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Niger–Congo languages

Niger–Congo is a hypothetical language family spoken over the majority of sub-Saharan Africa.[1] It unites the Mande languages, the Atlantic–Congo languages (which share a characteristic noun class system), and possibly several smaller groups of languages that are difficult to classify. If valid, Niger–Congo would be the world's largest in terms of member languages, the third-largest in terms of speakers, and Africa's largest in terms of geographical area.[2] It is generally considered to be the world's largest language family in terms of the number of distinct languages,[3][4] just ahead of Austronesian, although this is complicated by the ambiguity about what constitutes a distinct language; the number of named Niger–Congo languages listed by Ethnologue is 1,540.[5]

Niger–Congo
Niger–Kordofanian
(hypothetical)
Geographic
distribution
Africa
Linguistic classificationProposed language family
Proto-languageProto-Niger–Congo language
Subdivisions
ISO 639-2 / 5nic
GlottologNone
Map showing the distribution of major Niger–Congo languages. Pink-red is the Bantu subfamily.

The proposed family would be the third-largest language family in the world by number of native speakers, comprising around 700 million people as of 2015. Within Niger–Congo, the Bantu languages alone account for 350 million people (2015), or half the total Niger–Congo speaking population. The most widely spoken Niger–Congo languages by number of native speakers are Yoruba, Igbo, Fula, Lingala, Ewe, Fon, Ga-Dangme, Shona, Sesotho, Xhosa, Zulu, Akan, and Mooré. The most widely spoken by the total number of speakers is Swahili, which is used as a lingua franca in parts of eastern and southeastern Africa.[2]

While the ultimate genetic unity of the core of Niger–Congo (called Atlantic–Congo) is widely accepted, the internal cladistic structure is not well established. Other primary branches may include Dogon, Mande, Ijo, Katla and Rashad. The connection of the Mande languages especially has never been demonstrated, and without them, the validity of Niger–Congo family as a whole (as opposed to Atlantic–Congo or a similar subfamily) has not been established.

One of the most distinctive characteristics common to Atlantic–Congo languages is the use of a noun-class system, which is essentially a gender system with multiple genders.[6]

Origin edit

The language family most likely originated in or near the area where these languages were spoken prior to Bantu expansion (i.e. West Africa or Central Africa). Its expansion may have been associated with the expansion of Sahel agriculture in the African Neolithic period, following the desiccation of the Sahara in c. 3500 BCE.[7][8]

According to Roger Blench (2004), all specialists in Niger–Congo languages believe the languages to have a common origin, rather than merely constituting a typological classification, for reasons including their shared noun-class system, shared verbal extensions and shared basic lexicon.[9] Similar classifications to Niger–Congo have been made ever since Diedrich Westermann in 1922.[10] Joseph Greenberg continued that tradition, making it the starting point for modern linguistic classification in Africa, with some of his most notable publications going to press starting in the 1960s.[11] However, there has been active debate for many decades over the appropriate subclassifications of the languages in this language family, which is a key tool used in localising a language's place of origin.[12] No definitive "Proto–Niger–Congo" lexicon or grammar has been developed for the language family as a whole.

An important unresolved issue in determining the time and place where the Niger–Congo languages originated and their range prior to recorded history is this language family's relationship to the Kordofanian languages, now spoken in the Nuba mountains of Sudan, which is not contiguous with the remainder of the Niger–Congo-language-speaking region and is at the northeasternmost extent of the current Niger–Congo linguistic region. The current prevailing linguistic view is that Kordofanian languages are part of the Niger–Congo language family and that these may be the first of the many languages still spoken in that region to have been spoken in the region.[13] The evidence is insufficient to determine if this outlier group of Niger–Congo language speakers represents a prehistoric range of a Niger–Congo linguistic region that has since contracted as other languages have intruded, or if instead, this represents a group of Niger–Congo language speakers who migrated to the area at some point in prehistory where they were an isolated linguistic community from the beginning.

There is more agreement regarding the place of origin of Benue–Congo, the largest subfamily of the group. Within Benue–Congo, the place of origin of the Bantu languages as well as time at which it started to expand is known with great specificity. Blench (2004), relying particularly on prior work by Kay Williamson and P. De Wolf, argued that Benue–Congo probably originated at the confluence of the Benue and Niger Rivers in central Nigeria.[9][14][15][16][17][18] These estimates of the place of origin of the Benue–Congo language family do not fix a date for the start of that expansion, other than that it must have been sufficiently prior to the Bantu expansion to allow for the diversification of the languages within this language family that includes Bantu.

The classification of the relatively divergent family of the Ubangian languages, centred in the Central African Republic, as part of the Niger–Congo language family is disputed. Ubangian was grouped with Niger–Congo by Greenberg (1963), and later authorities concurred,[19] but it was questioned by Dimmendaal (2008).[20]

The Bantu expansion, beginning around 1000 BC, swept across much of Central and Southern Africa, leading to the assimilation and extinction of many of the indigenous Pygmy and Bushmen (Khoisan) populations there.[21]

Major branches edit

The following is an overview of the language groups usually included in Niger–Congo. The genetic relationship of some branches is not universally accepted, and the cladistic connection between those who are accepted as related may also be unclear.

The core phylum of the Niger–Congo group are the Atlantic–Congo languages. The non-Atlantic–Congo languages within Niger–Congo are grouped as Dogon, Mande, Ijo (sometimes with Defaka as Ijoid), Katla and Rashad.

Atlantic–Congo edit

Atlantic–Congo combines the Atlantic languages, which do not form one branch, and Volta–Congo. It comprises more than 80% of the Niger–Congo speaking population, or close to 600 million people (2015).

The proposed Savannas group combines Adamawa, Ubangian and Gur. Outside of the Savannas group, Volta–Congo comprises Kru, Kwa (or "West Kwa"), Volta–Niger (also "East Kwa" or "West Benue–Congo") and Benue–Congo (or "East Benue–Congo"). Volta–Niger includes the two largest languages of Nigeria, Yoruba and Igbo. Benue–Congo includes the Southern Bantoid group, which is dominated by the Bantu languages, which account for 350 million people (2015), or half the total Niger–Congo speaking population.

The strict genetic unity of any of these subgroups may themselves be under dispute. For example, Roger Blench (2012) argued that Adamawa, Ubangian, Kwa, Bantoid, and Bantu are not coherent groups.[22]

Although the Kordofanian branch is generally included in the Niger–Congo languages, some researchers do not agree with its inclusion. Glottolog 3.4 (2019)[23] does not accept that the Kordofanian branches (Lafofa, Talodi and Heiban) or the difficult-to-classify Laal language have been demonstrated to be Atlantic–Congo languages. It otherwise accepts the family but not its inclusion within a broader Niger–Congo. Glottolog also considers Ijoid, Mande, and Dogon to be independent language phyla that have not been demonstrated to be related to each other.

The Atlantic–Congo group is characterised by the noun class systems of its languages. Atlantic–Congo largely corresponds to Mukarovsky's "Western Nigritic" phylum.[24]

Atlantic

The polyphyletic Atlantic group accounts for about 35 million speakers as of 2016, mostly accounted for by Fula and Wolof speakers. Atlantic is not considered to constitute a valid group.

Volta–Congo

Other edit

The putative Niger–Congo languages outside of the Atlantic–Congo family are centred in the upper Senegal and Niger river basins, south and west of Timbuktu (Mande, Dogon), the Niger Delta (Ijoid), and far to the east in south-central Sudan, around the Nuba Mountains (the Kordofanian families). They account for a total population of about 100 million (2015), mostly Mandé and Ijaw.

"Kordofanian" edit

The various Kordofanian languages are spoken in south-central Sudan, around the Nuba Mountains. "Kordofanian" is a geographic grouping, not a genetic one, named for the Kordofan region. These are minor languages, spoken by a total of about 100,000 people according to 1980s estimates. Katla and Rashad languages show isoglosses with Benue–Congo that the other families lack.[26]

The endangered or extinct Laal, Mpre and Jalaa languages are often assigned to Niger–Congo.

Classification history edit

Early classifications edit

Niger–Congo as it is known today was only gradually recognized as a linguistic unit. In early classifications of the languages of Africa, one of the principal criteria used to distinguish different groupings was the languages' use of prefixes to classify nouns, or the lack thereof. A major advance came with the work of Sigismund Wilhelm Koelle, who in his 1854 Polyglotta Africana attempted a careful classification, the groupings of which in quite a number of cases correspond to modern groupings. An early sketch of the extent of Niger–Congo as one language family can be found in Koelle's observation, echoed in Bleek (1856), that the Atlantic languages used prefixes just like many Southern African languages. Subsequent work of Bleek, and some decades later the comparative work of Meinhof, solidly established Bantu as a linguistic unit.

In many cases, wider classifications employed a blend of typological and racial criteria. Thus, Friedrich Müller, in his ambitious classification (1876–88), separated the 'Negro' and Bantu languages. Likewise, the Africanist Karl Richard Lepsius considered Bantu to be of African origin, and many 'Mixed Negro languages' as products of an encounter between Bantu and intruding Asiatic languages.

In this period a relation between Bantu and languages with Bantu-like (but less complete) noun class systems began to emerge. Some authors saw the latter as languages which had not yet completely evolved to full Bantu status, whereas others regarded them as languages which had partly lost original features still found in Bantu. The Bantuist Meinhof made a major distinction between Bantu and a 'Semi-Bantu' group which according to him was originally of the unrelated Sudanic stock.

Westermann, Greenberg, and others edit

 
Westermann's 1911 Die Sudansprachen: Eine sprachvergleichende Studie laid much of the basis for the understanding of Niger–Congo.

Westermann, a pupil of Meinhof, set out to establish the internal classification of the then Sudanic languages. In a 1911 work he established a basic division between 'East' and 'West'. A historical reconstruction of West Sudanic was published in 1927, and in his 1935 'Charakter und Einteilung der Sudansprachen' he conclusively established the relationship between Bantu and West Sudanic.

