoun is taaba and occurs postverbally BudaamanlaDEFpɔkawomanlaDEFnɔŋɛlovetaabaRECPmɛ FOCBudaa la pɔka la nɔŋɛ taaba mɛ man DEF woman DEF love RECP FOC The man and the woman love each other 8 Reflexive Pronouns Edit To form a reflexive pronoun in Gurenɛ the morphem miŋa for singular or misi for plural is attached to a particular personal pronoun While in other Gur languages the reflexive morphem is not sensitive to number in Gurenɛ there exist two forms one for each number Person Reflexive Morphem SG Personal Pronoun SG Reflexive Pronoun SG Reflexive Morphem PL Personal Pronoun PL Reflexive Pronoun PL1st miŋa n nmiŋa misi tu tumisi2nd miŋa fu fumiŋa misi ya yamisi3rd miŋa a amiŋa misi ba bamisiAmaabutmami1SGdaaPSTgurihold PSTnmiŋa 1SG REFLAmaa mami daa guri nmiŋa but 1SG PST hold PST 1SG REFL But I restrained myself 8 Ba3PLkaNEGleagainŋmɛbeatbamisi 3PL REFLBa ka le ŋmɛ bamisi 3PL NEG again beat 3PL REFL They will not beat themselves again 8 Relative Pronouns Edit There are two relative pronouns ti and n The former relativizes subjects while the latter is used to relativize objects Both pronouns are not sensitive to number or animacy while this is the case in other Gur languages such as Dagbani for instance BudaamanlaDEFnRELwa amcomekalamheredeCOPlaFOCma1SGsɔ fatherBudaa la n wa am kalam de la ma sɔ man DEF REL come here COP FOC 1SG father The man who came here is my father 8 BudaamanlaDEFtiRELfu2SGnyɛseelaFOCdeCOPlaFOCɛma1SGsɔ fatherBudaa la ti fu nyɛ la de la ma sɔ man DEF REL 2SG see FOC COP FOCɛ 1SG father The man that you saw is my father 8 Interrogative Pronouns Edit Interrogative pronouns can either occur sentence initially or sentence finally AniwhonFOCdieat PFVdiafoodla DEFAni n di dia la who FOC eat PFV food DEF Who ate the food 8 SukuuschoolkɔmachildrenlaDEFsiŋɛdolaFOCbɛ whereSukuu kɔma la siŋɛ la bɛ school children DEF do FOC where Where did the students go 8 Beniwhatdiafoodtithatba3PLkɔɔsasellda a marketBeni dia ti ba kɔɔsa da a what food that 3PL sell market What food are they selling at the market 8 NaafucowlaDEFdeCOPlaFOCalɛ how muchNaafu la de la alɛ cow DEF COP FOC how much How much is the price of the cow 8 Demonstrative Pronouns Edit Each demonstrative pronoun refers to a single noun class Number Gurenɛ GlossSG ina CL1 that thiskana CL4 that thisdina CL5 that thiskuna CL7 that thisPL bana CL2 these thosesina CL4 these thosetuna CL8 these thosebuna CL9 these thoseSyntax EditWord Order Edit The word order in Gurenɛ is strictly SVO 8 N1SGwanFUTkulego homebeere tomorrowN wan kule beere 1SG FUT go home tomorrow I will go home tomorrow 8 DɔgetadoctorlaDEFwanFUTluinjectma 1SGDɔgeta la wan lu ma doctor DEF FUT inject 1SG The doctor will inject me 8 A3SGbogivema1SGligerimoneyla DEFA bo ma ligeri la 3SG give 1SG money DEF S he gave me the money 8 Verb Phrase Edit The verb phrase VP consists of pre and postverbal particles surrounding the verb Preverbal particles encode aspect tense negation and mood such as imperative and conditional Postverbal particles also encode aspect and tense but in addition to that they can also encode focus The order of particles within the VP is strictly organized as shown below Moreover the maximal amount of pre and postverbal particles is also strictly defined There can be at maximum five preverbal and two postverbal particles within one clause in Gurenɛ Time gt Tense gt Conditional gt Aspectual gt