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Wikipedia

Nilo-Saharan languages

The Nilo-Saharan languages are a proposed family of African languages spoken by somewhere around 70 million speakers,[1] mainly in the upper parts of the Chari and Nile rivers, including historic Nubia, north of where the two tributaries of the Nile meet. The languages extend through 17 nations in the northern half of Africa: from Algeria to Benin in the west; from Libya to the Democratic Republic of the Congo in the centre; and from Egypt to Tanzania in the east.

Nilo-Saharan
(disputed)
Geographic
distribution
Central Africa, north-central Africa and East Africa
Native speakers
ca. 70 million for all branches listed below.[1]
Linguistic classificationProposed language family
Subdivisions
ISO 639-2 / 5ssa
GlottologNone
Distribution of Nilo-Saharan languages (in yellow)

As indicated by its hyphenated name, Nilo-Saharan is a family of the African interior, including the greater Nile Basin and the Central Sahara Desert. Eight of its proposed constituent divisions (excluding Kunama, Kuliak, and Songhay) are found in the modern countries of Sudan and South Sudan, through which the Nile River flows.

In his book The Languages of Africa (1963), Joseph Greenberg named the group and argued it was a genetic family. It contains the languages which are not included in the Niger–Congo, Afroasiatic or Khoisan groups. Although some linguists have referred to the phylum as "Greenberg's wastebasket", into which he placed all the otherwise unaffiliated non-click languages of Africa,[2][3] other specialists in the field have accepted it as a working hypothesis since Greenberg's classification.[4] Linguists accept that it is a challenging proposal to demonstrate but contend that it looks more promising the more work is done.[5][6][7]

Some of the constituent groups of Nilo-Saharan are estimated to predate the African neolithic. For example, the unity of Eastern Sudanic is estimated to date to at least the 5th millennium BC.[8] Nilo-Saharan genetic unity would thus be much older still and date to the late Upper Paleolithic. The earliest written language associated with the Nilo-Saharan family is Old Nubian, one of the oldest written African languages, attested in writing from the 8th to the 15th century AD.

This larger classification system is not accepted by all linguists, however. Glottolog (2013), for example, a publication of the Max Planck Institute in Germany, does not recognise the unity of the Nilo-Saharan family or even of the Eastern Sudanic branch; Georgiy Starostin (2016) likewise does not accept a relationship between the branches of Nilo-Saharan, though he leaves open the possibility that some of them may prove to be related to each other once the necessary reconstructive work is done. According to Güldemann (2018), "the current state of research is not sufficient to prove the Nilo-Saharan hypothesis."[9]

Characteristics edit

The constituent families of Nilo-Saharan are quite diverse. One characteristic feature is a tripartite singulativecollectiveplurative number system, which Blench (2010) believes is a result of a noun-classifier system in the protolanguage. The distribution of the families may reflect ancient watercourses in a green Sahara during the Neolithic Subpluvial, when the desert was more habitable than it is today.[10]

Major languages edit

Within the Nilo-Saharan languages are a number of languages with at least a million speakers (most data from SIL's Ethnologue 16 (2009)). In descending order:

Some other important Nilo-Saharan languages under 1 million speakers:

The total for all speakers of Nilo-Saharan languages according to Ethnologue 16 is 38–39 million people. However, the data spans a range from ca. 1980 to 2005, with a weighted median at ca. 1990. Given population growth rates, the figure in 2010 might be half again higher, or about 60 million.

History of the proposal edit

The Saharan family (which includes Kanuri, Kanembu, the Tebu languages, and Zaghawa) was recognized by Heinrich Barth in 1853, the Nilotic languages by Karl Richard Lepsius in 1880, the various constituent branches of Central Sudanic (but not the connection between them) by Friedrich Müller in 1889, and the Maban family by Maurice Gaudefroy-Demombynes in 1907. The first inklings of a wider family came in 1912, when Diedrich Westermann included three of the (still independent) Central Sudanic families within Nilotic in a proposal he called Niloto-Sudanic;[12] this expanded Nilotic was in turn linked to Nubian, Kunama, and possibly Berta, essentially Greenberg's Macro-Sudanic (Chari–Nile) proposal of 1954.

In 1920 G. W. Murray fleshed out the Eastern Sudanic languages when he grouped Nilotic, Nubian, Nera, Gaam, and Kunama. Carlo Conti Rossini made similar proposals in 1926, and in 1935 Westermann added Murle. In 1940 A. N. Tucker published evidence linking five of the six branches of Central Sudanic alongside his more explicit proposal for East Sudanic. In 1950 Greenberg retained Eastern Sudanic and Central Sudanic as separate families, but accepted Westermann's conclusions of four decades earlier in 1954 when he linked them together as Macro-Sudanic (later Chari–Nile, from the Chari and Nile Watersheds).

Greenberg's later contribution came in 1963, when he tied Chari–Nile to Songhai, Saharan, Maban, Fur, and Koman-Gumuz and coined the current name Nilo-Saharan for the resulting family. Lionel Bender noted that Chari–Nile was an artifact of the order of European contact with members of the family and did not reflect an exclusive relationship between these languages, and the group has been abandoned, with its constituents becoming primary branches of Nilo-Saharan—or, equivalently, Chari–Nile and Nilo-Saharan have merged, with the name Nilo-Saharan retained. When it was realized that the Kadu languages were not Niger–Congo, they were commonly assumed to therefore be Nilo-Saharan, but this remains somewhat controversial.

Progress has been made since Greenberg established the plausibility of the family. Koman and Gumuz remain poorly attested and are difficult to work with, while arguments continue over the inclusion of Songhai. Blench (2010) believes that the distribution of Nilo-Saharan reflects the waterways of the wet Sahara 12,000 years ago, and that the protolanguage had noun classifiers, which today are reflected in a diverse range of prefixes, suffixes, and number marking.

Internal relationships edit

Dimmendaal (2008) notes that Greenberg (1963) based his conclusion on strong evidence and that the proposal as a whole has become more convincing in the decades since. Mikkola (1999) reviewed Greenberg's evidence and found it convincing. Roger Blench notes morphological similarities in all putative branches, which leads him to believe that the family is likely to be valid.

Koman and Gumuz are poorly known and have been difficult to evaluate until recently.[vague] Songhay is markedly divergent, in part due to massive influence from the Mande languages.[4] Also problematic are the Kuliak languages, which are spoken by hunter-gatherers and appear to retain a non-Nilo-Saharan core; Blench believes they might have been similar to Hadza or Dahalo and shifted incompletely to Nilo-Saharan.

Anbessa Tefera and Peter Unseth consider the poorly attested Shabo language to be Nilo-Saharan, though unclassified within the family due to lack of data; Dimmendaal and Blench, based on a more complete description, consider it to be a language isolate on current evidence. Proposals have sometimes been made to add Mande (usually included in Niger–Congo), largely due to its many noteworthy similarities with Songhay rather than with Nilo-Saharan as a whole, however this relationship is more likely due to a close relationship between Songhay and Mande many thousands of years ago in the early days of Nilo-Saharan, so the relationship is probably more one of ancient contact than a genetic link.[4]

The extinct Meroitic language of ancient Kush has been accepted by linguists such as Rille, Dimmendaal, and Blench as Nilo-Saharan, though others argue for an Afroasiatic affiliation. It is poorly attested.

There is little doubt that the constituent families of Nilo-Saharan—of which only Eastern Sudanic and Central Sudanic show much internal diversity—are valid groups. However, there have been several conflicting classifications in grouping them together. Each of the proposed higher-order groups has been rejected by other researchers: Greenberg's Chari–Nile by Bender and Blench, and Bender's Core Nilo-Saharan by Dimmendaal and Blench. What remains are eight (Dimmendaal) to twelve (Bender) constituent families of no consensus arrangement.

Greenberg 1963 edit

 
The branches of the Nilo-Saharan languages.

Joseph Greenberg, in The Languages of Africa, set up the family with the following branches. The Chari–Nile core are the connections that had been suggested by previous researchers.

 Nilo‑Saharan 

Koman (including Gumuz)

Saharan

Songhay

Fur

Maban

 Chari–Nile 

Gumuz was not recognized as distinct from neighbouring Koman; it was separated out (forming "Komuz") by Bender (1989).

Bender 1989, 1991 edit

Lionel Bender came up with a classification which expanded upon and revised that of Greenberg. He considered Fur and Maban to constitute a Fur–Maban branch, added Kadu to Nilo-Saharan, removed Kuliak from Eastern Sudanic, removed Gumuz from Koman (but left it as a sister node), and chose to posit Kunama as an independent branch of the family. By 1991 he had added more detail to the tree, dividing Chari–Nile into nested clades, including a Core group in which Berta was considered divergent, and coordinating Fur–Maban as a sister clade to Chari–Nile.[13][14]

 Nilo-Saharan 

Bender revised his model of Nilo-Saharan again in 1996, at which point he split Koman and Gumuz into completely separate branches of Core Nilo-Saharan.[15]

Ehret 1989 edit

Christopher Ehret came up with a novel classification of Nilo-Saharan as a preliminary part of his then-ongoing research into the macrofamily. His evidence for the classification was not fully published until much later (see Ehret 2001 below), and so it did not attain the same level of acclaim as competing proposals, namely those of Bender and Blench.[14]

Bender 2000 edit

By 2000 Bender had entirely abandoned the Chari–Nile and Komuz branches. He also added Kunama back to the "Satellite–Core" group and simplified the subdivisions therein. He retracted the inclusion of Shabo, stating that it could not yet be adequately classified but might prove to be Nilo-Saharan once sufficient research has been done. This tentative and somewhat conservative classification held as a sort of standard for the next decade.[16]

 Nilo-Saharan 

Ehret 2001 edit

Ehret's updated classification was published in his book A Historical–Comparative Reconstruction of Nilo-Saharan (2001).[17] This model is notable in that it consists of two primary branches: Gumuz–Koman, and a Sudanic group containing the rest of the families (see Sudanic languages § Nilo-Saharan for more detail). Also, unusually, Songhay is well-nested within a core group and coordinate with Maban in a "Western Sahelian" clade, and Kadu is not included in Nilo-Saharan. Note that "Koman" in this classification is equivalent to Komuz, i.e. a family with Gumuz and Koman as primary branches, and Ehret renames the traditional Koman group as "Western Koman".