Joseph Greenberg took Westermann's work as a starting-point for his own classification. In a series of articles published between 1949 and 1954, he argued that Westermann's 'West Sudanic' and Bantu formed a single genetic family, which he named Niger–Congo; that Bantu constituted a subgroup of the Benue–Congo branch; that Adamawa-Eastern, previously not considered to be related, was another member of this family; and that Fula belonged to the West Atlantic languages. Just before these articles were collected in final book form (The Languages of Africa) in 1963, he amended his classification by adding Kordofanian as a branch co-ordinate with Niger–Congo as a whole; consequently, he renamed the family Congo-Kordofanian, later Niger–Kordofanian. Greenberg's work on African languages, though initially greeted with scepticism, became the prevailing view among scholars.[19]

Bennet and Sterk (1977) presented an internal reclassification based on lexicostatistics that laid the foundation for the regrouping in Bendor-Samuel (1989). Kordofanian was presented as one of several primary branches rather than being coordinate to the family as a whole, prompting re-introduction of the term Niger–Congo, which is in current use among linguists. Many classifications continue to place Kordofanian as the most distant branch, but mainly due to negative evidence (fewer lexical correspondences), rather than positive evidence that the other languages form a valid genealogical group. Likewise, Mande is often assumed to be the second-most distant branch based on its lack of the noun-class system prototypical of the Niger–Congo family. Other branches lacking any trace of the noun-class system are Dogon and Ijaw, whereas the Talodi branch of Kordofanian does have cognate noun classes, suggesting that Kordofanian is also not a unitary group.

Pozdniakov (2012) stated: "The hypothesis of kinship between Niger–Congo languages didn't appear as a result of discovery of numerous related forms, for example, in Mande and Adamawa. It appeared as a result of comparison between the Bantu languages, for which the classical comparative method was possible to be applied and which were reliably reconstructed, with other African languages. Niger–Congo does not exist without Bantu. We need to say clearly that if we establish a genetic relationship between a form in Bantu and in Atlantic languages, or between Bantu and Mande, we have all grounds to trace this form back to Niger–Congo. If we establish such a relationship between Mel and Kru or between Mande and Dogon, we don't have enough reason to claim it Niger–Congo. In other words, all Niger–Congo languages are equal, but Bantu languages are "more equal" than the others."[27]

Glottolog (2013) accepts the core with noun-class systems, the Atlantic–Congo languages, apart from the recent inclusion of some of the Kordofanian groups, but not Niger–Congo as a whole. They list the following as separate families: Atlantic–Congo, Mande, Dogon, Ijoid, Lafofa, Katla-Tima, Heiban, Talodi, and Rashad.

Babaev (2013) stated: "The truth here is that almost no attempts in fact have been made to verify Greenberg's Niger–Congo hypothesis. This might seem strange but the path laid by Joseph Greenberg to Proto–Niger–Congo was not followed by much research. Most scholars have focused on individual families or groups, and classifications as well as reconstructions were made on lower levels. Compared with the volume of literature on Atlantic or Mande languages, the list of papers considering the aspects of Niger–Congo reconstruction per se is quite scarce."[28]

Oxford Handbooks Online (2016) has indicated that the continuing reassessment of Niger–Congo's "internal structure is due largely to the preliminary nature of Greenberg's classification, explicitly based as it was on a methodology that doesn't produce proofs for genetic affiliations between languages but rather aims at identifying "likely candidates."...The ongoing descriptive and documentary work on individual languages and their varieties, greatly expanding our knowledge on formerly little-known linguistic regions, is helping to identify clusters and units that allow for the application of the historical-comparative method. Only the reconstruction of lower-level units, instead of "big picture" contributions based on mass comparison, can help to verify (or disprove) our present concept of Niger–Congo as a genetic grouping consisting of Benue–Congo plus Volta–Niger, Kwa, Adamawa plus Gur, Kru, the so-called Kordofanian languages, and probably the language groups traditionally classified as Atlantic."[29]

The coherence of Niger–Congo as a language phylum is supported by Grollemund, et al. (2016), using computational phylogenetic methods.[30] The East/West Volta–Congo division, West/East Benue–Congo division, and North/South Bantoid division are not supported, whereas a Bantoid group consisting of Ekoid, Bendi, Dakoid, Jukunoid, Tivoid, Mambiloid, Beboid, Mamfe, Tikar, Grassfields, and Bantu is supported.

The Automated Similarity Judgment Program (ASJP) also groups many Niger–Congo branches together.

Dimmendaal, Crevels, and Muysken (2020) stated: "Greenberg's hypothesis of Niger–Congo phylum has sometimes been taken as an established fact rather than a hypothesis awaiting further proof, but there have also been attempts to look at his argumentation in more detail. Much of the discussion concerning Niger–Congo after Greenberg's seminal contribution in fact centered around the inclusion or exclusion of specific languages or language groups."[31]

Good (2020) stated: "First proposed by Greenberg (1949), Niger–Congo (NC) has for decades been treated as one of the four major phyla of African languages. The term, as presently used, however, is not without its difficulties. On the one hand, it is employed as a referential label for a group of over 1,500 languages, putting it among the largest commonly cited language groups in the world. On the other hand, the term is also intended to embody a hypothesis of genealogical relationship between the referential NC languages that has not been proven."[32]

Reconstruction edit

The lexicon of Proto–Niger–Congo (or Proto-Atlantic–Congo) has not been comprehensively reconstructed, although Konstantin Pozdniakov reconstructed the numeral system of Proto–Niger–Congo in 2018.[33] The most extensive reconstructions of lower-order Niger–Congo branches include several reconstructions of Proto-Bantu, which has consequently had a disproportionate influence on conceptions of what Proto–Niger–Congo may have been like. The only stage higher than Proto-Bantu that has been reconstructed is a pilot project by Stewart, who since the 1970s has reconstructed the common ancestor of the Potou-Tano and Bantu languages, without so far considering the hundreds of other languages which presumably descend from that same ancestor.[34]

Niger–Congo and Nilo-Saharan edit

Over the years, several linguists have suggested a link between Niger–Congo and Nilo-Saharan, probably starting with Westermann's comparative work on the "Sudanic" family in which 'Eastern Sudanic' (now classified as Nilo-Saharan) and 'Western Sudanic' (now classified as Niger–Congo) were united. Gregersen (1972) proposed that Niger–Congo and Nilo-Saharan be united into a larger phylum, which he termed Kongo-Saharan. His evidence was mainly based on the uncertainty in the classification of Songhay, morphological resemblances, and lexical similarities. A more recent proponent was Roger Blench (1995), who puts forward phonological, morphological and lexical evidence for uniting Niger–Congo and Nilo-Saharan in a Niger–Saharan phylum, with special affinity between Niger–Congo and Central Sudanic. However, fifteen years later his views had changed, with Blench (2011) proposing instead that the noun-classifier system of Central Sudanic, commonly reflected in a tripartite general-singulative-plurative number system, triggered the development or elaboration of the noun-class system of the Atlantic–Congo languages, with tripartite number marking surviving in the Plateau and Gur languages of Niger–Congo, and the lexical similarities being due to loans.

Common features edit

Phonology edit

Niger–Congo languages have a clear preference for open syllables of the type CV (Consonant Vowel). The typical word structure of Proto–Niger–Congo (though it has not been reconstructed) is thought to have been CVCV, a structure still attested in, for example, Bantu, Mande and Ijoid – in many other branches this structure has been reduced through phonological change. Verbs are composed of a root followed by one or more extensional suffixes. Nouns consist of a root originally preceded by a noun class prefix of (C)V- shape which is often eroded by phonological change.

Consonants edit

Several branches of Niger–Congo have a regular phonological contrast between two classes of consonants. Pending more clarity as to the precise nature of this contrast, it is commonly characterized as a contrast between fortis and lenis consonants.

Vowels edit

Many Niger–Congo languages' vowel harmony is based on the [ATR] (advanced tongue root) feature. In this type of vowel harmony, the position of the root of the tongue in regards to backness is the phonetic basis for the distinction between two harmonizing sets of vowels. In its fullest form, this type involves two classes, each of five vowels.[35]

[+ATR] [−ATR]
[i] [ɪ]
[e] [ɛ]
[ə] [a]
[o] [ɔ]
[u] [ʊ]

The roots are then divided into [+ATR] and [−ATR] categories. This feature is lexically assigned to the roots because there is no determiner within a normal root that causes the [ATR] value.[36]

There are two types of [ATR] vowel harmony controllers in Niger–Congo. The first controller is the root. When a root contains a [+ATR] or [−ATR] vowel, then that value is applied to the rest of the word, which involves crossing morpheme boundaries.[37] For example, suffixes in Wolof assimilate to the [ATR] value of the root to which they attach. The following examples of these suffixes alternate depending on the root.[36]

[+ATR] [−ATR] Purpose
-le -lɛ 'participant'
-o 'nominalizing'
-əl -al 'benefactive'

Furthermore, the directionality of assimilation in [ATR] root-controlled vowel harmony need not be specified. The root features [+ATR] and [−ATR] spread left and/or right as needed, so that no vowel would lack a specification and be ill-formed.[38]

Unlike in the root-controlled harmony system, where the two [ATR] values behave symmetrically, a large number of Niger–Congo languages exhibit a pattern where the [+ATR] value is more active or dominant than the [−ATR] value.[39] This results in the second vowel harmony controller being the [+ATR] value. If there is even one vowel that is [+ATR] in the whole word, then the rest of the vowels harmonize with that feature. However, if there is no vowel that is [+ATR], the vowels appear in their underlying form.[37] This form of vowel harmony control is best exhibited in West African languages. For example, in Nawuri, the diminutive suffix /-bi/ will cause the underlying [−ATR] vowels in a word to become phonetically [+ATR].[39]

There are two types of vowels which affect the harmony process. These are known as neutral or opaque vowels. Neutral vowels do not harmonize to the [ATR] value of the word, and instead maintain their own [ATR] value. The vowels that follow them, however, will receive the [ATR] value of the root. Opaque vowels maintain their own [ATR] value as well, but they affect the harmony process behind them. All of the vowels following an opaque vowel will harmonize with the [ATR] value of the opaque vowel instead of the [ATR] vowel of the root.[36]

The vowel inventory listed above is a ten-vowel language. This is a language in which all of the vowels of the language participate in the harmony system, producing five harmonic pairs. Vowel inventories of this type are still found in some branches of Niger–Congo, for example in the Ghana Togo Mountain languages.[40] However, this is the rarer inventory as oftentimes there are one or more vowels that are not part of a harmonic pair. This has resulted in seven- and nine-vowel systems being the more popular systems. The majority of languages with [ATR] controlled vowel harmony have either seven or nine vowel phonemes, with the most common non-participatory vowel being /a/.[35] It has been asserted that this is because vowel quality differences in the mid-central region where /ə/, the counterpart of /a/, is found, are difficult to perceive. Another possible reason for the non-participatory status of /a/ is that there is articulatory difficulty in advancing the tongue root when the tongue body is low in order to produce a low [+ATR] vowel.[41] Therefore, the vowel inventory for nine-vowel languages is generally:

[+ATR] [−ATR]
[i] [ɪ]
[e] [ɛ]
[a]
[o] [ɔ]
[u] [ʊ]

And seven-vowel languages have one of two inventories:

[+ATR] [−ATR]
[i] [ɪ]
[ɛ]
[a]
[ɔ]
[u] [ʊ]
[+ATR] [−ATR]
[i]
[e] [ɛ]
[a]
[o] [ɔ]
[u]

Note that in the nine-vowel language, the missing vowel is, in fact, [ə], [a]'s counterpart, as would be expected.[42]

The fact that ten vowels have been reconstructed for proto-Ijoid has led to the hypothesis that the original vowel inventory of Niger–Congo was a full ten-vowel system.[43][44][45] On the other hand, Stewart, in recent comparative work, reconstructs a seven-vowel system for his proto-Potou-Akanic-Bantu.[46]

Nasality edit

Several scholars have documented a contrast between oral and nasal vowels in Niger–Congo.[47] In his reconstruction of proto-Volta–Congo, Steward (1976) postulates that nasal consonants have originated under the influence of nasal vowels; this hypothesis is supported by the fact that there are several Niger–Congo languages that have been analysed as lacking nasal consonants altogether. Languages like this have nasal vowels accompanied with complementary distribution between oral and nasal consonants before oral and nasal vowels. Subsequent loss of the nasal/oral contrast in vowels may result in nasal consonants becoming part of the phoneme inventory. In all cases reported to date, the bilabial /m/ is the first nasal consonant to be phonologized. Niger–Congo thus invalidates two common assumptions about nasals:[48] that all languages have at least one primary nasal consonant, and that if a language has only one primary nasal consonant it is /n/.

Niger–Congo languages commonly show fewer nasalized than oral vowels. Kasem, a language with a ten-vowel system employing ATR vowel harmony, has seven nasalized vowels. Similarly, Yoruba has seven oral vowels and only five nasal ones. However, the language of Zialo has a nasal equivalent for each of its seven oral vowels.

Tone edit

The large majority of present-day Niger–Congo languages are tonal. A typical Niger–Congo tone system involves two or three contrastive level tones. Four-level systems are less widespread, and five-level systems are rare. Only a few Niger–Congo languages are non-tonal; Swahili is perhaps the best known, but within the Atlantic branch some others are found. Proto–Niger–Congo is thought to have been a tone language with two contrastive levels. Synchronic and comparative-historical studies of tone systems show that such a basic system can easily develop more tonal contrasts under the influence of depressor consonants or through the introduction of a downstep.[49] Languages which have more tonal levels tend to use tone more for lexical and less for grammatical contrasts.

Contrastive levels of tone in some Niger–Congo languages
Tones Languages
H, L Dyula-Bambara, Maninka, Temne, Dogon, Dagbani, Gbaya, Efik, Lingala
H, M, L Yakuba, Nafaanra, Kasem, Banda, Yoruba, Jukun, Dangme, Yukuben, Akan, Anyi, Ewe, Igbo
T, H, M, L Gban, Wobe, Munzombo, Igede, Mambila, Fon
T, H, M, L, B Ashuku (Benue–Congo), Dan-Santa (Mande)
PA/S Mandinka (Senegambia), Fula, Wolof, Kimwani
none Swahili
Abbreviations used: T top, H high, M mid, L low, B bottom, PA/S pitch-accent or stress
Adapted from Williamson 1989:27

Morphosyntax edit

Noun classification edit

Niger–Congo languages are known for their system of noun classification, traces of which can be found in every branch of the family but Mande, Ijoid, Dogon, and the Katla and Rashad branches of Kordofanian. These noun-classification systems are somewhat analogous to grammatical gender in other languages, but there are often a fairly large number of classes (often 10 or more), and the classes may be male human/female human/animate/inanimate, or even completely gender-unrelated categories such as places, plants, abstracts, and groups of objects. For example, in Bantu, the Swahili language is called Kiswahili, while the Swahili people are Waswahili. Likewise, in Ubangian, the Zande language is called Pazande, while the Zande people are called Azande.

In the Bantu languages, where noun classification is particularly elaborate, it typically appears as prefixes, with verbs and adjectives marked according to the class of the noun they refer to. For example, in Swahili, watu wazuri wataenda is 'good (zuri) people (tu) will go (ta-enda)'.

Verbal extensions edit

The same Atlantic–Congo languages which have noun classes also have a set of verb applicatives and other verbal extensions, such as the reciprocal suffix -na (Swahili penda 'to love', pendana 'to love each other'; also applicative pendea 'to love for' and causative pendeza 'to please').

Word order edit

A subject-verb-object word order is quite widespread among today's Niger–Congo languages, but SOV is found in branches as divergent as Mande, Ijoid and Dogon. As a result, there has been quite some debate as to the basic word order of Niger–Congo.

Whereas Claudi (1993) argues for SVO on the basis of existing SVO > SOV grammaticalization paths, Gensler (1997) points out that the notion of 'basic word order' is problematic as it excludes structures with, for example, auxiliaries. However, the structure SC-OC-VbStem (Subject concord, Object concord, Verb stem) found in the "verbal complex" of the SVO Bantu languages suggests an earlier SOV pattern (where the subject and object were at least represented by pronouns).

Noun phrases in most Niger–Congo languages are characteristically noun-initial, with adjectives, numerals, demonstratives and genitives all coming after the noun. The major exceptions are found in the western[50] areas where verb-final word order predominates and genitives precede nouns, though other modifiers still come afterwards. Degree words almost always follow adjectives, and except in verb-final languages adpositions are prepositional.

The verb-final languages of the Mende region have two quite unusual word order characteristics. Although verbs follow their direct objects, oblique adpositional phrases (like "in the house", "with timber") typically come after the verb,[50] creating a SOVX word order. Also noteworthy in these languages is the prevalence of internally headed and correlative relative clauses, in both of which the head occurs inside the relative clause rather than the main clause.