Future gt Negation gt Emphatic gt Epistemic gt Purpose gt Verb gt Tense gt Focus Affirmative Completive Directional 9 NɛrebapeoplelaDEFzaamtext1yesterdaynyaa2thenk ɔ ɔm3justsirum4surelyta5in orderiŋɛdoba asum1certainlygaŋɛmoremɛ2 AFFNɛreba la zaamtext1 nyaa2 k ɔ ɔm3 sirum4 ta5 iŋɛ ba asum1 gaŋɛ mɛ2 people DEF yesterday then just surely in order do certainly more AFF The people yesterday certainly did more than what was just expected 9 Particles Edit There are a lot of particles in Gurenɛ such that the total number is not fully clear 10 The following table provides an overview of the most common particles 9 Aspect Gurenɛnow after this nyaain a determined way waintention taan action event still lasts naŋonly kɔ ɔmeven pugumagain lealready pilumjust k ɔ ɔmrather tugumnecessairly yɛruminstead yiever tabelɛas usual ya amhabitual naTensepast daatwo days ago daarɛthree days ago datatayears ago yuumthe next day dagiImperativemust taneed waConditionalif sanVerb Edit The verb in Gurenɛ consists of an obligatory stem or root that can take one or more morphems 9 Verbs appear either in the perfective or imperfective form depending on its aspect The perfective expresses actions in the present whereas the imperfective denotes actions in the past or progressive 11 Root Stem Infinitive Perfective ri Imperfective ra single closed event open eventGurenɛ Gloss follows Object Adverb follows Pronominalnyu drink nyuuri nyuurada buy da ari da aralebe return leberi leberadikɛ take dikɛri dikɛrapagesɛ imitate pagesɛri pagesɛrapa alɛ teach pa ali pa aladi eat diti ditadarɛ disturb dati dataparɛ be a lot pati patakiŋɛ go kini kinasiŋɛ walk sini sinasigum come down sigeni sigenaQuestion Formation Edit There are several ways of forming a question in Gurenɛ but importantly the strict word order SVO is always to obey Ex situ Edit In subject questions the question word occurs as the first element of the clause and can either function as the subject or as the agent of the clause AniwhonFOCtum work PFVAni n tum who FOC work PFV Who worked 10 AniwhonFOCtun i work IPFVAni n tun i who FOC work IPFV Who is working 10 In situ Edit In general questions are formed by raising intonation of the final tone Questions without an explicit question word have a clause final question marker i Fʊ2SGnyɛseeʔi i 3SG QFʊ nyɛ ʔi i 2SG see 3SG Q Did you see him 11 Fʊ2SGnFOCnyɛseeʔi 3SGFʊ n nyɛ ʔi 2SG FOC see 3SG You saw him 11 Embedded Edit Questions can be embedded and are then preceded by the complementizer ti Ma1SGmFOCsokeaskʔi3SGtiSUBR3SG3SGnyɛseeAdʊŋɔ AdongoMa m soke ʔi ti 3SG nyɛ Adʊŋɔ 1SG FOC ask 3SG SUBR 3SG see Adongo I asked him whether he had seen Adongo 11 Ma1SGmFOCsokeaskʔi3SGla aTOP QanɪwhomtiSUBRa3SGnyɛ ɛ see QMa m soke ʔi la a anɪ ti a nyɛ ɛ 1SG FOC ask 3SG TOP Q whom SUBR 3SG see Q I asked him whom he saw 11 Multiple Questions Edit Question can also be formed by more than one question word In these cases one question word occurs ex situ and the other s in situ Again a question word can only appear ex situ if it replaces the subject or agent of the clause AniwhonFOCdabuy PFV la FOCbeni whatAni n da la beni who FOC buy PFV FOC what Who bought what 10 BeniwhattiFOCaniwhoda buy PFV Beni ti ani da what FOC who buy PFV What bought who 10 NapariNapari n FOCdabuy PFVyire houseNapari n da yire Napari FOC buy PFV house Napari bought a house 10 Long distance extraction Edit Question words