 Nilo-Saharan 
 Koman 
 Sudanic 

Central Sudanic

 Northern Sudanic 

Kunama

Saharan

 Sahelian 

Fur

Trans-Sahel 
 Western Sahelian 

Eastern Sahelian (Eastern Sudanic) (including Berta)

Blench 2006 edit

Niger-Saharan, a language macrofamily linking the Niger-Congo and Nilo-Saharan phyla, was proposed by Blench (2006).[18] It was not accepted by other linguists. Blench's (2006) internal classification of the Niger-Saharan macrophylum is as follows:

According to Blench (2006), typological features common to both Niger-Congo and Nilo-Saharan include:

  • Phonology: ATR vowel harmony and the labial-velars /kp/ and /gb/
  • Noun-class affixes: e.g., ma- affix for mass nouns in Nilo-Saharan
  • Verbal extensions and plural verbs

Blench 2010 edit

With a better understanding of Nilo-Saharan classifiers, and the affixes or number marking they have developed into in various branches, Blench believes that all of the families postulated as Nilo-Saharan belong together. He proposes the following tentative internal classification, with Songhai closest to Saharan, a relationship that had not previously been suggested:

? Mimi of Decorse

Blench 2015 edit

By 2015,[19] and again in 2017,[20] Blench had refined the subclassification of this model, linking Maban with Fur, Kadu with Eastern Sudanic, and Kuliak with the node that contained them, and added a tentative, extinct branch he names "Plateau" as to explain a possible Nilo-Saharan substrate in the Malian Dogon and Bangime languages, for the following structure:

Blench (2021) concludes that Maban may be close to Eastern Sudanic.

Starostin (2016) edit

 
Starostin's "Macro-Sudanic" in purple, surrounding language families shown as well.

Georgiy Starostin (2016),[21] using lexicostatistics based on Swadesh lists, is more inclusive than Glottolog, and in addition finds probable and possible links between the families that will require reconstruction of the proto-languages for confirmation. Starostin also does not consider Greenberg's Nilo-Saharan to be a valid, coherent clade.

In addition to the families listed in Glottolog (previous section), Starostin considers the following to be established:

A relationship of Nyima with Nubian, Nara, and Tama (NNT) is considered "highly likely" and close enough that proper comparative work should be able to demonstrate the connection if it's valid, though it would fall outside NNT proper (see Eastern Sudanic languages).

Other units that are "highly likely" to eventually prove to be valid families are:

In summary, at this level of certainty, "Nilo-Saharan" constitutes ten distinct and separate language families: Eastern Sudanic, Central Sudanic – Kadu, Maba–Kunama, Komuz, Saharan, Songhai, Kuliak, Fur, Berta, and Shabo.

Possible further "deep" connections, which cannot be evaluated until the proper comparative work on the constituent branches has been completed, are:

  • Eastern Sudanic + Fur + Berta
  • Central Sudanic – Kadu + Maba–Kunama

There are faint suggestions that Eastern and Central Sudanic may be related (essentially the old Chari–Nile clade), though that possibility is "unexplorable under current conditions" and could be complicated if Niger–Congo were added to the comparison. Starostin finds no evidence that the Komuz, Kuliak, Saharan, Songhai, or Shabo languages are related to any of the other Nilo-Saharan languages. Mimi-D and Meroitic were not considered, though Starostin had previously proposed that Mimi-D was also an isolate despite its slight similarity to Central Sudanic.

In a follow-up study published in 2017, Starostin reiterated his previous points as well as explicitly accepting a genetic relationship between Macro-East Sudanic and Macro-Central Sudanic. Starostin names this proposal "Macro-Sudanic". The classification is as follows.[22]

Starostin (2017) finds significant lexical similarities between Kadu and Central Sudanic, while some lexical similarities also shared by Central Sudanic with Fur-Amdang, Berta, and Eastern Sudanic to a lesser extent.

Dimmendaal 2016, 2019 edit

Gerrit J. Dimmendaal[23][24] suggests the following subclassification of Nilo-Saharan:

 Nilo‑Saharan 

Dimmendaal et al. consider the evidence for the inclusion of Kadu and Songhay too weak to draw any conclusions at present, whereas there is some evidence that Koman and Gumuz belong together and may be Nilo-Saharan.[25]

The large Northeastern division is based on several typological markers:

Blench 2023 edit

By 2023,[26] Blench had slightly revised the model for a deep primary split between Koman–Gumuz and the rest. Kunama and Bertha are "provisionally" placed as the next to branch off, because they only partially share the features that unite the rest of the family. However, it is not clear if this is because they actually diverged early, or if they might have lost those features at a later date. For example, Berta shares plausible lexical cognates with the Eastern Jebel languages (East Sudanic) and its system of grammatical number "closely resembles" those of the East Sudanic languages; Kunama could be divergent "due to long-term interaction with Afroasiatic languages." Saharan–Songhay (especially Songhay) have seen substantial erosion of key characteristics, but this appears to be a secondary development and not evidence of early branching. "Core" Nilo-Saharan ("Central African" in Blench 2015) thus appears to be a typological rather than genetic grouping, though Maban is treated as a divergent branch of Eastern Sudanic; Kadu also seems to be quite close. The resulting structure is as follows:

Beyond the work of Colleen Ahland, Blench notes that the inclusion of Koman is buttressed by the work of Manuel Otero.[27] The argument for Songhay is mostly lexical, especially the pronouns. Blench gives Greenberg credit for both East and Central Sudanic. Saharan and Songhay have some "striking" similarities in their lexicon, which Blench argues is genetic, though the absence of reliable proto-Sarahan and proto-Songhay reconstructions makes evaluation difficult.

Glottolog 4.0 (2019) edit

In summarizing the literature to date, Hammarström et al. in Glottolog do not accept that the following families are demonstrably related with current research:

External relations edit

Proposals for the external relationships of Nilo-Saharan typically center on Niger–Congo: Gregersen (1972) grouped the two together as Kongo–Saharan. However, Blench (2011) proposed that the similarities between Niger–Congo and Nilo-Saharan (specifically Atlantic–Congo and Central Sudanic) are due to contact, with the noun-class system of Niger–Congo developed from, or elaborated on the model of, the noun classifiers of Central Sudanic.

Phonology edit

Nilo-Saharan languages present great differences, being a highly diversified group. It has proven difficult to reconstruct many aspects of Proto-Nilo-Saharan. Two very different reconstructions of the proto-language have been proposed by Lionel Bender and Christopher Ehret.

Bender's reconstruction edit

The consonant system reconstructed by Bender for Proto-Nilo-Saharan is:

Labial Coronal Palatal Velar
plosive voiceless *t, *t₂ *k, *kʰ
voiced *b *d, *d₂ *g
fricative *f *s
liquid *r, *l *r₂
nasal *m *n
semivowel *w *j

The phonemes /*d₂, *t₂/ correspond to coronal plosives, the phonetic details are difficult to specify, but clearly, they remain distinct from /*d, *t/ and supported by many phonetic correspondences (another author, C. Ehret, reconstructs for the coronal area the sound [d̪], [ḍ] and [t̪], [ṭ] which perhaps are closer to the phonetic detail of /*d₂, *t₂/, see infra)

Bender gave a list of about 350 cognates and discussed in depth the grouping and the phonological system proposed by Ch. Ehret. Blench (2000) compares both systems (Bender's and Ehret's) and prefers the former because it is more secure and is based in more reliable data.[28] For example, Bender points out that there is a set of phonemes including implosives /*ɓ, *ɗ, *ʄ, *ɠ/, ejectives /*pʼ, *tʼ, (*sʼ), *cʼ, *kʼ/ and prenasal constants /*ᵐb, *ⁿd, (*ⁿt), *ⁿɟ, *ᵑg/, but it seems that they can be reconstructed only for core groups (E, I, J, L) and the collateral group (C, D, F, G, H), but not for Proto-Nilo-Saharan.

Ehret's reconstruction edit

Christopher Ehret used a less clear methodology and proposed a maximalist phonemic system:

Labial Dental Alveol. Retrof. Palatal Velar Glottal
plosive implosive *ɗ̣
voiced *b *d̪ *d *ḍ *g
voiceless *p *t̪ *t *ṭ *k
aspirate *pʰ *t̪ʰ *tʰ *ṭʰ *kʰ
ejective *pʼ *t̪ʼ *tʼ *ṭʼ *kʼ
fricative *s, *z *ṣ
nasal simple *m *n
prenasal *ⁿb *ⁿð *ⁿd *ⁿḍ *ⁿg
liquid *l̪ *r, *l
approximant plain *w *j
complex *ʼw *ʼj *h

Ehret's maximalist system has been criticized by Bender and Blench. These authors state that the correspondences used by Ehret are not very clear and because of this many of the sounds in the table may only be allophonic variations.[29]

Morphology edit

Dimmendaal (2016)[23] cites the following morphological elements as stable across Nilo-Saharan:

Comparative vocabulary edit

Sample basic vocabulary in different Nilo-Saharan branches:

Note: In table cells with slashes, the singular form is given before the slash, while the plural form follows the slash.