References edit

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  7. ^ Manning, Katie; Timpson, Adrian (2014). "The demographic response to Holocene climate change in the Sahara". Quaternary Science Reviews. 101: 28–35. Bibcode:2014QSRv..101...28M. doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2014.07.003.
  8. ^ Igor Kopytoff, The African Frontier: The Reproduction of Traditional African Societies (1989), 9–10 (cited after Igbo Language Roots and (Pre)-History 2019-07-17 at the Wayback Machine, A Mighty Tree, 2011).
  9. ^ a b Blench, Roger, The Benue-Congo languages: a proposed internal classification.[unreliable source?] "No comprehensive reconstruction has yet been done for the phylum as a whole, and it is sometimes suggested (e.g. by Dixon 1997) that Niger-Congo is merely a typological and not a genetic unity. This view is not held by any specialists in the phylum, and reasons for thinking Niger-Congo is a true genetic unity will be given in this chapter. It is, however, true that the subclassification of the phylum has been continuously modified in recent years and cannot be presented as an agreed scheme. The factors which have delayed reconstruction are the large number of languages, the inaccessibility of much of the data, and the paucity of able researchers committed to this field. Emphasis will be placed on three characteristics of Niger-Congo; noun-class systems, verbal extensions, and basic lexicon." See also: Bendor-Samuel, J. ed. 1989. The Niger–Congo Languages. Lanham: University Press of America.
  10. ^ Westermann, D. 1922a. Die Sprache der Guang. Berlin: Dietrich Reimer.
  11. ^ Greenberg, J.H. 1964. Historical inferences from linguistic research in sub-Saharan Africa. Boston University Papers in African History, 1:1–15.
  12. ^ Blench, Roger. "Unpublished Working Draft" (PDF). www.rogerblench.info.
  13. ^ Herman Bell. 1995. The Nuba Mountains: Who Spoke What in 1976?. (The published results from a major project of the Institute of African and Asian Studies: the Language Survey of the Nuba Mountains.)
  14. ^ Williamson, K. 1971. The Benue–Congo languages and Ijo. Current Trends in Linguistics, 7. ed. T. Sebeok 245–306. The Hague: Mouton.
  15. ^ Williamson, K. 1988. Linguistic evidence for the prehistory of the Niger Delta. The early history of the Niger Delta, edited by E.J. Alagoa, F.N. Anozie and N. Nzewunwa. Hamburg: Helmut Buske Verlag.
  16. ^ Williamson, K. 1989. Benue–Congo Overview. In The Niger–Congo Languages. J. Bendor-Samuel ed. Lanham: University Press of America.
  17. ^ De Wolf, P. 1971. The noun class system of Proto-Benue–Congo. The Hague: Mouton.
  18. ^ Blench, R.M. 1989. A proposed new classification of Benue–Congo languages. Afrikanische Arbeitspapiere, Köln, 17:115–147.
  19. ^ a b Williamson, Kay; Blench, Roger (2000). "Niger-Congo". In Bernd Heine; Derek Nurse (eds.). African Languages: An Introduction. Cambridge University Press. pp. 11–12.
  20. ^ Gerrit Dimmendaal (2008) "Language Ecology and Linguistic Diversity on the African Continent", Language and Linguistics Compass 2/5:841.
  21. ^ Martin H. Steinberg, Disorders of Hemoglobin: Genetics, Pathophysiology, and Clinical Management, Cambridge University Press, 2001, p. 717.
  22. ^ "Niger-Congo: an alternative view" (PDF). Rogerblench.info. Retrieved 2012-12-29. "Roger Blench: Niger-Congo reconstruction". Rogerblench.info. Retrieved 2012-12-29.
  23. ^ "Glottolog 3.4 -". glottolog.org.
  24. ^ Hans G. Mukarovsky, A Study of Western Nigritic, 2 vols. (1976–1977). Blench (2004): "Almost simultaneously [with Greenberg (1963)], Mukarovsky (1976–7) published his analysis of 'Western Nigritic'. Mukarovsky's basic theme was the relationship between the reconstructions of Bantu of Guthrie and other writers and the languages of West Africa. Mukarovsky excluded Kordofanian, Mande, Ijo, Dogon, Adamawa-Ubangian and most Bantoid languages for unknown reasons, thus reconstructing an idiosyncratic grouping. Nonetheless, he buttressed his argument with an extremely valuable compilation of data, establishing the case for Bantu/Niger-Congo genetic link beyond reasonable doubt."
  25. ^ a b c Blench, Roger. 2012. Niger-Congo: an alternative view.
  26. ^ Dimmendaal, Gerrit J.; Storch, Anne (2016-02-11). "Niger-Congo: A brief state of the art". Oxford Handbooks Online. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199935345.013.3. ISBN 978-0-19-993534-5. Retrieved 2020-03-26.
  27. ^ Pozdniakov, Konstantin (September 18–21, 2012). "From Atlantic to Niger-Congo: three, two, one ..." (PDF). Towards Proto-Niger-Congo: Comparison and Reconstruction International Congress: 2.
  28. ^ Babaev, Kirill (2013). "Joseph Greenberg and the Current State of Niger-Congo". Journal of the Association for the Study of Language in Prehistory (18): 19.
  29. ^ Storch, Anne; Dimmendaal, Gerrit J. (11 February 2016). "Niger-Congo". Oxford Handbook Topics in Linguistics. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199935345.013.3. ISBN 978-0-19-993534-5 – via www.oxfordhandbooks.com.
  30. ^ Rebecca Grollemund, Simon Branford, Jean-Marie Hombert & Mark Pagel. 2016. Genetic unity of the Niger-Congo family. Towards Proto-Niger-Congo: comparison and reconstruction (2nd International Congress)
  31. ^ Dimmendaal, Gerrit J.; Crevels, Mily; Muysken, Pieter (2020). "Patterns of dispersal and diversification in Africa". Language Dispersal, Diversification, and Contact. Oxford University Press. p. 201. ISBN 978-0-19-872381-3.
  32. ^ Good, Jeff (Mar 19, 2020). "Niger-Congo, With A Special Focus On Benue Congo". The Oxford Handbook of African Languages. Oxford University Press. p. 139. ISBN 978-0-19-960989-5.
  33. ^ Pozdniakov, Konstantin (2018). The numeral system of Proto-Niger-Congo: A step-by-step reconstruction (pdf). Niger-Congo Comparative Studies. Berlin: Language Science Press. doi:10.5281/zenodo.1311704. ISBN 978-3-96110-098-9.
  34. ^ Tom Gueldemann (2018) Historical linguistics and genealogical language classification in Africa, p. 146.
  35. ^ a b Morton, Deborah (2012). Harmony in an Eleven Vowel Language (PDF). Cascadilla Proceedings Project. pp. 70–71. ISBN 978-1-57473-453-9.
  36. ^ a b c Unseth, Carla (2009). (PDF). Occasional Papers in Applied Linguistics. Graduate Institute of Applied Linguistics (2–3). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 3, 2013.
  37. ^ a b Bakovic, Eric (2000). Harmony, Dominance and Control (PDF) (PhD dissertation). Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. p. ii.
  38. ^ Clements, G. N. (1981). "Akan vowel harmony: A non-linear analysis". Harvard Studies in Phonology. 2: 108–177.
  39. ^ a b Casali, Roderic F. (2002). (PDF). Journal of West African Languages. Summer Institute of Linguistics. 29 (1). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 30, 2014.
  40. ^ Anderson, C. G. (1999). "ATR vowel harmony in Akposso". Studies in African Linguistics. 28 (2): 185–214. doi:10.32473/sal.v28i2.107372.
  41. ^ Archangeli, Diana; Pulleyblank, Douglas (1994). Grounded Phonology. Current Studies in Linguistics. Vol. 25. Cambridge: MIT Press. ISBN 0-262-01137-9.
  42. ^ Casali, Roderic F. (2008). "ATR Harmony in African Languages". Language and Linguistics Compass. 2 (3): 496–549. doi:10.1111/j.1749-818X.2008.00064.x.
  43. ^ Doneux, Jean L. (1975). "Hypothèses pour la comparative des langues atlantiques". Africana Linguistica. Tervuren: Musée Royal de l'Afrique Centrale. 6: 41–129. doi:10.3406/aflin.1975.892. (Re: proto-Atlantic)
  44. ^ Williamson, Kay (2000). "Towards reconstructing Proto-Niger-Congo". In Wolff, H. E.; Gensler, O. (eds.). Proceedings of the 2nd World Congress of African Linguistics, Leipzig 1997. Köln: Rüdiger Köppe. pp. 49–70. ISBN 3-89645-124-3. (Re: proto-Ijoid)
  45. ^ Stewart, John M. (1976). Towards Volta-Congo Reconstruction : Rede. Leiden: Universitaire Pers Leiden. ISBN 90-6021-307-6, Casali, Roderic F. (1995). "On the Reduction of Vowel Systems in Volta-Congo". African Languages and Cultures. 8 (2): 109–121. doi:10.1080/09544169508717790. (Re: proto-Volta-Conga)
  46. ^ Stewart, John M. (2002). "The potential of Proto-Potou-Akanic-Bantu as a pilot Proto-Niger-Congo, and the reconstructions updated". Journal of African Languages and Linguistics. 23 (2): 197–224. doi:10.1515/jall.2002.012.
  47. ^ le Saout (1973) for an early overview, Stewart (1976) for a diachronic, Volta–Congo wide analysis, Capo (1981) for a synchronic analysis of nasality in Gbe (see Gbe languages: nasality), and Bole-Richard (1984, 1985) as cited in Williamson (1989) for similar reports on several Mande, Gur, Kru, Kwa, and Ubangi languages.
  48. ^ As noted by Williamson (1989:24). The assumptions are from Ferguson's (1963) 'Assumptions about nasals' in Greenberg (ed.) Universals of Language, pp 50–60 as cited in Williamson art.cit.
  49. ^ "Niger-Congo languages – Widespread characteristics of Niger-Congo languages | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2022-05-13.
  50. ^ a b Haspelmath, Martin; Dryer, Matthew S.; Gil, David and Comrie, Bernard (eds.) The World Atlas of Language Structures; pp 346–385. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005. ISBN 0-19-925591-1

Further reading edit

  • Bendor-Samuel, John; Hartell, Rhonda L., eds. (1989). The Niger-Congo Languages: A Classification and Description of Africa's Largest Language Family. University Press of America. ISBN 9780819173751.
  • Bennett, Patrick R.; Sterk, Jan P. (1977). "South Central Niger-Congo: A reclassification". Studies in African Linguistics. 8 (3): 241–273.
  • Blench, Roger (January 1995). "Is Niger-Congo simply a branch of Nilo-Saharan?". In Nicolaï, Robert; Rottland, Franz (eds.). Actes du Cinquième Colloque de Linguistique Nilo-Saharienne: 24 - 29 août 1992, Université de Nice Sophia-Antipolis. Nilo-Saharan. Vol. 10. pp. 83–130. ISBN 3-927620-72-6.
  • Blench, Roger (2011). (PDF). CALL 41. Leiden. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-04-23.
  • Blench, Roger (2011). Should Kordofanian be split up? (PDF). Nuba Hills Conference. Leiden.
  • Capo, Hounkpati B.C. (1981). "Nasality in Gbe: A Synchronic Interpretation". Studies in African Linguistics. 12 (1): 1–43.
  • Casali, Roderic F. (1995). "On the Reduction of Vowel Systems in Volta-Congo". African Languages and Cultures. 8 (2): 109–121. doi:10.1080/09544169508717790.
  • Der-Houssikian, Haig (1972). "The Evidence for a Niger-Congo Hypothesis". Cahiers d'Études Africaines. 12 (46): 316–22. doi:10.3406/cea.1972.2768. JSTOR 4391154.
  • Dimmendaal, Gerrit (2008). "Language Ecology and Linguistic Diversity on the African Continent". Language and Linguistics Compass. 2 (5): 840–858. doi:10.1111/j.1749-818X.2008.00085.x.
  • Greenberg, Joseph H. (1963). The Languages of Africa. Indiana University Press.
  • Gregersen, Edgar A. (1972). "Kongo-Saharan". Journal of African Languages. 11 (1): 46–56.
  • Nurse, Derek; Rose, Sarah; Hewson, John (2016). (PDF). Documents on Social Sciences and Humanities. Tervuren, Belgium: Royal Museum for Central Africa. ISBN 978-9-4922-4429-1. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2023-05-22.
  • Olson, Kenneth S. (2006). "On Niger-Congo Classification". In Darden, Bill J.; Aronson, Howard Isaac (eds.). The Bill Question: Contributions to the Study of Linguistics and Languages in Honor of Bill J. Darden on the Occasion of His Sixty-sixth Birthday. Slavica Publishers. pp. 153–190. ISBN 978-0-89357-330-0.
  • le Saout, J. (1973). "Languages sans consonnes nasales". Annales de l'Université d'Abidjan. Série H, Linguistique (in French). ISSN 1011-6737. OCLC 772580339.
  • Segerer, G; Flavier, S. "RefLex: Reference Lexicon". 2.2.
  • Stewart, John M. (1976). Towards Volta-Congo reconstruction: a comparative study of some languages of Black-Africa (Speech). Leiden University.
  • Stewart, John M. (2002). "The potential of Proto-Potou-Akanic-Bantu as a pilot Proto-Niger-Congo, and the reconstructions updated". Journal of African Languages and Linguistics. 23 (2). doi:10.1515/jall.2002.012.
  • Webb, Vic (2001). African Voices: An Introduction to the Languages and Linguistics of Africa. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195716818.
  • Williamson, Kay; Blench, Roger. "Niger-Congo". In Heine, Bernd; Nurse, Derek (eds.). African Languages: An Introduction. pp. 11–42. ISBN 9780521661782. OCLC 42810789.