in Gurenɛ can also cross clause boundaries such that they originated in the embedded clause and have been fronted to the clause initial position BeniwhattiFOCAmaAmasokeasktiSUBRJohnJohnk oregɛslaughteryaCOMPL la FOCBeni ti Ama soke ti John k oregɛ ya la what FOC Ama ask SUBR John slaughter COMPL FOC What did Ama ask that John slaughtered 10 BeniwhattiFOCAmaAmaspokeasktiSUBRJohnJohnk oregɛ ri raslaughter IPFVyaCOMPL la FOCBeni ti Ama spoke ti John k oregɛ ri ra ya la what FOC Ama ask SUBR John slaughter IPFV COMPL FOC What did Ama ask that John is slaughtering 10 BeniwhattiFOCAmaAmabɔtawanttiSUBRJohnJohnk oregɛ slaughterBeni ti Ama bɔta ti John k oregɛ what FOC Ama want SUBR John slaughter What did Ama ask that John slaughtered 10 Greetings EditGurunɛ Phonetic EnglishBulika bulika morning Greeting in the morning Wuntɛɛŋa wʊn tɛ ŋa sun Greeting around noon Zaanuurɛ za jʋɻɛ Evening Greeting in the evening Zaare za r e WelcomeTooma Tooma to ma to ma a greeting similar to Hello every time of the day Nambaa ˈnaːm ba Response to these greetingsGeography EditContinents English GurunɛAfrica AfrikaAmerica AmerikaAntarctica AntartikaAsia AsiaAustralia AustraliaEurope EuropaOceania OkeaniaSolemitẽŋa means land of the white man and is used to refer to all non African countries Soleminɛ is theoretically referring to all non African languages however it is only used to refer to English Notes Edit Allophone of g between lax vowels and is rarely represented in writing References Edit Excluding 30 000 Nabit and 100 000 Talni Farefare at Ethnologue 18th ed 2015 subscription required ISO change request a b c d Niggli 2007 Equisse grammaticale du ninkarɛ au Burkina Faso PDF SIL International Burkina Faso p 14 Retrieved 24 November 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Niggli 2007 p 85 Niggli 2007 p 84 Niggli 2007 p 94 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Bodomo Adams Abubakari Hasiyatu Issah Samuel Alhassan 2020 Handbook of the Mabia Languages of West Africa Glienicke Galda Verlag a b c d e f Atintono Samuel 2011 Verb Morphology Phrase structure in a Gur Language Gurenɛ Saarbrucken Lambert Academic Publishing a b c d e f g h i The VP periphery in Mabia languages Gurene The VP periphery in Mabia languages Retrieved 2022 11 17 a b c d e Kropp Dakubu M E 2009 Parlons farefari gurene langue et culture de Bolgatanga Ghana et ses environs Paris L Harmattan Bibliography EditAtintono Samuel 2011 Verb Morphology Phrase structure in a Gur Language Gurenɛ Saarbrucken Lambert Academic Publishing Bodomo Adams Hasiyatu Abubakari amp Samuel Alhassan Issah 2020 Handbook of the Mabia Languages of West Africa Glienicke Galda Verlag Kropp Dakubu M E S Awinkene Antintono and E Avea Nsoh A Gurenɛ English Dictionary and accompanying English Gurenɛ Glossary Kropp Dakubu M E 2009 Parlons farefari gurene langue et culture de Bolgatanga Ghana et ses environs Paris L Harmattan Niggli Idda Niggli Urs 2007 De la phonologie a l orthographe Le ninkarɛ au Burkina Faso SIL Ninkare Frafra DictionaryExternal links Edit Frafra edition of Wikipedia the free encyclopedia Ninkare SIL Burkina Faso sil burkina org Retrieved 2021 07 29 The VP periphery in Mabia languages Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Farefare language amp oldid 1150871980, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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