Language eye ear nose tooth tongue mouth blood bone tree water eat name
Proto-Nilotic[30] *(k)ɔŋ, pl. *(k)ɔɲ *yit̪ *(q)ume *kɛ-la(-c) *ŋa-lyɛp *(k)ʊt̪ʊk *käw *kɛ-ɛt, *kɪ-yat *pi(-ʀ) *ɲam *ka-ʀin
Proto-Jebel[31] **ed ~ *er **si(di ~ gi) **ɲi-di **kala-d **udu **k-afa-d **(g-)am- **kaca **cii ~ *kii **ɲam (siigə, saag)
Temein[32] nɪ́ŋɪ̀nàʈ / kɛ̀ɛ́n wénàʈ / kwèén kɪ́mɪ́nʈɪ̀n / kɪkɪ́mɪ́nʈɪ́nɪ̀ awɪ̀s / kɛ́ɛ̀ʔ mɛ́nɖɪnyàʈ íʈùk / k(w)úʈɪ̀n mónɪ̀ʈ àmɪ̀s / kɔ́maʔ mɛ́rɛŋɪ̀s / mɛ́rɛŋ múŋ láma kàlɪ́n, kàlɪ́ŋ
Proto-Daju[33] *aŋune / *aŋwe ~ *aŋun *wunute / *wunuge *mu-ne *ɲiɣte / *ɲiɣke *ɲabire / *ɲabirta *ikke / *ikku *tamuke *ŋai / *ŋayu *ewete / *ewe *ma- *si- *ange / *angu
Kadugli (Talla dialect)[34] ayyɛ / iyyɛ naasɔ / isinɛ́ ámb-/nigáŋg-árɔk t̪- / iŋŋini áŋdáɗuk / ni- niinɔ / niginíínɔ ariid̪ʊ t̪iŋguba / kuba ffa / nááfa ɓiid̪i oori ɛɛrɛ / nigirɛɛnɛ
Proto-Northern Eastern Sudanic[35] *maɲ *ɲog-ul *em-u *ŋes-il *ŋal *ag-il ~ *ag-ul *ug-er *kɛs-ɛr *koɲ-er- *mban *kal- / *kamb- *(ŋ)ɛr-i
Nara[35] no, nòò / no-ta, nóó-ta tús / túsá demmo, dəmmo, dàm̀mò, dòmmò nɪ̀hɪ̀ / nɪ̀hɪ̀t-tá; nèʃɪ̀ / nèʃá hàggà, àggà, ààdà, hàdà aùlò / aùl-lá; àgúrá / àgúr-tà kitto, kɪ̀tò ketti, kəti, kátɪ́ / ketta, kátá tüm, tûm; kè́l emba, mbàà kal, kál, kár ade, ààdà
Proto-Nubian[35] *maaɲ, sg. *miɲ-di *ugul(-e), sg. *ugul-di ? *ŋil, sg. *ŋíl-di *ŋal, sg. ŋal-di *agil *ùg-er *kiser, sg. *kisir-ti *koor, sg. *koor-ti *es-ti *kal- *er-i
Proto-Taman[35] *me-ti, pl. *mVŋ *(ŋ)usu-ti (sg) *eme, sg. emi-ti (sg.) *ŋesi-t(i), pl. *ŋes-oŋ *laat *auli *agi *kei-ti, pl. *kei-ŋ *gaan; *kiɲe(-ti) (?) *kal /*kaal *ŋan- *(ŋ)aat, pl. *(ŋ)ari-g
Proto-Nyima[35] *a̍ŋV *ɲɔgɔr- *(o)mud̪- (?) *ŋil- ? *ŋàl- *wule *amV *t̪uma *bɔ́ŋ *t̪a̍l- / *ta̍m-
Proto-SW Surmic[36] *kɛɓɛrɛ (pl.) *it̪t̪at *ʊŋɛtʃ (?) *ɲiggɪtta *ʌgʌʌt *(k)-ʊt̪t̪ʊk *ɓɪj- *ɛmmɛ *kɛɛt̪ *maam *ɗak- *ðara
Proto-SE Surmic[36] *kabari *ɲabi (?) *giroŋ *ɲigidda (?) *kat *tuk- *ɲaɓa *giga (?) *kɛdo (?) *ma *sara
Proto-Kuliak[37] *ekw, pl. *ekw=ẹk *beos, pl. *beosẹk *nyab, pl. *nyabẹk *ɛd-eɓ *ak, pl. *akẹk *seh *ɔk *ad, pl. *ad=is *kywɛh *yed, pl. *yedẹk
Shabo[38] k’iti sonɑ k’ɑu hɑndɑ kɑusɛ dɑmo emɑhɑ; egege k’ɔnɑ wɔː woŋgɑse
Ongota[39] ˈʔaːfa ˈwoːwa ˈsiːna (loan?) ʔitiˈma ʔɑdabo (loan?) ˈʔiːfa ˈmitʃa (loan?) ˈhɑntʃa ˈtʃaːhawa ʔeˈdʒak ˈmiʃa
Proto-Sara-Bongo-Bagirmi[40] *kamɔ; *kamu; *kama *imbi; *EmbE; *mbili; *mbElE; *imbil-; *EmbEl- *Samɔ; *Samu; *Somu; *kanu; *kunu; *kVnV *kanga; *nganga *unɖɛ(C-) *tara *manga; *masu; *mVsV; *nɖuma *Kinga; *Kunga; *Kingo *kaga *mEnE; *mAnɛ; *mani *OɲO; *ɔɲɔ; *VɲV *iɭi; *ʈV
Proto-Mangbetu[41] *mʷɔ̀ *bɪ́ *amɔ̀ *kɪ́ *kàɖrà *tí(kpɔ̀) *álí *kpɔ̀ *kɪ́rɪ́ɛ̀ *gʷò *láɲɔ̀ *kɛ̀lʊ̀
Mangbutu[42] owékékí ubí tongi usɛ́ kedrú utí koto ikpi okpá uwɛ ano aɓé
Bale[42] ɲɔ̌ ndǔ̱tú̱ da tso kpa tsú wyɔ ngbá / nzú
Ndru[42] nikpɔ́ ɓi(na) ondǐ̹tsǔ̹ ku da tsu âzû kpá ítsú ǐɗá ɲú óvôná
Ma'di (Uganda)[43] ɔ̀mvɔ̄ lɛ̀ɖá ti àrɪ́ hʷa kʷɛ èyí ɲā
Birri[44] mɛ́; mʊ́ nvö; nvu ímɔ̀; ámɔ̀ ìnɖrɔ́; ìnɖrá tyi(di) ɔ́tɔ́ kpɔ kpi; kpɪ wu ɔnyo iri
Kresh[45] mumu mbímbi uŋú ʃɛ́ʃɛ̀ ndjindja srama kpɔkpɔ́ kpikpi ùyù ɔ́ʃɔ́ díri
Dongo[45] mómu mbimbi ʔɔŋu cẹ̀cẹ̀ ndjándja ọọs kpọkpŏ kpikpi ùyù l-ọc(ic) díri
Aja[45] iɲi mimbi múmú uku ndindyi usa gbäbí cící ɓaɓa kiri
Kunama[46] ùkùˈnà bòbòˈnà ŋèeˈlà ùˈdà kòkòˈbà sàŋˈgà èˈlà bìˈà ˈìŋ(à) ˈkíidà
Berta[47] aře iile amúŋ ndu-fuudí hala n'du k’aβa k’aara s’ís’ía fɪ'ri θɪ́ŋa huu (= foot)
Gumuz, Northern[48] kʼwácá tsʼéa ííta kʼósa kʼótʼá sa maχá ʒákwá ɟá aja tsʼéa
Proto-Koman[27] *D̪E *cʼɛ *ʃʊnʃ *ʃE *lEtʼ̪a *tʼ̪wa *sʼámá; *bàs *ʃUImakʼ *cwálá *jiɗE *ʃa; *kʼama *D̪uga
Gule[49] yan ĭgŭn fufŭn ŏdāīān wāīdjo wŏt āī
Gule[50] yan igă̄n fufan adad ayan ĭten ai
Amdang (Kouchane)[51] ni dili, kiliŋgɛ gʊrnɑ kɑlkɑ dɔlː sɪˈmi tʃoː dʊrtu sɔŋ sunu zɑm tʃuluk
Proto-Maba[52] *kàSì-k *dúrmì *sati-k; *sàdí-k / *sadi-ɲi *delemi-k *fàrí-ŋ *ta-k / *ta-si *-aɲɔ- *mílí-ik
Maba[53] kàʃì-k/-ñi koi-k boiñ sati-k delmi-k kan-a/-tu àríi kàñjí-k soŋgo-k inji mílí-i/-síi
Mimi of Decorse[54] dyo feɾ fir ɲain ɲyo su engi ɲyam
Kanuri[55] shîm sə́mò kə́nzà tímì; shélì tə́làm shíllà kə̀ská njî
Zaghawa[56][57] í kέbέ síná màrgiː tàmsiː áá ógú úrú bɛ̀gìdiː sε:gì tír
Dendi[58] háŋŋá nínè hínydyè dɛ́llɛ̀ méè kpííʀì bíʀí túúʀì hàʀí ŋwáà máà
Tadaksahak[59] haŋgá t-í-nʒar ée-ʃan íilǝs míya kud-én biidí tugúdu aryén ŋá mân

Population History edit

In the Sahel and East Africa Nilo-Saharan speakers are associated with the ruling class of powerful empires and sultanates that have dominated the region such as the Gao Empire, being the largest contiguous Songhai Empire that dominated the Sahel, West Africa, the Sahara/Maghreb and Central Africa, the Kanem-Bornu Empire in Central Africa, the Sultanate of Damagaram, the Wadai Empire, the Sultanate of Baguirmi, the Sultanate of Darfur, the Sultanate of Sennar, the Zabarma Emirate, and the Shilluk Kingdom.[citation needed]