External links edit

  Media related to Niger-Congo languages at Wikimedia Commons

  • An Evaluation of Niger–Congo Classification, Kenneth Olson
  • , Derek Nurse, Sarah Rose & John Hewson
  • Preliminary Niger–Congo classification 2021-05-09 at the Wayback Machine (Guillaume Segerer 2005, LLACAN)
  • Swadesh lists of African proto-language reconstructions 2021-08-08 at the Wayback Machine (Guillaume Segerer 2005, LLACAN)
  • Phonologies and orthographies of African languages (LLACAN)
Journals
  • Linguistique et Langues Africaines 2021-01-13 at the Wayback Machine (LLA)
  • Journal Mandenkan 2011-01-04 at the Wayback Machine (introduction) 2021-01-27 at the Wayback Machine
  • Nordic Journal of African Studies (archives 2020-07-11 at the Wayback Machine)
  • Journal of West African languages
  • Journal of African Languages and Linguistics

niger, congo, languages, niger, congo, hypothetical, language, family, spoken, over, majority, saharan, africa, unites, mande, languages, atlantic, congo, languages, which, share, characteristic, noun, class, system, possibly, several, smaller, groups, languag. Niger Congo is a hypothetical language family spoken over the majority of sub Saharan Africa 1 It unites the Mande languages the Atlantic Congo languages which share a characteristic noun class system and possibly several smaller groups of languages that are difficult to classify If valid Niger Congo would be the world s largest in terms of member languages the third largest in terms of speakers and Africa s largest in terms of geographical area 2 It is generally considered to be the world s largest language family in terms of the number of distinct languages 3 4 just ahead of Austronesian although this is complicated by the ambiguity about what constitutes a distinct language the number of named Niger Congo languages listed by Ethnologue is 1 540 5 Niger CongoNiger Kordofanian hypothetical GeographicdistributionAfricaLinguistic classificationProposed language familyProto languageProto Niger Congo languageSubdivisionsDogon Mande Ijoid Lafofa Kordofanian Kru Siamou Atlantic Congo noun classes ISO 639 2 5nicGlottologNoneMap showing the distribution of major Niger Congo languages Pink red is the Bantu subfamily The proposed family would be the third largest language family in the world by number of native speakers comprising around 700 million people as of 2015 Within Niger Congo the Bantu languages alone account for 350 million people 2015 or half the total Niger Congo speaking population The most widely spoken Niger Congo languages by number of native speakers are Yoruba Igbo Fula Lingala Ewe Fon Ga Dangme Shona Sesotho Xhosa Zulu Akan and Moore The most widely spoken by the total number of speakers is Swahili which is used as a lingua franca in parts of eastern and southeastern Africa 2 While the ultimate genetic unity of the core of Niger Congo called Atlantic Congo is widely accepted the internal cladistic structure is not well established Other primary branches may include Dogon Mande Ijo Katla and Rashad The connection of the Mande languages especially has never been demonstrated and without them the validity of Niger Congo family as a whole as opposed to Atlantic Congo or a similar subfamily has not been established One of the most distinctive characteristics common to Atlantic Congo languages is the use of a noun class system which is essentially a gender system with multiple genders 6 Contents 1 Origin 2 Major branches 2 1 Atlantic Congo 2 2 Other 2 3 Kordofanian 3 Classification history 3 1 Early classifications 3 2 Westermann Greenberg and others 3 3 Reconstruction 3 4 Niger Congo and Nilo Saharan 4 Common features 4 1 Phonology 4 1 1 Consonants 4 1 2 Vowels 4 1 3 Nasality 4 1 4 Tone 4 2 Morphosyntax 4 2 1 Noun classification 4 2 2 Verbal extensions 4 2 3 Word order 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksOrigin editFurther information Linguistic homeland Niger Congo Sub Saharan Africa Genetic history Congoid and Bantu expansion The language family most likely originated in or near the area where these languages were spoken prior to Bantu expansion i e West Africa or Central Africa Its expansion may have been associated with the expansion of Sahel agriculture in the African Neolithic period following the desiccation of the Sahara in c 3500 BCE 7 8 According to Roger Blench 2004 all specialists in Niger Congo languages believe the languages to have a common origin rather than merely constituting a typological classification for reasons including their shared noun class system shared verbal extensions and shared basic lexicon 9 Similar classifications to Niger Congo have been made ever since Diedrich Westermann in 1922 10 Joseph Greenberg continued that tradition making it the starting point for modern linguistic classification in Africa with some of his most notable publications going to press starting in the 1960s 11 However there has been active debate for many decades over the appropriate subclassifications of the languages in this language family which is a key tool used in localising a language s place of origin 12 No definitive Proto Niger Congo lexicon or grammar has been developed for the language family as a whole An important unresolved issue in determining the time and place where the Niger Congo languages originated and their range prior to recorded history is this language family s relationship to the Kordofanian languages now spoken in the Nuba mountains of Sudan which is not contiguous with the remainder of the Niger Congo language speaking region and is at the northeasternmost extent of the current Niger Congo linguistic region The current prevailing linguistic view is that Kordofanian languages are part of the Niger Congo language family and that these may be the first of the many languages still spoken in that region to have been spoken in the region 13 The evidence is insufficient to determine if this outlier group of Niger Congo language speakers represents a prehistoric range of a Niger Congo linguistic region that has since contracted as other languages have intruded or if instead this represents a group of Niger Congo language speakers who migrated to the area at some point in prehistory where they were an isolated linguistic community from the beginning There is more agreement regarding the place of origin of Benue Congo the largest subfamily of the group Within Benue Congo the place of origin of the Bantu languages as well as time at which it started to expand is known with great specificity Blench 2004 relying particularly on prior work by Kay Williamson and P De Wolf argued that Benue Congo probably originated at the confluence of the Benue and Niger Rivers in central Nigeria 9 14 15 16 17 18 These estimates of the place of origin of the Benue Congo language family do not fix a date for the start of that expansion other than that it must have been sufficiently prior to the Bantu expansion to allow for the diversification of the languages within this language family that includes Bantu The classification of the relatively divergent family of the Ubangian languages centred in the Central African Republic as part of the Niger Congo language family is disputed Ubangian was grouped with Niger Congo by Greenberg 1963 and later authorities concurred 19 but it was questioned by Dimmendaal 2008 20 The Bantu expansion beginning around 1000 BC swept across much of Central and Southern Africa leading to the assimilation and extinction of many of the indigenous Pygmy and Bushmen Khoisan populations there 21 Major branches editThe following is an overview of the language groups usually included in Niger Congo The genetic relationship of some branches is not universally accepted and the cladistic connection between those who are accepted as related may also be unclear The core phylum of the Niger Congo group are the Atlantic Congo languages The non Atlantic Congo languages within Niger Congo are grouped as Dogon Mande Ijo sometimes with Defaka as Ijoid Katla and Rashad Atlantic Congo edit Further information Atlantic Congo languages and Languages of NigeriaAtlantic Congo combines the Atlantic languages which do not form one branch and Volta Congo It comprises more than 80 of the Niger Congo speaking population or close to 600 million people 2015 The proposed Savannas group combines Adamawa Ubangian and Gur Outside of the Savannas group Volta Congo comprises Kru Kwa or West Kwa Volta Niger also East Kwa or West Benue Congo and Benue Congo or East Benue Congo Volta Niger includes the two largest languages of Nigeria Yoruba and Igbo Benue Congo includes the Southern Bantoid group which is dominated by the Bantu languages which account for 350 million people 2015 or half the total Niger Congo speaking population The strict genetic unity of any of these subgroups may themselves be under dispute For example Roger Blench 2012 argued that Adamawa Ubangian Kwa Bantoid and Bantu are not coherent groups 22 Although the Kordofanian branch is generally included in the Niger Congo languages some researchers do not agree with its inclusion Glottolog 3 4 2019 23 does not accept that the Kordofanian branches Lafofa Talodi and Heiban or the difficult to classify Laal language have been demonstrated to be Atlantic Congo languages It otherwise accepts the family but not its inclusion within a broader Niger Congo Glottolog also considers Ijoid Mande and Dogon to be independent language phyla that have not been demonstrated to be related to each other The Atlantic Congo group is characterised by the noun class systems of its languages Atlantic Congo largely corresponds to Mukarovsky s Western Nigritic phylum 24 AtlanticThe polyphyletic Atlantic group accounts for about 35 million speakers as of 2016 mostly accounted for by Fula and Wolof speakers Atlantic is not considered to constitute a valid group Senegambian languages includes Wolof spoken in Senegal and Fula spoken across the Sahel Bak languages sometimes grouped with Senegambian Mel languages Limba language Gola languageVolta CongoNorth Volta Kru languages of the Kru people in West Africa includes Bete Nyabwa and Dida Adamawa Ubangi Adamawa close to 100 languages and dialects scattered across the Adamawa Plateau spoken by an estimated total of 1 6 million as of 1996 the largest is Mumuye accounting for about a quarter of Adamawa speakers Ubangian a group of minor languages spoken in the Central African Republic May be an independent family or grouped with Adamawa as Adamawa Ubangi Gur about 70 languages spoken in the Sahel and Savanna regions of West Africa accounting for some 20 million speakers 2010 The largest language of this group is Moore with over 12 million speakers Gur and Adamawa Ubangi have also been grouped as Savannas languages Senufo languages of the Senufo people about 3 million speakers as of 2010 spoken in Ivory Coast and Mali with a geographical outlier in Ghana includes Senari and Supyire Senufo has been placed traditionally within Gur but is now usually considered an early offshoot from Atlantic Congo South Volta Kwa a divergent linkage 25 of languages of uncertain genetic unity spoken along the Ivory Coast across southern Ghana and in central Togo with a total of some 40 million speakers 2010s The largest language in this group is Akan spoken in Ghana with about 22 million speakers as of 2014 followed by Twi 9 million in 2015 Volta Niger also known as West Benue Congo or East Kwa a large linkage 25 of West African languages accounting for roughly 110 120 million speakers late 2010s Gbe spoken in Ghana Togo Benin and Nigeria of which Ewe 7 million speakers in 2017 is the largest and best known YEAI a large group of languages centred on Nigeria accounting for about 100 million speakers late 2010s Yoruboid 50 million speakers 2010s including Yoruba c 40 million 2017 Edoid including Edo 24 million 2010s Akoko Igboid including Igbo 24 million 2011 NOI Nupoid c 3 million c 1990 estimates Oko a minor dialect continuum spoken in Kogi State Idomoid group of languages of central Nigeria including Idoma with 1 to 2 million speakers 2010s Ayere Ahan moribund or extinct Benue Congo linkage 25 East Benue Congo Bantoid Cross Cross River Northern Bantoid Dakoid Fam Tikar Mambiloid Bendi Southern Bantoid includes the far flung Bantu languages spread across Sub Saharan Africa in the Bantu expansion from c 1000 BCE to 500 CE Tivoid Beboid a large range of languages of southwestern Cameroon and southeastern Nigeria Tivoid Esimbi East Beboid West Beboid Momo Furu Buru Menchum Ekoid Mbe Mamfe Grassfields Jarawan Mbam Bantu divided into Guthrie zones A S for a total of between 250 and 550 named languages Central Nigerian Platoid Jukunoid Kainji Plateau other languages unclassified within Benue Congo Ukaan Fali of Baissa Tita Other edit The putative Niger Congo languages outside of the Atlantic Congo family are centred in the upper Senegal and Niger river basins south and west of Timbuktu Mande Dogon the Niger Delta Ijoid and far to the east in south central Sudan around the Nuba Mountains the Kordofanian families They account for a total population of about 100 million 2015 mostly Mande and Ijaw Dogon languages of the Dogon people of Mali estimated at 1 6 million as of 2013 May have a noun class system related to the Atlantic Congo languages Ijoid Ijaw the languages of the Ijaw people 3 million as of 2011 plus the moribund Defaka language Mande languages of the Mande peoples estimated at 70 million as of 2016 Bangime spoken in Dogon country but seemingly unrelated to Dogon Siamou once classified as Kru Kordofanian edit The various Kordofanian languages are spoken in south central Sudan around the Nuba Mountains Kordofanian is a geographic grouping not a genetic one named for the Kordofan region These are minor languages spoken by a total of about 100 000 people according to 1980s estimates Katla and Rashad languages show isoglosses with Benue Congo that the other families lack 26 Talodi languages Heiban languages Lafofa languages Rashad languages Katla languagesThe endangered or extinct Laal Mpre and Jalaa languages are often assigned to Niger Congo nbsp Overview map nbsp Overview map of Benin Nigeria and Cameroon nbsp Table of demographic estimates in the same color code as the maps est 400 million speakers as of 2007 Classification history editEarly classifications edit Niger Congo as it is known today was only gradually recognized as a linguistic unit In early classifications of the languages of Africa one of the principal criteria used to distinguish different groupings was the languages use of prefixes to classify nouns or the lack thereof A major advance came with the work of Sigismund Wilhelm Koelle who in his 1854 Polyglotta Africana attempted a careful classification the groupings of which in quite a number of cases correspond to modern groupings An early sketch of the extent of Niger Congo as one language family can be found in Koelle s observation echoed in Bleek 1856 that the Atlantic languages used prefixes just like many Southern African languages Subsequent work of Bleek and some decades later the comparative work of Meinhof solidly established Bantu as a linguistic unit In many cases wider classifications employed a blend of typological and racial criteria Thus Friedrich Muller in his ambitious classification 1876 88 separated the Negro and Bantu languages Likewise the Africanist Karl Richard Lepsius considered Bantu to be of African origin and many Mixed Negro languages as products of an encounter between Bantu and intruding Asiatic languages In this period a relation between Bantu and languages with Bantu like but less complete noun class systems began to emerge Some authors saw the latter as languages which had not yet completely evolved to full Bantu status whereas others regarded them as languages which had partly lost original features still found in Bantu The Bantuist Meinhof made a major distinction between Bantu and a Semi Bantu group which according to him was originally of the unrelated Sudanic stock Westermann Greenberg and others edit nbsp Westermann s 1911 Die Sudansprachen Eine sprachvergleichende Studie laid much of the basis for the understanding of Niger Congo Westermann a pupil of Meinhof set out to establish the internal classification of the then Sudanic languages In a 1911 work he established a basic division between East and West A historical reconstruction of West Sudanic was published in 1927 and in his 1935 Charakter und Einteilung der Sudansprachen he conclusively established the relationship between Bantu and West Sudanic Joseph Greenberg took Westermann s work as a starting point for his own classification In a series of articles published between 1949 and 1954 he argued that Westermann s West Sudanic and Bantu formed a single genetic family which he named Niger Congo that Bantu constituted a subgroup of the Benue Congo branch that Adamawa Eastern previously not considered to be related was another member of this family and that Fula belonged to the West Atlantic languages Just before these articles were collected in final book form The Languages of Africa in 1963 he amended his classification by adding Kordofanian as a branch co ordinate with Niger Congo as a whole consequently he renamed the family Congo Kordofanian later Niger Kordofanian Greenberg s work on African languages though initially greeted with scepticism became the prevailing view among scholars 19 Bennet and Sterk 1977 presented an internal reclassification based on lexicostatistics that laid the foundation for the regrouping in Bendor Samuel 1989 Kordofanian was presented as one of several primary branches rather than being coordinate to the family as a whole prompting re introduction of the term Niger Congo which is in current use among linguists Many classifications continue to place Kordofanian as the most distant branch but mainly due to negative evidence fewer lexical correspondences rather than positive evidence that the other languages form a valid genealogical group Likewise Mande is often assumed to be the second most distant branch based on its lack of the noun class system prototypical of the Niger Congo family Other branches lacking any trace of the noun class system are Dogon and Ijaw whereas the Talodi branch of Kordofanian does have cognate noun classes suggesting that Kordofanian is also not a unitary group Pozdniakov 2012 stated The hypothesis of kinship between Niger Congo languages didn t appear as a result of discovery of numerous related forms for example in Mande and Adamawa It appeared as a result of comparison between the Bantu languages for which the classical comparative method was possible to be applied and which were reliably reconstructed with other African languages Niger Congo does not exist without Bantu We need to say clearly that if we establish a genetic relationship between a form in Bantu and in Atlantic languages or between Bantu and Mande we have all grounds to trace this form back to Niger Congo If we establish such a relationship between Mel and Kru or between Mande and Dogon we don t have enough reason to claim it Niger Congo In other words all Niger Congo languages are equal but Bantu languages are more equal than the others 27 Glottolog 2013 accepts the core with noun class systems the Atlantic Congo languages apart from the recent inclusion of some of the Kordofanian groups but not Niger Congo as a whole They list the following as separate families Atlantic Congo Mande Dogon Ijoid Lafofa Katla Tima Heiban Talodi and Rashad Babaev 2013 stated The truth here is that almost no attempts in fact have been made to verify Greenberg s Niger Congo hypothesis This might seem strange but the path laid by Joseph Greenberg to Proto Niger Congo was not followed by much research Most scholars have focused on individual families or groups and classifications as well as reconstructions were made on lower levels Compared with the volume of literature on Atlantic or Mande languages the list of papers considering the aspects of Niger Congo reconstruction per se is quite scarce 28 Oxford Handbooks Online 2016 has indicated that the continuing reassessment of Niger Congo s internal structure is due largely to the preliminary nature of Greenberg s classification explicitly based as it was on a methodology that doesn t produce proofs for genetic affiliations between languages but rather aims at identifying likely candidates The ongoing descriptive and documentary work on individual languages and their varieties greatly expanding our knowledge on formerly little known linguistic regions is helping to identify clusters and units that allow for the application of the historical comparative method Only the reconstruction of lower level units instead of big picture contributions based on mass comparison can help to verify or disprove our present concept of Niger Congo as a genetic grouping consisting of Benue Congo plus Volta Niger Kwa Adamawa plus Gur Kru the so called Kordofanian languages and probably the language groups traditionally classified as Atlantic 29 The coherence of Niger Congo as a language phylum is supported by Grollemund et al 2016 using computational phylogenetic methods 30 The East West Volta Congo division West East Benue Congo division and North South Bantoid division are not supported whereas a Bantoid group consisting of Ekoid Bendi Dakoid Jukunoid Tivoid Mambiloid Beboid Mamfe Tikar Grassfields and Bantu is supported The Automated Similarity Judgment Program ASJP also groups many Niger Congo branches together Dimmendaal Crevels and Muysken 2020 stated Greenberg s hypothesis of Niger Congo phylum has sometimes been taken as an established fact rather than a hypothesis awaiting further proof but there have also been attempts to look at his argumentation in more detail Much of the discussion concerning Niger Congo after Greenberg s seminal contribution in fact centered around the inclusion or exclusion of specific languages or language groups 31 Good 2020 stated First proposed by Greenberg 1949 Niger Congo NC has for decades been treated as one of the four major phyla of African languages The term as presently used however is not without its difficulties On the one hand it is employed as a referential label for a group of over 1 500 languages putting it among the largest commonly cited language groups in the world On the other hand the term is also intended to embody a hypothesis of genealogical relationship between the referential NC languages that has not been proven 32 Reconstruction edit Main article Proto Niger Congo language The lexicon of Proto Niger Congo or Proto Atlantic Congo has not been comprehensively reconstructed although Konstantin Pozdniakov reconstructed the numeral system of Proto Niger Congo in 2018 33 The most extensive reconstructions of lower order Niger Congo branches include several reconstructions of Proto Bantu which has consequently had a disproportionate influence on conceptions of what Proto Niger Congo may have been like The only stage higher than Proto Bantu that has been reconstructed is a pilot project by Stewart who since the 1970s has reconstructed the common ancestor of the Potou Tano and Bantu languages without so far considering the hundreds of other languages which presumably descend from that same ancestor 34 Niger Congo and Nilo Saharan edit See also Nilo Saharan languages Blench 2006 Over the years several linguists have suggested a link between Niger Congo and Nilo Saharan probably starting with Westermann s comparative work on the Sudanic family in which Eastern Sudanic now classified as Nilo Saharan and Western Sudanic now classified as Niger Congo were united Gregersen 1972 proposed that Niger Congo and Nilo Saharan be united into a larger phylum which he termed Kongo Saharan His evidence was mainly based on the uncertainty in the classification of Songhay morphological resemblances and lexical similarities A more recent proponent was Roger Blench 1995 who puts forward phonological morphological and lexical evidence for uniting Niger Congo and Nilo Saharan in a Niger Saharan phylum with special affinity between Niger Congo and Central Sudanic