The pastoralist Tutsi and the Rutara people of the great lakes are also of Nilotic ancestry and have led the powerful kingdom of Rwanda, the Kingdom of Burundi , the Kingdom of Bunyoro, the Kitara Empire, the Kingdom of Toro, the Kingdom of Buganda, the Kingdom of Karagwe, and the Kingdom of Rwenzururu. Whilst these are established on the Bantu peoples from which they adopted the language, they have preserved the bovine pastoralism of the Nilotic peoples.[60][61][62][63]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Nilo-Saharan; Ethnologue".
  2. ^ Campbell, Lyle; Mixco, Mauricio J. (2007). A Glossary of Historical Linguistics. University of Utah Press. ISBN 978-0-87480-892-6.
  3. ^ Matthews, P. H. (2007). Oxford Concise Dictionary of Linguistics (2nd ed.). Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-920272-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link),
  4. ^ a b c Blench, Roger & Lameen Souag. m.s. Saharan and Songhay form a branch of Nilo-Saharan.
  5. ^ Dimmendaal, Gerrit J. (1992). "Nilo-Saharan Languages". International Encyclopedia of Linguistics. Vol. 3. Oxford. pp. 100–104. ISBN 0-19-505196-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  6. ^ Bender, M. Lionel (2000). "Nilo-Saharan". African Languages, An Introduction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 43–73. ISBN 0-521-66178-1.
  7. ^ Blench, Roger; Ahland, Colleen (2010). . Language Isolates in Africa workshop, Lyons, December 4. Archived from the original on March 16, 2012.
  8. ^ Clark, John Desmond (1984). From Hunters to Farmers: The Causes and Consequences of Food Production in Africa. University of California Press. p. 31. ISBN 0-520-04574-2.
  9. ^ Güldemann, Tom (2018). "Historical linguistics and genealogical language classification in Africa". In Güldemann, Tom (ed.). The Languages and Linguistics of Africa. The World of Linguistics series. Vol. 11. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton. pp. 299–308. doi:10.1515/9783110421668-002. ISBN 978-3-11-042606-9. S2CID 133888593.
  10. ^ Drake, N. A.; Blench, R. M.; Armitage, S. J.; Bristow, C. S.; White, K. H. (2011). "Ancient watercourses and biogeography of the Sahara explain the peopling of the desert". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 108 (2): 458–62. Bibcode:2011PNAS..108..458D. doi:10.1073/pnas.1012231108. PMC 3021035. PMID 21187416.
  11. ^ Lewis, M. Paul, ed. (2009). "Maasai: A language of Kenya". Ethnologue: Languages of the World (Sixteenth ed.). Dallas, TX: SIL International..
  12. ^ Diedrich Westermann, 1912. The Shilluk people, their language and folklore
  13. ^ Bender, M. Lionel (1991) "Subclassification of Nilo-Saharan". In Bender, M. Lionel, ed. (1991) Proceedings of the Fourth Nilo-Saharan Conference, Bayreuth, Aug. 30–Sep. 2, 1989. Hamburg: Helmut Buske Verlag. NISA 7, 1–36
  14. ^ a b Roger Blench (2006). The Niger-Saharan Macrophylum (PDF). Cambridge: Mallam Dendo. p. 5.
  15. ^ Bender, Lionel (1996). The Nilo-Saharan languages: a comparative essay. Munich: Lincom Europa.
  16. ^ Bender, Lionel (2000). "Nilo-Saharan". In Heine, Bernd; Nurse, Derek (eds.). African Languages: An Introduction. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-66178-1.
  17. ^ Ehret (2001)
  18. ^ Blench, Roger. 2006. The Niger-Saharan Macrophylum.
  19. ^ Blench, Roger. 2015. Was there a now-vanished branch of Nilo-Saharan on the Dogon Plateau? Evidence from substrate vocabulary in Bangime and Dogon. Available in: http://www.rogerblench.info/Language/Isolates/MT%20XX%20Blench%20off%20print.pdf
  20. ^ Blench, Roger. "Africa over the last 12,000 years".
  21. ^ George Starostin (2016) The Nilo-Saharan hypothesis tested through lexicostatistics: current state of affairs
  22. ^ Starostin, Georgiy C. 2017. Языки Африки. Опыт построения лексикостатистической классификации. Т. 3. Нило-сахарские языки / Languages of Africa: an attempt at a lexicostatistical classification. Volume 3: Nilo-Saharan languages. Moscow: Издательский Дом ЯСК / LRC Press. 840 p. ISBN 978-5-9909114-9-9
  23. ^ a b Dimmendaal, Gerrit J. (2016). "On stable and unstable features in Nilo-Saharan". The University of Nairobi Journal of Language and Linguistics.
  24. ^ Gerrit Dimmendaal, Colleen Ahland, Angelika Jakobi & Constance Kutsch-Lojenga (2019) "Linguistic features and typologies in languages commonly referred to as 'Nilo-Saharan'", in Wolff, Ekkehard (ed.) Cambridge Handbook of African Linguistics, p.326-381.
  25. ^ Dimmendaal, Gerrit J. (2011). Historical Linguistics and the Comparative Study of African Languages. John Benjamins. p. 313. ISBN 978-90-272-8722-9.
  26. ^ Blench, Roger. 2023. In defence of Nilo-Saharan.
  27. ^ a b Otero, Manuel Alejandro. 2019. A Historical Reconstruction of the Koman Language Family. Doctoral thesis. Department of Linguistics, University of Oregon.
  28. ^ Blench, Roger M. (2000) "The classification of Nilo-Saharan" (Afrika und Übersee 83). p. 299.[dead link]
  29. ^ Blench, Roger (2004). "Review of The Civilizations of Africa: A History to 1800". The African Archaeological Review. 21 (4): 239–242. doi:10.1007/s10437-004-0752-7. ISSN 0263-0338. JSTOR 25130809. S2CID 162354153.
  30. ^ Dimmendaal, Gerrit Jan. 1988. "The lexical reconstruction of proto-Nilotic: a first reconnaissance." Afrikanistische (AAP) 16: 5–67.
  31. ^ Bender, M. Lionel. 1998. "The Eastern Jebel Languages of Sudan." Afrika und Übersee 81: 39–64.
  32. ^ Blench, Roger. Temein languages comparative wordlist.
  33. ^ Thelwall, Robin. 1981. The Daju Language Group. Doctoral dissertation. Coleraine: New University of Ulster.
  34. ^ Schadeberg, Thilo. 1994. Comparative Kadu Wordlists. Afrikanistische Arbeitspapiere 40:11–48. University of Cologne.
  35. ^ a b c d e Rilly, Claude. 2010. Le méroïtique et sa famille linguistique. Leuven: Peeters Publishers.
  36. ^ a b Yigezu, Moges. 2001. A comparative study of the phonetics and phonology of Surmic languages. Bruxelles: Université libre de Bruxelles. Doctoral dissertation, University of Bruxelles.
  37. ^ Heine, Bernd. 1976. The Kuliak Languages of Eastern Uganda. Nairobi: East African Publishing House.
  38. ^ Jordan, Linda, Hussein Mohammed, and Jillian Netzley. 2015. Sociolinguistic Survey of the Shabo of Ethiopia. SIL Electronic Survey Report 2015-019. SIL International.
  39. ^ Wedekind, Klaus. 2001. Sociolinguistic Survey Report of the Languages of the Gawwada, Tsamay, and Diraasha Areas with Excursions to Birayle (Ongota) and Arbore (Irbore): Part 2 2012-07-28 at the Wayback Machine. SIL Electronic Survey Reports 2002-066: 6–15.
  40. ^ Boyeldieu, Pascal, Pierre Nougayrol, and Pierre Palayer. 2006. Lexique comparatif historique des langues Sara-Bongo-Baguirmiennes 2021-01-24 at the Wayback Machine. Online version.
  41. ^ Demolin, Didier. 1992. Le Mangbetu: etude phonétique et phonologique, 2 vols. Brussels: Faculté de Philosophie et Lettres, Université libre de Bruxelles dissertation.
  42. ^ a b c Bokula, Moiso & Agozia-Kario Irumu. 1994. Bibliographie et matériaux lexicaux des langues Moru-Mangbetu (Soudan-Central, Zaïre). Annales Aequatoria 10: 203‒245.
  43. ^ Boone, Douglas; Richard L. Watson (editors). 1996. Moru-Ma'di survey report. Nairobi, Kenya: Summer Institute of Linguistics.
  44. ^ Santandrea, Stefano. 1966. The Birri language: Brief elementary notes. Afrika und Übersee 49: 81‒234.
  45. ^ a b c Santandrea, Stefano. 1976. The Kresh group, Aja and Baka languages (Sudan): A linguistic contribution. Napoli: Istituto Universitario Orientale.
  46. ^ Bender, Lionel. 2001. English-Kunama lexicon. Afrikanistische Arbeitspapiere 65: 201–253.
  47. ^ Bender, M. Lionel. 1989. Berta Lexicon. In Bender, M. Lionel (ed.), Topics in Nilo-Saharan Linguistics, 271–304. Hamburg: Helmut Buske.
  48. ^ Ahland, Colleen and Eliza Kelly. 2014. Daatsʼíin-Gumuz Comparative Word list.
  49. ^ Evans-Pritchard, Edward E. 1932. Ethnological Observations in Dar Fung. Sudan Notes and Records 15: 1–61.
  50. ^ Seligmann, Brenda Z. 1911–1912. Note on Two Languages in the Sennar Province of Anglo-Egyptian Sudan. Zeitschrift für Kolonialsprachen 2: 297–308.
  51. ^ Wolf, Katharina. 2010. Une enquête sociolinguistique parmi les Amdang (Mimi) du Tchad: Rapport Technique. SIL Electronic Survey Reports 2010-028
  52. ^ Blench, Roger. 2021. The Maban languages and their place within Nilo-Saharan.
  53. ^ Edgar, John T. 1991. Maba-group Lexicon. (Sprache und Oralität in Afrika: Frankfurter Studien zur Afrikanistik, 13.) Berlin: Dietrich Reimer.
  54. ^ Gaudefroy-Demombynes, Maurice. 1907. Document sur les Langues de l'Oubangui-Chari. In Actes du XVIe Congrès International des Orientalistes, Alger, 1905, Part II, 172–330. Paris: Ernest Leroux.
  55. ^ Doris Löhr, H. Ekkehard Wolff (with Ari Awagana). 2009. Kanuri vocabulary. In: Haspelmath, Martin & Tadmor, Uri (eds.) World Loanword Database. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, 1591 entries.
  56. ^ Blažek, Václav. 2007. On application of Glottochronology for Saharan Languages. In Viva Africa 2007. Proceedings of the IInd International Conference on African Studies (April 2007). Plzeň: Dryáda, 2007. p. 19-38, 19 pp. ISBN 978-80-87025-17-8.
  57. ^ Tourneux, Henry. 1992. Inventaire phonologiques et formation du pluriel en zaghawa (Tchad). Afrika und Übersee 75, 267–277.
  58. ^ Zima, Petr. 1994. Lexique dendi (songhay): Djougou, Bénin: avec un index français-dendi. (Westafrikanische Studien 4). Köln: Rüdiger Köppe.
  59. ^ Christiansen-Bolli, Regula. 2010. A Grammar of Tadaksahak: a Northern Songhay Language of Mali. Leiden.
  60. ^ Stephens, Rhiannon (2 September 2013). A History of African Motherhood: The Case of Uganda, 700–1900. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781107030800.
  61. ^ Elfasi, M.; Hrbek, Ivan (January 1988). Africa from the Seventh to the Eleventh Century. UNESCO. ISBN 9789231017094.
  62. ^ Wrigley, Christopher (16 May 2002). Kingship and State: The Buganda Dynasty. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521894357.
  63. ^ Schoenbrun, David L. (1993). "Cattle herds and banana gardens: The historical geography of the western Great Lakes region,ca AD 800?1500". The African Archaeological Review. 11–11: 39–72. doi:10.1007/BF01118142. S2CID 161913402.

Further reading edit

  • Christopher Ehret (2001). A historical-comparative reconstruction of Nilo-Saharan. Köln: R. Köppe Verlag. ISBN 3-89645-098-0. OCLC 48027016.
  • Dimmendaal, Gerrit J. (2008-09-01). "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. ISSN 1749-818X.
  • Joseph Greenberg (1970). Written at International Journal of American Linguistics 29.1. The languages of Africa. Bloomington: Indiana University. ISBN 0-87750-115-7. OCLC 795772769.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  • Roger Blench (2006). Archaeology, language, and the African past. Lanham, MD: AltaMira Press. ISBN 0-7591-0465-4. OCLC 62281704.
  • Pertti Mikkola, 1999. "Nilo-Saharan revisited: some observations concerning the best etymologies". Nordic Journal of African Studies, 8(2):108–138.

External relationships edit

  • Roger Blench, 2011. "Can Sino-Tibetan and Austroasiatic help us understand the evolution of Niger-Congo noun classes?",[1] 2013-05-18 at the Wayback Machine CALL 41, Leiden
  • Gregersen, Edgar (1972). "Kongo-Saharan". Journal of African Languages. 11 (1): 69–89.