However fifteen years later his views had changed with Blench 2011 proposing instead that the noun classifier system of Central Sudanic commonly reflected in a tripartite general singulative plurative number system triggered the development or elaboration of the noun class system of the Atlantic Congo languages with tripartite number marking surviving in the Plateau and Gur languages of Niger Congo and the lexical similarities being due to loans Common features editPhonology edit Niger Congo languages have a clear preference for open syllables of the type CV Consonant Vowel The typical word structure of Proto Niger Congo though it has not been reconstructed is thought to have been CVCV a structure still attested in for example Bantu Mande and Ijoid in many other branches this structure has been reduced through phonological change Verbs are composed of a root followed by one or more extensional suffixes Nouns consist of a root originally preceded by a noun class prefix of C V shape which is often eroded by phonological change Consonants edit Several branches of Niger Congo have a regular phonological contrast between two classes of consonants Pending more clarity as to the precise nature of this contrast it is commonly characterized as a contrast between fortis and lenis consonants Vowels edit Many Niger Congo languages vowel harmony is based on the ATR advanced tongue root feature In this type of vowel harmony the position of the root of the tongue in regards to backness is the phonetic basis for the distinction between two harmonizing sets of vowels In its fullest form this type involves two classes each of five vowels 35 ATR ATR i ɪ e ɛ e a o ɔ u ʊ The roots are then divided into ATR and ATR categories This feature is lexically assigned to the roots because there is no determiner within a normal root that causes the ATR value 36 There are two types of ATR vowel harmony controllers in Niger Congo The first controller is the root When a root contains a ATR or ATR vowel then that value is applied to the rest of the word which involves crossing morpheme boundaries 37 For example suffixes in Wolof assimilate to the ATR value of the root to which they attach The following examples of these suffixes alternate depending on the root 36 ATR ATR Purpose le lɛ participant o ɔ nominalizing el al benefactive Furthermore the directionality of assimilation in ATR root controlled vowel harmony need not be specified The root features ATR and ATR spread left and or right as needed so that no vowel would lack a specification and be ill formed 38 Unlike in the root controlled harmony system where the two ATR values behave symmetrically a large number of Niger Congo languages exhibit a pattern where the ATR value is more active or dominant than the ATR value 39 This results in the second vowel harmony controller being the ATR value If there is even one vowel that is ATR in the whole word then the rest of the vowels harmonize with that feature However if there is no vowel that is ATR the vowels appear in their underlying form 37 This form of vowel harmony control is best exhibited in West African languages For example in Nawuri the diminutive suffix bi will cause the underlying ATR vowels in a word to become phonetically ATR 39 There are two types of vowels which affect the harmony process These are known as neutral or opaque vowels Neutral vowels do not harmonize to the ATR value of the word and instead maintain their own ATR value The vowels that follow them however will receive the ATR value of the root Opaque vowels maintain their own ATR value as well but they affect the harmony process behind them All of the vowels following an opaque vowel will harmonize with the ATR value of the opaque vowel instead of the ATR vowel of the root 36 The vowel inventory listed above is a ten vowel language This is a language in which all of the vowels of the language participate in the harmony system producing five harmonic pairs Vowel inventories of this type are still found in some branches of Niger Congo for example in the Ghana Togo Mountain languages 40 However this is the rarer inventory as oftentimes there are one or more vowels that are not part of a harmonic pair This has resulted in seven and nine vowel systems being the more popular systems The majority of languages with ATR controlled vowel harmony have either seven or nine vowel phonemes with the most common non participatory vowel being a 35 It has been asserted that this is because vowel quality differences in the mid central region where e the counterpart of a is found are difficult to perceive Another possible reason for the non participatory status of a is that there is articulatory difficulty in advancing the tongue root when the tongue body is low in order to produce a low ATR vowel 41 Therefore the vowel inventory for nine vowel languages is generally ATR ATR i ɪ e ɛ a o ɔ u ʊ And seven vowel languages have one of two inventories ATR ATR i ɪ ɛ a ɔ u ʊ ATR ATR i e ɛ a o ɔ u Note that in the nine vowel language the missing vowel is in fact e a s counterpart as would be expected 42 The fact that ten vowels have been reconstructed for proto Ijoid has led to the hypothesis that the original vowel inventory of Niger Congo was a full ten vowel system 43 44 45 On the other hand Stewart in recent comparative work reconstructs a seven vowel system for his proto Potou Akanic Bantu 46 Nasality edit Several scholars have documented a contrast between oral and nasal vowels in Niger Congo 47 In his reconstruction of proto Volta Congo Steward 1976 postulates that nasal consonants have originated under the influence of nasal vowels this hypothesis is supported by the fact that there are several Niger Congo languages that have been analysed as lacking nasal consonants altogether Languages like this have nasal vowels accompanied with complementary distribution between oral and nasal consonants before oral and nasal vowels Subsequent loss of the nasal oral contrast in vowels may result in nasal consonants becoming part of the phoneme inventory In all cases reported to date the bilabial m is the first nasal consonant to be phonologized Niger Congo thus invalidates two common assumptions about nasals 48 that all languages have at least one primary nasal consonant and that if a language has only one primary nasal consonant it is n Niger Congo languages commonly show fewer nasalized than oral vowels Kasem a language with a ten vowel system employing ATR vowel harmony has seven nasalized vowels Similarly Yoruba has seven oral vowels and only five nasal ones However the language of Zialo has a nasal equivalent for each of its seven oral vowels Tone edit The large majority of present day Niger Congo languages are tonal A typical Niger Congo tone system involves two or three contrastive level tones Four level systems are less widespread and five level systems are rare Only a few Niger Congo languages are non tonal Swahili is perhaps the best known but within the Atlantic branch some others are found Proto Niger Congo is thought to have been a tone language with two contrastive levels Synchronic and comparative historical studies of tone systems show that such a basic system can easily develop more tonal contrasts under the influence of depressor consonants or through the introduction of a downstep 49 Languages which have more tonal levels tend to use tone more for lexical and less for grammatical contrasts Contrastive levels of tone in some Niger Congo languages Tones LanguagesH L Dyula Bambara Maninka Temne Dogon Dagbani Gbaya Efik LingalaH M L Yakuba Nafaanra Kasem Banda Yoruba Jukun Dangme Yukuben Akan Anyi Ewe IgboT H M L Gban Wobe Munzombo Igede Mambila FonT H M L B Ashuku Benue Congo Dan Santa Mande PA S Mandinka Senegambia Fula Wolof Kimwaninone SwahiliAbbreviations used T top H high M mid L low B bottom PA S pitch accent or stress Adapted from Williamson 1989 27Morphosyntax edit Noun classification edit Niger Congo languages are known for their system of noun classification traces of which can be found in every branch of the family but Mande Ijoid Dogon and the Katla and Rashad branches of Kordofanian These noun classification systems are somewhat analogous to grammatical gender in other languages but there are often a fairly large number of classes often 10 or more and the classes may be male human female human animate inanimate or even completely gender unrelated categories such as places plants abstracts and groups of objects For example in Bantu the Swahili language is called Kiswahili while the Swahili people are Waswahili Likewise in Ubangian the Zande language is called Pazande while the Zande people are called Azande In the Bantu languages where noun classification is particularly elaborate it typically appears as prefixes with verbs and adjectives marked according to the class of the noun they refer to For example in Swahili watu wazuri wataenda is good zuri people tu will go ta enda Verbal extensions edit The same Atlantic Congo languages which have noun classes also have a set of verb applicatives and other verbal extensions such as the reciprocal suffix na Swahili penda to love pendana to love each other also applicative pendea to love for and causative pendeza to please Word order edit A subject verb object word order is quite widespread among today s Niger Congo languages but SOV is found in branches as divergent as Mande Ijoid and Dogon As a result there has been quite some debate as to the basic word order of Niger Congo Whereas Claudi 1993 argues for SVO on the basis of existing SVO gt SOV grammaticalization paths Gensler 1997 points out that the notion of basic word order is problematic as it excludes structures with for example auxiliaries However the structure SC OC VbStem Subject concord Object concord Verb stem found in the verbal complex of the SVO Bantu languages suggests an earlier SOV pattern where the subject and object were at least represented by pronouns Noun phrases in most Niger Congo languages are characteristically noun initial with adjectives numerals demonstratives and genitives all coming after the noun The major exceptions are found in the western 50 areas where verb final word order predominates and genitives precede nouns though other modifiers still come afterwards Degree words almost always follow adjectives and except in verb final languages adpositions are prepositional The verb final languages of the Mende region have two quite unusual word order characteristics Although verbs follow their direct objects oblique adpositional phrases like in the house with timber typically come after the verb 50 creating a SOVX word order Also noteworthy in these languages is the prevalence of internally headed and correlative relative clauses in both of which the head occurs inside the relative clause rather than the main clause References edit Good Jeff 2020 Niger Congo with a special focus on Benue Congo In Vossen Rainer Gerrit J Dimmendaal eds The Oxford Handbook of African Languages Oxford University Press pp 139 160 ISBN 9780191007378 The term Niger Congo as presently used however is not without its difficulties On the one hand it is employed as a referential label for a group of over 1 500 languages putting it among the largest commonly cited language groups in the world On the other hand the term is also intended to embody a hypothesis of genealogical relationship between the referential NC languages that has not been proven p 139 a b Irene Thompson Niger Congo Language Family aboutworldlanguages March 2015 Heine Bernd Nurse Derek 2000 08 03 African Languages An Introduction Cambridge University Press p 11 ISBN 9780521666299 Ammon Ulrich 2006 Sociolinguistics An International Handbook of the Science of Language and Society Walter de Gruyter p 2036 ISBN 9783110184181 Simons Gary F and Charles D Fennig eds 2018 Ethnologue Languages of the World Twenty first edition Dallas Texas SIL International Niger Congo Languages The Language Gulper March 2015 Manning Katie Timpson Adrian 2014 The demographic response to Holocene climate change in the Sahara Quaternary Science Reviews 101 28 35 Bibcode 2014QSRv 101 28M doi 10 1016 j quascirev 2014 07 003 Igor Kopytoff The African Frontier The Reproduction of Traditional African Societies 1989 9 10 cited after Igbo Language Roots and Pre History Archived 2019 07 17 at the Wayback Machine A Mighty Tree 2011 a b Blench Roger The Benue Congo languages a proposed internal classification unreliable source No comprehensive reconstruction has yet been done for the phylum as a whole and it is sometimes suggested e g by Dixon 1997 that Niger Congo is merely a typological and not a genetic unity This view is not held by any specialists in the phylum and reasons for thinking Niger Congo is a true genetic unity will be given in this chapter It is however true that the subclassification of the phylum has been continuously modified in recent years and cannot be presented as an agreed scheme The factors which have delayed reconstruction are the large number of languages the inaccessibility of much of the data and the paucity of able researchers committed to this field Emphasis will be placed on three characteristics of Niger Congo noun class systems verbal extensions and basic lexicon See also Bendor Samuel J ed 1989 The Niger Congo Languages Lanham University Press of America Westermann D 1922a Die Sprache der Guang Berlin Dietrich Reimer Greenberg J H 1964 Historical inferences from linguistic research in sub Saharan Africa Boston University Papers in African History 1 1 15 Blench Roger Unpublished Working Draft PDF www rogerblench info Herman Bell 1995 The Nuba Mountains Who Spoke What in 1976 The published results from a major project of the Institute of African and Asian Studies the Language Survey of the Nuba Mountains Williamson K 1971 The Benue Congo languages and Ijo Current Trends in Linguistics 7 ed T Sebeok 245 306 The Hague Mouton Williamson K 1988 Linguistic evidence for the prehistory of the Niger Delta The early history of the Niger Delta edited by E J Alagoa F N Anozie and N Nzewunwa Hamburg Helmut Buske Verlag Williamson K 1989 Benue Congo Overview In The Niger Congo Languages J Bendor Samuel ed Lanham University Press of America De Wolf P 1971 The noun class system of Proto Benue Congo The Hague Mouton Blench R M 1989 A proposed new classification of Benue Congo languages Afrikanische Arbeitspapiere Koln 17 115 147 a b Williamson Kay Blench Roger 2000 Niger Congo In Bernd Heine Derek Nurse eds African Languages An Introduction Cambridge University Press pp 11 12 Gerrit Dimmendaal 2008 Language Ecology and Linguistic Diversity on the African Continent Language and Linguistics Compass 2 5 841 Martin H Steinberg Disorders of Hemoglobin Genetics Pathophysiology and Clinical Management Cambridge University Press 2001 p 717 Niger Congo an alternative view PDF Rogerblench info Retrieved 2012 12 29 Roger Blench Niger Congo reconstruction Rogerblench info Retrieved 2012 12 29 Glottolog 3 4 glottolog org Hans G Mukarovsky A Study of Western Nigritic 2 vols 1976 1977 Blench 2004 Almost simultaneously with Greenberg 1963 Mukarovsky 1976 7 published his analysis of Western Nigritic Mukarovsky s basic theme was the relationship between the reconstructions of Bantu of Guthrie and other writers and the languages of West Africa Mukarovsky excluded Kordofanian Mande Ijo Dogon Adamawa Ubangian and most Bantoid languages for unknown reasons thus reconstructing an idiosyncratic grouping Nonetheless he buttressed his argument with an extremely valuable compilation of data establishing the case for Bantu Niger Congo genetic link beyond reasonable doubt a b c Blench Roger 2012 Niger Congo an alternative view Dimmendaal Gerrit J Storch Anne 2016 02 11 Niger Congo A brief state of the art Oxford Handbooks Online doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199935345 013 3 ISBN 978 0 19 993534 5 Retrieved 2020 03 26 Pozdniakov Konstantin September 18 21 2012 From Atlantic to Niger Congo three two one PDF Towards Proto Niger Congo Comparison and Reconstruction International Congress 2 Babaev Kirill 2013 Joseph Greenberg and the Current State of Niger Congo Journal of the Association for the Study of Language in Prehistory 18 19 Storch Anne Dimmendaal Gerrit J 11 February 2016 Niger Congo Oxford Handbook Topics in Linguistics doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199935345 013 3 ISBN 978 0 19 993534 5 via www oxfordhandbooks com Rebecca Grollemund Simon Branford Jean Marie Hombert amp Mark Pagel 2016 Genetic unity of the Niger Congo family Towards Proto Niger Congo comparison and reconstruction 2nd International Congress Dimmendaal Gerrit J Crevels Mily Muysken Pieter 2020 Patterns of dispersal and diversification in Africa Language Dispersal Diversification and Contact Oxford University Press p 201 ISBN 978 0 19 872381 3 Good Jeff Mar 19 2020 Niger Congo With A Special Focus On Benue Congo The Oxford Handbook of African Languages Oxford University Press p 139 ISBN 978 0 19 960989 5 Pozdniakov Konstantin 2018 The numeral system of Proto Niger Congo A step by step reconstruction pdf Niger Congo Comparative Studies Berlin Language Science Press doi 10 5281 zenodo 1311704 ISBN 978 3 96110 098 9 Tom Gueldemann 2018 Historical linguistics and genealogical language classification in Africa p 146 a b Morton Deborah 2012 Harmony in an Eleven Vowel Language PDF Cascadilla Proceedings Project pp 70 71 ISBN 978 1 57473 453 9 a b c Unseth Carla 2009 Vowel Harmony in Wolof PDF Occasional Papers in Applied Linguistics Graduate Institute of Applied Linguistics 2 3 Archived from the original PDF on September 3 2013 a b Bakovic Eric 2000 Harmony Dominance and Control PDF PhD dissertation Rutgers The State University of New Jersey p ii Clements G N 1981 Akan vowel harmony A non linear analysis Harvard Studies in Phonology 2 108 177 a b Casali Roderic F 2002 Nawuri ATR Harmony in Typological Perspective PDF Journal of West African Languages Summer Institute of Linguistics 29 1 Archived from the original PDF on March 30 2014 Anderson C G 1999 ATR vowel harmony in Akposso Studies in African Linguistics 28 2 185 214 doi 10 32473 sal v28i2 107372 Archangeli Diana Pulleyblank Douglas 1994 Grounded Phonology Current Studies in Linguistics Vol 25 Cambridge MIT Press ISBN 0 262 01137 9 Casali Roderic F 2008 ATR Harmony in African Languages Language and Linguistics Compass 2 3 496 549 doi 10 1111 j 1749 818X 2008 00064 x Doneux Jean L 1975 Hypotheses pour la comparative des langues atlantiques Africana Linguistica Tervuren Musee Royal de l Afrique Centrale 6 41 129 doi 10 3406 aflin 1975 892 Re proto Atlantic Williamson Kay 2000 Towards reconstructing Proto Niger Congo In Wolff H E Gensler O eds Proceedings of the 2nd World Congress of African Linguistics Leipzig 1997 Koln Rudiger Koppe pp 49 70 ISBN 3 89645 124 3 Re proto Ijoid Stewart John M 1976 Towards Volta Congo Reconstruction Rede Leiden Universitaire Pers Leiden ISBN 90 6021 307 6 Casali Roderic F 1995 On the Reduction of Vowel Systems in Volta Congo African Languages and Cultures 8 2 109 121 doi 10 1080 09544169508717790 Re proto Volta Conga Stewart John M 2002 The potential of Proto Potou Akanic Bantu as a pilot Proto Niger Congo and the reconstructions updated Journal of African Languages and Linguistics 23 2 197 224 doi 10 1515 jall 2002 012 le Saout 1973 for an early overview Stewart 1976 for a diachronic Volta Congo wide analysis Capo 1981 for a synchronic analysis of nasality in Gbe see Gbe languages nasality and Bole Richard 1984 1985 as cited in Williamson 1989 for similar reports on several Mande Gur Kru Kwa and Ubangi languages As noted by Williamson 1989 24 The assumptions are from Ferguson s 1963 Assumptions about nasals in Greenberg ed Universals of Language pp 50 60 as cited in Williamson art cit Niger Congo languages Widespread characteristics of Niger Congo languages Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2022 05 13 a b Haspelmath Martin Dryer Matthew S Gil David and Comrie Bernard eds The World Atlas of Language Structures pp 346 385 Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 ISBN 0 19 925591 1Further reading editBendor Samuel John Hartell Rhonda L eds 1989 The Niger Congo Languages A Classification and Description of Africa s Largest Language Family University Press of America ISBN 9780819173751 Bennett Patrick R Sterk Jan P 1977 South Central Niger Congo A reclassification Studies in African Linguistics 8 3 241 273 Blench Roger January 1995 Is Niger Congo simply a branch of Nilo Saharan In Nicolai Robert Rottland Franz eds Actes du Cinquieme Colloque de Linguistique Nilo Saharienne 24 29 aout 1992 Universite de Nice Sophia Antipolis Nilo Saharan Vol 10 pp 83 130 ISBN 3 927620 72 6 Blench Roger 2011 Can Sino Tibetan and Austroasiatic help us understand the evolution of Niger Congo noun classes PDF CALL 41 Leiden Archived from the original PDF on 2019 04 23 Blench Roger 2011 Should Kordofanian be split up PDF Nuba Hills Conference Leiden Capo Hounkpati B C 1981 Nasality in Gbe A Synchronic Interpretation Studies in African Linguistics 12 1 1 43 Casali Roderic F 1995 On the Reduction of Vowel Systems in Volta Congo African Languages and Cultures 8 2 109 121 doi 10 1080 09544169508717790 Der Houssikian Haig 1972 The Evidence for a Niger Congo Hypothesis Cahiers d Etudes Africaines 12 46 316 22 doi 10 3406 cea 1972 2768 JSTOR 4391154 Dimmendaal Gerrit 2008 Language Ecology and Linguistic Diversity on the African Continent Language and Linguistics Compass 2 5 840 858 doi 10 1111 j 1749 818X 2008 00085 x Greenberg Joseph H 1963 The Languages of Africa Indiana University Press Gregersen Edgar A 1972 Kongo Saharan Journal of African Languages 11 1 46 56 Nurse Derek Rose Sarah Hewson John 2016 Tense and Aspect in Niger Congo PDF Documents on Social Sciences and Humanities Tervuren Belgium Royal Museum for Central Africa ISBN 978 9 4922 4429 1 Archived from the original PDF on 2023 05 22 Olson Kenneth S 2006 On Niger Congo Classification In Darden Bill J Aronson Howard Isaac eds The Bill Question Contributions to the Study of Linguistics and Languages in Honor of Bill J Darden on the Occasion of His Sixty sixth Birthday Slavica Publishers pp 153 190 ISBN 978 0 89357 330 0 le Saout J 1973 Languages sans consonnes nasales Annales de l Universite d Abidjan Serie H Linguistique in French ISSN 1011 6737 OCLC 772580339 Segerer G Flavier S RefLex Reference Lexicon 2 2 Stewart John M 1976 Towards Volta Congo reconstruction a comparative study of some languages of Black Africa Speech Leiden University Stewart John M 2002 The potential of Proto Potou Akanic Bantu as a pilot Proto Niger Congo and the reconstructions updated Journal of African Languages and Linguistics 23 2 doi 10 1515 jall 2002 012 Webb Vic 2001 African Voices An Introduction to the Languages and Linguistics of Africa Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195716818 Williamson Kay Blench Roger Niger Congo In Heine Bernd Nurse Derek eds African Languages An Introduction pp 11 42 ISBN 9780521661782 OCLC 42810789 External links edit nbsp Media related to Niger Congo languages at Wikimedia Commons An Evaluation of Niger Congo Classification Kenneth Olson Tense and Aspect in Niger Congo Derek Nurse Sarah Rose amp John Hewson Preliminary Niger Congo classification Archived 2021 05 09 at the Wayback Machine Guillaume Segerer 2005 LLACAN Swadesh lists of African proto language reconstructions Archived 2021 08 08 at the Wayback Machine Guillaume Segerer 2005 LLACAN Phonologies and orthographies of African languages LLACAN JournalsLinguistique et Langues Africaines Archived 2021 01 13 at the Wayback Machine LLA Journal Mandenkan Archived 2011 01 04 at the Wayback Machine introduction Archived 2021 01 27 at the Wayback Machine Nordic Journal of African Studies archives Archived 2020 07 11 at the Wayback Machine Journal of West African languages Journal of African Languages and Linguistics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Niger Congo languages amp oldid 1206011188, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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