External links edit

  • Roger Blench: Nilo-Saharan
    • Nilo-Saharan list (Blench 2012)
  • Map of Nilo-Saharan
  • Popular Overview of Nilo-Saharan

nilo, saharan, languages, proposed, family, african, languages, spoken, somewhere, around, million, speakers, mainly, upper, parts, chari, nile, rivers, including, historic, nubia, north, where, tributaries, nile, meet, languages, extend, through, nations, nor. The Nilo Saharan languages are a proposed family of African languages spoken by somewhere around 70 million speakers 1 mainly in the upper parts of the Chari and Nile rivers including historic Nubia north of where the two tributaries of the Nile meet The languages extend through 17 nations in the northern half of Africa from Algeria to Benin in the west from Libya to the Democratic Republic of the Congo in the centre and from Egypt to Tanzania in the east Nilo Saharan disputed GeographicdistributionCentral Africa north central Africa and East AfricaNative speakersca 70 million for all branches listed below 1 Linguistic classificationProposed language familySubdivisionsBerta Bʼaga Fur Kadu Koman Kuliak Kunama Maban Saharan Songhay Central Sudanic Eastern Sudanic Mimi D ISO 639 2 5ssaGlottologNoneDistribution of Nilo Saharan languages in yellow As indicated by its hyphenated name Nilo Saharan is a family of the African interior including the greater Nile Basin and the Central Sahara Desert Eight of its proposed constituent divisions excluding Kunama Kuliak and Songhay are found in the modern countries of Sudan and South Sudan through which the Nile River flows In his book The Languages of Africa 1963 Joseph Greenberg named the group and argued it was a genetic family It contains the languages which are not included in the Niger Congo Afroasiatic or Khoisan groups Although some linguists have referred to the phylum as Greenberg s wastebasket into which he placed all the otherwise unaffiliated non click languages of Africa 2 3 other specialists in the field have accepted it as a working hypothesis since Greenberg s classification 4 Linguists accept that it is a challenging proposal to demonstrate but contend that it looks more promising the more work is done 5 6 7 Some of the constituent groups of Nilo Saharan are estimated to predate the African neolithic For example the unity of Eastern Sudanic is estimated to date to at least the 5th millennium BC 8 Nilo Saharan genetic unity would thus be much older still and date to the late Upper Paleolithic The earliest written language associated with the Nilo Saharan family is Old Nubian one of the oldest written African languages attested in writing from the 8th to the 15th century AD This larger classification system is not accepted by all linguists however Glottolog 2013 for example a publication of the Max Planck Institute in Germany does not recognise the unity of the Nilo Saharan family or even of the Eastern Sudanic branch Georgiy Starostin 2016 likewise does not accept a relationship between the branches of Nilo Saharan though he leaves open the possibility that some of them may prove to be related to each other once the necessary reconstructive work is done According to Guldemann 2018 the current state of research is not sufficient to prove the Nilo Saharan hypothesis 9 Contents 1 Characteristics 2 Major languages 3 History of the proposal 4 Internal relationships 4 1 Greenberg 1963 4 2 Bender 1989 1991 4 3 Ehret 1989 4 4 Bender 2000 4 5 Ehret 2001 4 6 Blench 2006 4 7 Blench 2010 4 8 Blench 2015 4 9 Starostin 2016 4 10 Dimmendaal 2016 2019 4 11 Blench 2023 4 12 Glottolog 4 0 2019 5 External relations 6 Phonology 6 1 Bender s reconstruction 6 2 Ehret s reconstruction 7 Morphology 8 Comparative vocabulary 9 Population History 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 12 1 External relationships 13 External linksCharacteristics editThe constituent families of Nilo Saharan are quite diverse One characteristic feature is a tripartite singulative collective plurative number system which Blench 2010 believes is a result of a noun classifier system in the protolanguage The distribution of the families may reflect ancient watercourses in a green Sahara during the Neolithic Subpluvial when the desert was more habitable than it is today 10 Major languages editWithin the Nilo Saharan languages are a number of languages with at least a million speakers most data from SIL s Ethnologue 16 2009 In descending order Luo Dholuo 4 4 million Dholuo language of the Luo people of Kenya and Tanzania Kenya s third largest ethnicity after the Niger Congo speaking Agĩkũyũ and Luhya The term Luo is also used for a wider group of languages which includes Dholuo Kanuri 4 0 million all dialects 4 7 million if Kanembu is included The major ethnicity around Lake Chad Songhay 3 2 million all dialects mostly Zarma Spread along the Niger River in Mali Burkina Faso and Niger throughout the historic Songhai Empire including its former capital Gao and the well known cities of Timbuktu and Djenne Teso 1 9 million Related to Karamojong Turkana Toposa and Nyangatom Nubian 1 7 million all dialects The language of Nubia extending today from southern Egypt into northern Sudan Many Nubians have also migrated northwards to Cairo since the building of the Aswan Dam Lugbara 1 7 million 2 2 if Aringa Low Lugbara is included The major Central Sudanic language Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo Nandi Markweta languages Kalenjin 1 6 million Kenyan Rift Valley Kapchorua Uganda Lango 1 5 million A Luo language one of the major languages of Uganda Dinka 1 4 million The major ethnicity of South Sudan Acholi 1 2 million Another Luo language of Uganda Nuer 1 1 million in 2011 significantly more today The language of the Nuer another numerous people from South Sudan and Ethiopia Maasai 1 0 million Spoken by the Maasai people of Kenya and Tanzania one of the most well known African peoples internationally 11 Ngambay 1 0 million with Laka Central Sudanic the principal language of southern Chad Some other important Nilo Saharan languages under 1 million speakers Fur 500 000 in 1983 significantly more today The eponymous language of Darfur Province in western Sudan Tubu 350 000 to 400 000 One of the northernmost Nilo Saharan languages extending from Nigeria Niger and Chad into Libya Most Tubu speakers live in Northern Chad close to the Tibesti Mountains Tubu has two main varieties the Daza language and the Teda language The total for all speakers of Nilo Saharan languages according to Ethnologue 16 is 38 39 million people However the data spans a range from ca 1980 to 2005 with a weighted median at ca 1990 Given population growth rates the figure in 2010 might be half again higher or about 60 million History of the proposal editThe Saharan family which includes Kanuri Kanembu the Tebu languages and Zaghawa was recognized by Heinrich Barth in 1853 the Nilotic languages by Karl Richard Lepsius in 1880 the various constituent branches of Central Sudanic but not the connection between them by Friedrich Muller in 1889 and the Maban family by Maurice Gaudefroy Demombynes in 1907 The first inklings of a wider family came in 1912 when Diedrich Westermann included three of the still independent Central Sudanic families within Nilotic in a proposal he called Niloto Sudanic 12 this expanded Nilotic was in turn linked to Nubian Kunama and possibly Berta essentially Greenberg s Macro Sudanic Chari Nile proposal of 1954 In 1920 G W Murray fleshed out the Eastern Sudanic languages when he grouped Nilotic Nubian Nera Gaam and Kunama Carlo Conti Rossini made similar proposals in 1926 and in 1935 Westermann added Murle In 1940 A N Tucker published evidence linking five of the six branches of Central Sudanic alongside his more explicit proposal for East Sudanic In 1950 Greenberg retained Eastern Sudanic and Central Sudanic as separate families but accepted Westermann s conclusions of four decades earlier in 1954 when he linked them together as Macro Sudanic later Chari Nile from the Chari and Nile Watersheds Greenberg s later contribution came in 1963 when he tied Chari Nile to Songhai Saharan Maban Fur and Koman Gumuz and coined the current name Nilo Saharan for the resulting family Lionel Bender noted that Chari Nile was an artifact of the order of European contact with members of the family and did not reflect an exclusive relationship between these languages and the group has been abandoned with its constituents becoming primary branches of Nilo Saharan or equivalently Chari Nile and Nilo Saharan have merged with the name Nilo Saharan retained When it was realized that the Kadu languages were not Niger Congo they were commonly assumed to therefore be Nilo Saharan but this remains somewhat controversial Progress has been made since Greenberg established the plausibility of the family Koman and Gumuz remain poorly attested and are difficult to work with while arguments continue over the inclusion of Songhai Blench 2010 believes that the distribution of Nilo Saharan reflects the waterways of the wet Sahara 12 000 years ago and that the protolanguage had noun classifiers which today are reflected in a diverse range of prefixes suffixes and number marking Internal relationships editDimmendaal 2008 notes that Greenberg 1963 based his conclusion on strong evidence and that the proposal as a whole has become more convincing in the decades since Mikkola 1999 reviewed Greenberg s evidence and found it convincing Roger Blench notes morphological similarities in all putative branches which leads him to believe that the family is likely to be valid Koman and Gumuz are poorly known and have been difficult to evaluate until recently vague Songhay is markedly divergent in part due to massive influence from the Mande languages 4 Also problematic are the Kuliak languages which are spoken by hunter gatherers and appear to retain a non Nilo Saharan core Blench believes they might have been similar to Hadza or Dahalo and shifted incompletely to Nilo Saharan Anbessa Tefera and Peter Unseth consider the poorly attested Shabo language to be Nilo Saharan though unclassified within the family due to lack of data Dimmendaal and Blench based on a more complete description consider it to be a language isolate on current evidence Proposals have sometimes been made to add Mande usually included in Niger Congo largely due to its many noteworthy similarities with Songhay rather than with Nilo Saharan as a whole however this relationship is more likely due to a close relationship between Songhay and Mande many thousands of years ago in the early days of Nilo Saharan so the relationship is probably more one of ancient contact than a genetic link 4 The extinct Meroitic language of ancient Kush has been accepted by linguists such as Rille Dimmendaal and Blench as Nilo Saharan though others argue for an Afroasiatic affiliation It is poorly attested There is little doubt that the constituent families of Nilo Saharan of which only Eastern Sudanic and Central Sudanic show much internal diversity are valid groups However there have been several conflicting classifications in grouping them together Each of the proposed higher order groups has been rejected by other researchers Greenberg s Chari Nile by Bender and Blench and Bender s Core Nilo Saharan by Dimmendaal and Blench What remains are eight Dimmendaal to twelve Bender constituent families of no consensus arrangement Greenberg 1963 edit nbsp The branches of the Nilo Saharan languages Joseph Greenberg in The Languages of Africa set up the family with the following branches The Chari Nile core are the connections that had been suggested by previous researchers Nilo Saharan Koman including Gumuz SaharanSonghayFurMaban Chari Nile Central SudanicKunamaBertaEastern Sudanic including Kuliak Nubian and Nilotic Gumuz was not recognized as distinct from neighbouring Koman it was separated out forming Komuz by Bender 1989 Bender 1989 1991 edit Lionel Bender came up with a classification which expanded upon and revised that of Greenberg He considered Fur and Maban to constitute a Fur Maban branch added Kadu to Nilo Saharan removed Kuliak from Eastern Sudanic removed Gumuz from Koman but left it as a sister node and chose to posit Kunama as an independent branch of the family By 1991 he had added more detail to the tree dividing Chari Nile into nested clades including a Core group in which Berta was considered divergent and coordinating Fur Maban as a sister clade to Chari Nile 13 14 Nilo Saharan SonghaySaharanKunama IlitKuliak Fur Maban FurMaban Chari Nile Central Sudanic Moru MangbetuSara Bongo Core Berta East Sudanic Surmic NiloticNubian Nara Taman Komuz GumuzKoman including Shabo Kadugli KrongoBender revised his model of Nilo Saharan again in 1996 at which point he split Koman and Gumuz into completely separate branches of Core Nilo Saharan 15 Ehret 1989 edit Christopher Ehret came up with a novel classification of Nilo Saharan as a preliminary part of his then ongoing research into the macrofamily His evidence for the classification was not fully published until much later see Ehret 2001 below and so it did not attain the same level of acclaim as competing proposals namely those of Bender and Blench 14 Bender 2000 edit By 2000 Bender had entirely abandoned the Chari Nile and Komuz branches He also added Kunama back to the Satellite Core group and simplified the subdivisions therein He retracted the inclusion of Shabo stating that it could not yet be adequately classified but might prove to be Nilo Saharan once sufficient research has been done This tentative and somewhat conservative classification held as a sort of standard for the next decade 16 Nilo Saharan SonghaySaharanKuliak Satellite Core MabanFurCentral SudanicBertaKunama Core Eastern SudanicKomanGumuzKaduEhret 2001 edit Ehret s updated classification was published in his book A Historical Comparative Reconstruction of Nilo Saharan 2001 17 This model is notable in that it consists of two primary branches Gumuz Koman and a Sudanic group containing the rest of the families see Sudanic languages Nilo Saharan for more detail Also unusually Songhay is well nested within a core group and coordinate with Maban in a Western Sahelian clade and Kadu is not included in Nilo Saharan Note that Koman in this classification is equivalent to Komuz i e a family with Gumuz and Koman as primary branches and Ehret renames the traditional Koman group as Western Koman Nilo Saharan Koman GumuzWestern Koman Sudanic Central Sudanic Northern Sudanic Kunama Saharo Sahelian Saharan Sahelian FurTrans Sahel Western Sahelian SonghayMabanEastern Sahelian Eastern Sudanic including Berta Blench 2006 edit See also Niger Congo languages Niger Congo and Nilo Saharan Niger Saharan a language macrofamily linking the Niger Congo and Nilo Saharan phyla was proposed by Blench 2006 18 It was not accepted by other linguists Blench s 2006 internal classification of the Niger Saharan macrophylum is as follows Proto Niger Saharan Songhay Saharan Maba Fur Kuliak Berta Kunama Komuz Shabo Kado Sudanic Kado Kadugli Krongo Niger Sudanic East Sudanic Niger Central Sudanic Central Sudanic Niger CongoAccording to Blench 2006 typological features common to both Niger Congo and Nilo Saharan include Phonology ATR vowel harmony and the labial velars kp and gb Noun class affixes e g ma affix for mass nouns in Nilo Saharan Verbal extensions and plural verbsBlench 2010 edit With a better understanding of Nilo Saharan classifiers and the affixes or number marking they have developed into in various branches Blench believes that all of the families postulated as Nilo Saharan belong together He proposes the following tentative internal classification with Songhai closest to Saharan a relationship that had not previously been suggested KunamaBertaKomanGumuzSaharanSonghayKuliakMabanFurKaduCentral SudanicEastern Sudanic Mimi of Decorse Blench 2015 edit By 2015 19 and again in 2017 20 Blench had refined the subclassification of this model linking Maban with Fur Kadu with Eastern Sudanic and Kuliak with the node that contained them and added a tentative extinct branch he names Plateau as to explain a possible Nilo Saharan substrate in the Malian Dogon and Bangime languages for the following structure BertaKomanGumuzKunamaSaharanSonghayPlateau Central African KuliakMabanFurCentral SudanicKaduEastern SudanicBlench 2021 concludes that Maban may be close to Eastern Sudanic Starostin 2016 edit nbsp Starostin s Macro Sudanic in purple surrounding language families shown as well Georgiy Starostin 2016 21 using lexicostatistics based on Swadesh lists is more inclusive than Glottolog and in addition finds probable and possible links between the families that will require reconstruction of the proto languages for confirmation Starostin also does not consider Greenberg s Nilo Saharan to be a valid coherent clade In addition to the families listed in Glottolog previous section Starostin considers the following to be established Northern K Eastern Sudanic or NNT Nubian Nara and Tama see below for Nyima Southern N Eastern Sudanic Surmic Temein Jebel Daju Nilotic though their exact relationships to each other remain obscure Central Sudanic including Birri and Kresh Aja which may prove to be closest to each other Koman including Gule A relationship of Nyima with Nubian Nara and Tama NNT is considered highly likely and close enough that proper comparative work should be able to demonstrate the connection if it s valid though it would fall outside NNT proper see Eastern Sudanic languages Other units that are highly likely to eventually prove to be valid families are East Sudanic as a whole Central Sudanic Kadu Central Sudanic Kadugli Krongo Maba Kunama Maban Kunama Komuz Koman Gumuz In summary at this level of certainty Nilo Saharan constitutes ten distinct and separate language families Eastern Sudanic Central Sudanic Kadu Maba Kunama Komuz Saharan Songhai Kuliak Fur Berta and Shabo Possible further deep connections which cannot be evaluated until the proper comparative work on the constituent branches has been completed are Eastern Sudanic Fur Berta Central Sudanic Kadu Maba KunamaThere are faint suggestions that Eastern and Central Sudanic may be related essentially the old Chari Nile clade though that possibility is unexplorable under current conditions and could be complicated if Niger Congo were added to the comparison Starostin finds no evidence that the Komuz Kuliak Saharan Songhai or Shabo languages are related to any of the other Nilo Saharan languages Mimi D and Meroitic were not considered though Starostin had previously proposed that Mimi D was also an isolate despite its slight similarity to Central Sudanic In a follow up study published in 2017 Starostin reiterated his previous points as well as explicitly accepting a genetic relationship between Macro East Sudanic and Macro Central Sudanic Starostin names this proposal Macro Sudanic The classification is as follows 22 Macro Sudanic macrofamily Macro Central Sudanic family Central Sudanic family Sara Bongo Bagirmi West Central Sudanic branch Kresh Aja Birri East Central Sudanic branch Mangbutu Efe Mangbetu Asoa Lendu Ngiti Moru Madi Krongo Kadugli Kadu group Maba group Macro Eastern Sudanic family Eastern Sudanic family Northeast Sudanic family Nubian group Tama group Nara language Nyimang Afitti Group Southeast Sudanic family Surmic languages Southern Surmic Northern Surmic Majang branches Nilotic languages Western Eastern Southern branches Jebel group Temein group Daju group Berta group Fur Amdang group Kunama Ilit group Koman Gumuz Komuz family Koman family Narrow Koman group Gule Anej language Gumuz languages group Saharan family Western Saharan group Kanuri Kanembu Teda Dazaga Eastern Saharan group Zaghawa Berti Kuliak group Songhay group Shabo language Mikeyir Starostin 2017 finds significant lexical similarities between Kadu and Central Sudanic while some lexical similarities also shared by Central Sudanic with Fur Amdang Berta and Eastern Sudanic to a lesser extent Dimmendaal 2016 2019 edit Gerrit J Dimmendaal 23 24 suggests the following subclassification of Nilo Saharan Nilo Saharan Northeastern MabanKunamaFurSaharanEastern Sudanic including Berta KuliakCentral SudanicDimmendaal et al consider the evidence for the inclusion of Kadu and Songhay too weak to draw any conclusions at present whereas there is some evidence that Koman and Gumuz belong together and may be Nilo Saharan 25 The large Northeastern division is based on several typological markers tolerance of complex syllable structure higher amount of both inflectional and derivational morphology including the presence of cases verb final SOV or OSV word order coverb light verb constructions converbsBlench 2023 edit By 2023 26 Blench had slightly revised the model for a deep primary split between Koman Gumuz and the rest Kunama and Bertha are provisionally placed as the next to branch off because they only partially share the features that unite the rest of the family However it is not clear if this is because they actually diverged early or if they might have lost those features at a later date For example Berta shares plausible lexical cognates with the Eastern Jebel languages East Sudanic and its system of grammatical number closely resembles those of the East Sudanic languages Kunama could be divergent due to long term interaction with Afroasiatic languages Saharan Songhay especially Songhay have seen substantial erosion of key characteristics but this appears to be a secondary development and not evidence of early branching Core Nilo Saharan Central African in Blench 2015 thus appears to be a typological rather than genetic grouping though Maban is treated as a divergent branch of Eastern Sudanic Kadu also seems to be quite close The resulting structure is as follows KomanGumuzSaharanSonghayFurCentral SudanicKaduKuliakMabanEastern Sudanic Berta KunamaBeyond the work of Colleen Ahland Blench notes that the inclusion of Koman is buttressed by the work of Manuel Otero 27 The argument for Songhay is mostly lexical especially the pronouns Blench gives Greenberg credit for both East and Central Sudanic Saharan and Songhay have some striking similarities in their lexicon which Blench argues is genetic though the absence of reliable proto Sarahan and proto Songhay reconstructions makes evaluation difficult Glottolog 4 0 2019 edit In summarizing the literature to date Hammarstrom et al in Glottolog do not accept that the following families are demonstrably related with current research Berta Central Sudanic excluding Kresh Aja Birri is also questionable as Central Sudanic Daju putatively East Sudanic Eastern Jebel putatively East Sudanic Furan Gule Gumuz Kadugli Krongo Koman excluding Gule Kresh Aja putatively Central Sudanic Kuliak Kunama Maban including Mimi N Mimi Gaudefroy Mimi D Nara putatively East Sudanic Nilotic putatively East Sudanic Nubian putatively East Sudanic Nyimang putatively East Sudanic Saharan Shabo Songhai Surmic putatively East Sudanic Tama putatively East Sudanic Temein putatively East Sudanic External relations editProposals for the external relationships of Nilo Saharan typically center on Niger Congo Gregersen 1972 grouped the two together as Kongo Saharan However Blench 2011 proposed that the similarities between Niger Congo and Nilo Saharan specifically Atlantic Congo and Central Sudanic are due to contact with the noun class system of Niger Congo developed from or elaborated on the model of the noun classifiers of Central Sudanic Phonology editNilo Saharan languages present great differences being a highly diversified group It has proven difficult to reconstruct many aspects of Proto Nilo Saharan Two very different reconstructions of the proto language have been proposed by Lionel Bender and Christopher Ehret Bender s reconstruction edit The consonant system reconstructed by Bender for Proto Nilo Saharan is Labial Coronal Palatal Velarplosive voiceless t t k kʰvoiced b d d ɟ gfricative f sliquid r l r nasal m n ŋsemivowel w jThe phonemes d t correspond to coronal plosives the phonetic details are difficult to specify but clearly they remain distinct from d t and supported by many phonetic correspondences another author C Ehret reconstructs for the coronal area the sound d ḍ and t ṭ which perhaps are closer to the phonetic detail of d t see infra Bender gave a list of about 350 cognates and discussed in depth the grouping and the phonological system proposed by Ch Ehret Blench 2000 compares both systems Bender s and Ehret s and prefers the former because it is more secure and is based in more reliable data 28 For example Bender points out that there is a set of phonemes including implosives ɓ ɗ ʄ ɠ ejectives pʼ tʼ sʼ cʼ kʼ and prenasal constants ᵐb ⁿd ⁿt ⁿɟ ᵑg but it seems that they can be reconstructed only for core groups E I J L and the collateral group C D F G H but not for Proto Nilo Saharan Ehret s reconstruction edit Christopher Ehret used a less clear methodology and proposed a maximalist phonemic system Labial Dental Alveol Retrof Palatal Velar Glottalplosive implosive ɓ ɗ ɗ ɠvoiced b d d ḍ gvoiceless p t t ṭ kaspirate pʰ t ʰ tʰ ṭʰ kʰejective pʼ t ʼ tʼ ṭʼ kʼfricative 8 s z ṣnasal simple m n ɲ ŋprenasal ⁿb ⁿd ⁿd ⁿḍ ⁿgliquid l r lapproximant plain w jcomplex ʼw ʼj hEhret s maximalist system has been criticized by Bender and Blench These authors state that the correspondences used by Ehret are not very clear and because of this many of the sounds in the table may only be allophonic variations 29 Morphology editDimmendaal 2016 23 cites the following morphological elements as stable across Nilo Saharan Causative prefix ɪ or i Deverbal noun abstract participial agent prefix a Number suffixes i in k Reflexive marker rʊ Personal pronouns first person singular qa second person singular yi Logophoric pronoun y ɛ Deictic markers singular n plural k Postpositions possessive ne locative ta Preposition kɪ Negative verb kʊComparative vocabulary editSample basic vocabulary in different Nilo Saharan branches Note In table cells with slashes the singular form is given before the slash while the plural form follows the slash Language eye ear nose tooth tongue mouth blood bone tree water eat nameProto Nilotic 30 k ɔŋ pl k ɔɲ yit q ume kɛ la c ŋa lyɛp k ʊt ʊk kaw kɛ ɛt kɪ yat pi ʀ ɲam ka ʀinProto Jebel 31 ed er si di gi ɲi di kala d udu k afa d g am kaca cii kii ɲam siige saag Temein 32 nɪ ŋɪ naʈ kɛ ɛ n wenaʈ kween kɪ mɪ nʈɪ n kɪkɪ mɪ nʈɪ nɪ awɪ s kɛ ɛ ʔ mɛ nɖɪnyaʈ iʈuk k w uʈɪ n monɪ ʈ amɪ s kɔ maʔ mɛ rɛŋɪ s mɛ rɛŋ muŋ lama kalɪ n kalɪ ŋProto Daju 33 aŋune aŋwe aŋun wunute wunuge mu ne ɲiɣte ɲiɣke ɲabire ɲabirta ikke ikku tamuke ŋai ŋayu ewete ewe ma si ange anguKadugli Talla dialect 34 ayyɛ iyyɛ naasɔ isinɛ amb nigaŋg arɔk t iŋŋini aŋdaɗuk ni niinɔ niginiinɔ ariid ʊ t iŋguba kuba ffa naafa ɓiid i oori ɛɛrɛ nigirɛɛnɛProto Northern Eastern Sudanic 35 maɲ ɲog ul em u ŋes il ŋal ag il ag ul ug er kɛs ɛr koɲ er mban kal kamb ŋ ɛr iNara 35 no noo no ta noo ta tus tusa demmo demmo dam mo dommo nɪ hɪ nɪ hɪ t ta neʃɪ neʃa hagga agga aada hada aulo aul la agura agur ta kitto kɪ to ketti keti katɪ ketta kata tum tum ke l emba mbaa kal kal kar ade aadaProto Nubian 35 maaɲ sg miɲ di ugul e sg ugul di ŋil sg ŋil di ŋal sg ŋal di agil ug er kiser sg kisir ti koor sg koor ti es ti kal er iProto Taman 35 me ti pl mVŋ ŋ usu ti sg eme sg emi ti sg ŋesi t i pl ŋes oŋ laat auli agi kei ti pl kei ŋ gaan kiɲe ti kal kaal ŋan ŋ aat pl ŋ ari gProto Nyima 35 a ŋV ɲɔgɔr o mud ŋil ŋal wule amV t uma bɔ ŋ t a l ta m Proto SW Surmic 36 kɛɓɛrɛ pl it t at ʊŋɛtʃ ɲiggɪtta ʌgʌʌt k ʊt t ʊk ɓɪj ɛmmɛ kɛɛt maam ɗak daraProto SE Surmic 36 kabari ɲabi giroŋ ɲigidda kat tuk ɲaɓa giga kɛdo ma saraProto Kuliak 37 ekw pl ekw ẹk beos pl beosẹk nyab pl nyabẹk ɛd eɓ ak pl akẹk seh ɔk ad pl ad is kywɛh yed pl yedẹkShabo 38 sɛ k iti sonɑ k ɑu hɑndɑ kɑusɛ dɑmo emɑhɑ egege k ɔnɑ wɔː woŋgɑseOngota 39 ˈʔaːfa ˈwoːwa ˈsiːna loan ʔitiˈma ʔɑdabo loan ˈʔiːfa ˈmitʃa loan ˈhɑntʃa ˈtʃaːhawa ʔeˈdʒak ˈmiʃaProto Sara Bongo Bagirmi 40 kamɔ kamu kama imbi EmbE mbili mbElE imbil EmbEl Samɔ Samu Somu kanu kunu kVnV kanga nganga unɖɛ C tara manga masu mVsV nɖuma Kinga Kunga Kingo kaga mEnE mAnɛ mani OɲO ɔɲɔ VɲV iɭi ʈVProto Mangbetu 41 mʷɔ bɪ amɔ kɪ kaɖra ti kpɔ ali kpɔ kɪ rɪ ɛ gʷo laɲɔ kɛ lʊ Mangbutu 42 owekeki ubi tongi usɛ kedru uti koto ikpi okpa uwɛ ano aɓeBale 42 ɲɔ bi ndǔ tu ku da tso zu kpa tsu cu wyɔ ngba nzuNdru 42 nikpɔ ɓi na ondǐ tsǔ ku da tsu azu kpa itsu ǐɗa ɲu ovonaMa di Uganda 43 mi bi ɔ mvɔ si lɛ ɖa ti arɪ hʷa kʷɛ eyi ɲa ruBirri 44 mɛ mʊ nvo nvu imɔ amɔ si inɖrɔ inɖra tyi di ɔ tɔ kpɔ kpi kpɪ wu ɔnyo iriKresh 45 mumu mbimbi uŋu ʃɛ ʃɛ ndjindja srama kpɔkpɔ kpikpi uyu ɔ ʃɔ diriDongo 45 momu mbimbi ʔɔŋu cẹ cẹ ndjandja ọọs kpọkpŏ kpikpi uyu l ọc ic diriAja 45 iɲi mimbi mumu uku ndindyi usa gbabi cici ɓaɓa aɲ kiriKunama 46 wa ukuˈna boboˈna ma ŋeeˈla uˈda kokoˈba saŋˈga eˈla biˈa ˈiŋ a ˈkiidaBerta 47 are iile amuŋ ndu fuudi hala n du k aba k aara s is ia fɪ ri 8ɪ ŋa huu foot Gumuz Northern 48 kʼwaca tsʼea iita kʼosa kʼotʼa sa maxa ʒakwa ɟa aja sa tsʼeaProto Koman 27 D E cʼɛ ʃʊnʃ ʃE lEtʼ a tʼ wa sʼama bas ʃUImakʼ cwala jiɗE ʃa kʼama D ugaGule 49 yan ĭgŭn fufŭn ŏdaian waidjo wŏt aiGule 50 yan igă n fufan adad ayan ĭten aiAmdang Kouchane 51 ni dili kiliŋgɛ gʊrnɑ kɑlkɑ dɔlː sɪˈmi tʃoː dʊrtu sɔŋ sunu zɑm tʃulukProto Maba 52 kaSi k durmi sati k sadi k sadi ɲi delemi k fari ŋ ta k ta si aɲɔ mili ikMaba 53 kaʃi k ni koi k boin sati k delmi k kan a tu arii kanji k soŋgo k inji an mili i siiMimi of Decorse 54 dyo feɾ fir ɲain ɲyo su engi ɲyamKanuri 55 shim se mo ke nza timi sheli te lam ci bu shilla ke ska nji bu cuZaghawa 56 57 i kebe sina margiː tamsiː aa ogu uru bɛ gidiː bi se gi tirDendi 58 mo haŋŋa nine hinydye dɛ llɛ mee kpiiʀi biʀi tuuʀi haʀi ŋwaa maaTadaksahak 59 mo haŋga t i nʒar ee ʃan iilǝs miya kud en biidi tugudu aryen ŋa manPopulation History editIn the Sahel and East Africa Nilo Saharan speakers are associated with the ruling class of powerful empires and sultanates that have dominated the region such as the Gao Empire being the largest contiguous Songhai Empire that dominated the Sahel West Africa the Sahara Maghreb and Central Africa the Kanem Bornu Empire in Central Africa the Sultanate of Damagaram the Wadai Empire the Sultanate of Baguirmi the Sultanate of Darfur the Sultanate of Sennar the Zabarma Emirate and the Shilluk Kingdom citation needed The pastoralist Tutsi and the Rutara people of the great lakes are also of Nilotic ancestry and have led the powerful kingdom of Rwanda the Kingdom of Burundi the Kingdom of Bunyoro the Kitara Empire the Kingdom of Toro the Kingdom of Buganda the Kingdom of Karagwe and the Kingdom of Rwenzururu Whilst these are established on the Bantu peoples from which they adopted the language they have preserved the bovine pastoralism of the Nilotic peoples 60 61 62 63 See also editLanguages of Sudan Nilo Saharan word lists Wiktionary References edit a b Nilo Saharan Ethnologue Campbell Lyle Mixco Mauricio J 2007 A Glossary of Historical Linguistics University of Utah Press ISBN 978 0 87480 892 6 Matthews P H 2007 Oxford Concise Dictionary of Linguistics 2nd ed Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 920272 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c Blench Roger amp Lameen Souag m s Saharan and Songhay form a branch of Nilo Saharan Dimmendaal Gerrit J 1992 Nilo Saharan Languages International Encyclopedia of Linguistics Vol 3 Oxford pp 100 104 ISBN 0 19 505196 3 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Bender M Lionel 2000 Nilo Saharan African Languages An Introduction Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 43 73 ISBN 0 521 66178 1 Blench Roger Ahland Colleen 2010 The Classification of Gumuz and Koman Languages Language Isolates in Africa workshop Lyons December 4 Archived from the original on March 16 2012 Clark John Desmond 1984 From Hunters to Farmers The Causes and Consequences of Food Production in Africa University of California Press p 31 ISBN 0 520 04574 2 Guldemann Tom 2018 Historical linguistics and genealogical language classification in Africa In Guldemann Tom ed The Languages and Linguistics of Africa The World of Linguistics series Vol 11 Berlin De Gruyter Mouton pp 299 308 doi 10 1515 9783110421668 002 ISBN 978 3 11 042606 9 S2CID 133888593 Drake N A Blench R M Armitage S J Bristow C S White K H 2011 Ancient watercourses and biogeography of the Sahara explain the peopling of the desert Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 108 2 458 62 Bibcode 2011PNAS 108 458D doi 10 1073 pnas 1012231108 PMC 3021035 PMID 21187416 Lewis M Paul ed 2009 Maasai A language of Kenya Ethnologue Languages of the World Sixteenth ed Dallas TX SIL International Diedrich Westermann 1912 The Shilluk people their language and folklore Bender M Lionel 1991 Subclassification of Nilo Saharan In Bender M Lionel ed 1991 Proceedings of the Fourth Nilo Saharan Conference Bayreuth Aug 30 Sep 2 1989 Hamburg Helmut Buske Verlag NISA 7 1 36 a b Roger Blench 2006 The Niger Saharan Macrophylum PDF Cambridge Mallam Dendo p 5 Bender Lionel 1996 The Nilo Saharan languages a comparative essay Munich Lincom Europa Bender Lionel 2000 Nilo Saharan In Heine Bernd Nurse Derek eds African Languages An Introduction Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 66178 1 Ehret 2001 Blench Roger 2006 The Niger Saharan Macrophylum Blench Roger 2015 Was there a now vanished branch of Nilo Saharan on the Dogon Plateau Evidence from substrate vocabulary in Bangime and Dogon Available in http www rogerblench info Language Isolates MT 20XX 20Blench 20off 20print pdf Blench Roger Africa over the last 12 000 years George Starostin 2016 The Nilo Saharan hypothesis tested through lexicostatistics current state of affairs Starostin Georgiy C 2017 Yazyki Afriki Opyt postroeniya leksikostatisticheskoj klassifikacii T 3 Nilo saharskie yazyki Languages of Africa an attempt at a lexicostatistical classification Volume 3 Nilo Saharan languages Moscow Izdatelskij Dom YaSK LRC Press 840 p ISBN 978 5 9909114 9 9 a b Dimmendaal Gerrit J 2016 On stable and unstable features in Nilo Saharan The University of Nairobi Journal of Language and Linguistics Gerrit Dimmendaal Colleen Ahland Angelika Jakobi amp Constance Kutsch Lojenga 2019 Linguistic features and typologies in languages commonly referred to as Nilo Saharan in Wolff Ekkehard ed Cambridge Handbook of African Linguistics p 326 381 Dimmendaal Gerrit J 2011 Historical Linguistics and the Comparative Study of African Languages John Benjamins p 313 ISBN 978 90 272 8722 9 Blench Roger 2023 In defence of Nilo Saharan a b Otero Manuel Alejandro 2019 A Historical Reconstruction of the Koman Language Family Doctoral thesis Department of Linguistics University of Oregon Blench Roger M 2000 The classification of Nilo Saharan Afrika und Ubersee 83 p 299 dead link Blench Roger 2004 Review of The Civilizations of Africa A History to 1800 The African Archaeological Review 21 4 239 242 doi 10 1007 s10437 004 0752 7 ISSN 0263 0338 JSTOR 25130809 S2CID 162354153 Dimmendaal Gerrit Jan 1988 The lexical reconstruction of proto Nilotic a first reconnaissance Afrikanistische AAP 16 5 67 Bender M Lionel 1998 The Eastern Jebel Languages of Sudan Afrika und Ubersee 81 39 64 Blench Roger Temein languages comparative wordlist Thelwall Robin 1981 The Daju Language Group Doctoral dissertation Coleraine New University of Ulster Schadeberg Thilo 1994 Comparative Kadu Wordlists Afrikanistische Arbeitspapiere 40 11 48 University of Cologne a b c d e Rilly Claude 2010 Le meroitique et sa famille linguistique Leuven Peeters Publishers a b Yigezu Moges 2001 A comparative study of the phonetics and phonology of Surmic languages Bruxelles Universite libre de Bruxelles Doctoral dissertation University of Bruxelles Heine Bernd 1976 The Kuliak Languages of Eastern Uganda Nairobi East African Publishing House Jordan Linda Hussein Mohammed and Jillian Netzley 2015 Sociolinguistic Survey of the Shabo of Ethiopia SIL Electronic Survey Report 2015 019 SIL International Wedekind Klaus 2001 Sociolinguistic Survey Report of the Languages of the Gawwada Tsamay and Diraasha Areas with Excursions to Birayle Ongota and Arbore Irbore Part 2 Archived 2012 07 28 at the Wayback Machine SIL Electronic Survey Reports 2002 066 6 15 Boyeldieu Pascal Pierre Nougayrol and Pierre Palayer 2006 Lexique comparatif historique des langues Sara Bongo Baguirmiennes Archived 2021 01 24 at the Wayback Machine Online version Demolin Didier 1992 Le Mangbetu etude phonetique et phonologique 2 vols Brussels Faculte de Philosophie et Lettres Universite libre de Bruxelles dissertation a b c Bokula Moiso amp Agozia Kario Irumu 1994 Bibliographie et materiaux lexicaux des langues Moru Mangbetu Soudan Central Zaire Annales Aequatoria 10 203 245 Boone Douglas Richard L Watson editors 1996 Moru Ma di survey report Nairobi Kenya Summer Institute of Linguistics Santandrea Stefano 1966 The Birri language Brief elementary notes Afrika und Ubersee 49 81 234 a b c Santandrea Stefano 1976 The Kresh group Aja and Baka languages Sudan A linguistic contribution Napoli Istituto Universitario Orientale Bender Lionel 2001 English Kunama lexicon Afrikanistische Arbeitspapiere 65 201 253 Bender M Lionel 1989 Berta Lexicon In Bender M Lionel ed Topics in Nilo Saharan Linguistics 271 304 Hamburg Helmut Buske Ahland Colleen and Eliza Kelly 2014 Daatsʼiin Gumuz Comparative Word list Evans Pritchard Edward E 1932 Ethnological Observations in Dar Fung Sudan Notes and Records 15 1 61 Seligmann Brenda Z 1911 1912 Note on Two Languages in the Sennar Province of Anglo Egyptian Sudan Zeitschrift fur Kolonialsprachen 2 297 308 Wolf Katharina 2010 Une enquete sociolinguistique parmi les Amdang Mimi du Tchad Rapport Technique SIL Electronic Survey Reports 2010 028 Blench Roger 2021 The Maban languages and their place within Nilo Saharan Edgar John T 1991 Maba group Lexicon Sprache und Oralitat in Afrika Frankfurter Studien zur Afrikanistik 13 Berlin Dietrich Reimer Gaudefroy Demombynes Maurice 1907 Document sur les Langues de l Oubangui Chari In Actes du XVIe Congres International des Orientalistes Alger 1905 Part II 172 330 Paris Ernest Leroux Doris Lohr H Ekkehard Wolff with Ari Awagana 2009 Kanuri vocabulary In Haspelmath Martin amp Tadmor Uri eds World Loanword Database Leipzig Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology 1591 entries Blazek Vaclav 2007 On application of Glottochronology for Saharan Languages In Viva Africa 2007 Proceedings of the IInd International Conference on African Studies April 2007 Plzen Dryada 2007 p 19 38 19 pp ISBN 978 80 87025 17 8 Tourneux Henry 1992 Inventaire phonologiques et formation du pluriel en zaghawa Tchad Afrika und Ubersee 75 267 277 Zima Petr 1994 Lexique dendi songhay Djougou Benin avec un index francais dendi Westafrikanische Studien 4 Koln Rudiger Koppe Christiansen Bolli Regula 2010 A Grammar of Tadaksahak a Northern Songhay Language of Mali Leiden Stephens Rhiannon 2 September 2013 A History of African Motherhood The Case of Uganda 700 1900 Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781107030800 Elfasi M Hrbek Ivan January 1988 Africa from the Seventh to the Eleventh Century UNESCO ISBN 9789231017094 Wrigley Christopher 16 May 2002 Kingship and State The Buganda Dynasty Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521894357 Schoenbrun David L 1993 Cattle herds and banana gardens The historical geography of the western Great Lakes region ca AD 800 1500 The African Archaeological Review 11 11 39 72 doi 10 1007 BF01118142 S2CID 161913402 Further reading editChristopher Ehret 2001 A historical comparative reconstruction of Nilo Saharan Koln R Koppe Verlag ISBN 3 89645 098 0 OCLC 48027016 Dimmendaal Gerrit J 2008 09 01 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 ISSN 1749 818X Joseph Greenberg 1970 Written at International Journal of American Linguistics 29 1 The languages of Africa Bloomington Indiana University ISBN 0 87750 115 7 OCLC 795772769 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Roger Blench 2006 Archaeology language and the African past Lanham MD AltaMira Press ISBN 0 7591 0465 4 OCLC 62281704 Pertti Mikkola 1999 Nilo Saharan revisited some observations concerning the best etymologies Nordic Journal of African Studies 8 2 108 138 External relationships edit Roger Blench 2011 Can Sino Tibetan and Austroasiatic help us understand the evolution of Niger Congo noun classes 1 Archived 2013 05 18 at the Wayback Machine CALL 41 Leiden Gregersen Edgar 1972 Kongo Saharan Journal of African Languages 11 1 69 89 External links editRoger Blench Nilo Saharan Nilo Saharan list Blench 2012 Map of Nilo Saharan Popular Overview of Nilo Saharan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nilo Saharan languages amp oldid 1183061995, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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