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Sandawe language

Sandawe is a language spoken by about 60,000 Sandawe people in the Dodoma Region of Tanzania. Sandawe's use of click consonants, a rare feature shared with only two other languages of East Africa – Hadza and Dahalo, had been the basis of its classification as a member of the defunct Khoisan family of Southern Africa since Albert Drexel in the 1920s. Recent investigations however (Güldemann 2010) suggest that Sandawe may be related to the Khoe family regardless of the validity of Khoisan as a whole. A discussion of Sandawe's linguistic classification can be found in Sands (1998).

Sandawe
Sàndàwé kì’ìng
Pronunciation[sàndàwékìʔìŋ]
Native toTanzania
RegionRift Valley
EthnicitySandawe
Native speakers
60,000 (2013)[1]
estimates run from 30,000 to 90,000
Language isolate, possibly related to the Khoe–Kwadi languages
Language codes
ISO 639-2sad
ISO 639-3sad
Glottologsand1273
ELPSandawe
Distribution of the Sandawe language (grey) in Tanzania
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Language use is vigorous among both adults and children, with people in some areas monolingual. Sandawe has two dialects, northwest and southeast. Differences include speaking speed, vowel dropping, some word taboo, and minor lexical and grammatical differences. Some Alagwa have shifted to Sandawe, and are considered a Sandawe clan.

SIL International began work on Sandawe in 1996 and to date (2004), Daniel and Elisabeth Hunziker and Helen Eaton continue to work on the analysis of the language. They have so far produced a phonological description, a dialect survey report and several papers on aspects of grammar. Sandawe is also currently (since 2002) studied by Sander Steeman of Leiden University.

Phonology edit

Vowels edit

 
Sandawe vowel chart, from Eaton (2006:237)

Sandawe has five vowel qualities:

All five vowel qualities may be found as short oral, long oral and long nasal vowels. Thus /a/ can be found as /a/, /aː/ and /ãː/ respectively. There are therefore fifteen basic vowel phonemes. Short nasal vowels also occur, apparently from the historical elision of a nasal consonant that is still attested in related forms. Long vowels are written double, aa, and long nasal vowels with a tilde, ã.

Long vowels are about 50% longer than short vowels. In morpheme-final position, low-tone /u/ and /i/ are frequently devoiced, though this may not occur after /j/, /w/, or /h/.

Consonants edit

Non-click consonants edit

The glyphs in ⟨brackets⟩ are the practical orthography developed by Hunziker and Hunziker, along with approximate equivalents in the IPA.

Labial Coronal Palatal Velar Glottal
Central Lateral Sibilant
Nasal m ⟨m⟩ n ⟨n⟩
Plosive
and
Affricate
Voiced b ⟨b⟩ d ⟨d⟩ ɟ͜ʎ̝ ⟨dl⟩[a] ~ dz ⟨dz⟩ ɡ ⟨g⟩
Tenuis p ⟨bp⟩ t ⟨dt⟩ c͜𝼆 ⟨tl⟩[a] ~ ts ⟨tc⟩ k ⟨gk⟩ ʔ ⟨ʼ⟩
Aspirated ⟨p⟩ ⟨t⟩ tʃʰ ~ tsʰ ⟨tch⟩ ⟨k⟩
Ejective tsʼ ⟨tsʼ⟩ c͜𝼆ʼ ⟨tlʼ⟩ ⟨kʼ⟩
Fricative f ⟨f⟩[a] s ⟨s⟩ ɬ ⟨lh⟩ x ⟨kh⟩
Approximant ɾ ⟨r⟩ l ⟨l⟩ j ⟨y⟩[a] w ⟨w⟩ h ⟨h⟩
  1. ^ a b c d Rare consonants.

Tc and dz are [tʃ] and [dʒ] in the northwestern dialect, but often [ts] and [dz] or even [z] in the southeast. [tsʰ] for tch occurs but is less common.

Clicks edit

Laminal
Denti-alveolar
Lateral
alveolar
Apical
postalveolar
Nasal ŋǀ ⟨nc⟩ ŋǁ ⟨nx⟩ ŋǃ ⟨nq⟩
Voiced ɡǀ ⟨gc⟩ ɡǁ ⟨gx⟩ ɡǃ ⟨gq⟩
Tenuis ⟨c⟩ ⟨x⟩ ⟨q⟩
Aspirated kǀʰ ⟨ch⟩ kǁʰ ⟨xh⟩ kǃʰ ⟨qh⟩
Glottalised ᵑǀˀ ⟨cʼ⟩ ᵑǁˀ ⟨xʼ⟩ ᵑǃˀ ⟨qʼ⟩

The clicks in Sandawe are not particularly loud, when compared to better known click languages in southern Africa. The lateral click [] can be confused with the alveolar lateral ejective affricate [tɬʼ] even by native speakers. With the postalveolar clicks, the tongue often slaps the bottom of the mouth, and this slap may be louder than the actual release of the click. Wright et al. transcribe this slapped click with the extended-IPA symbol ǃ¡. The voiced clicks are uncommon, being found in a few words such as gqokomi 'greater kudu' and gcingco (sp. bird). Labialized clicks are found in word-initial position.

The glottalized click phonation is something like creaky voice, not an ejective. In initial position, the glottis is closed during the entire occlusion of the click, and not opened until after the release burst. In medial position, the glottis is closed after the velar closure [ŋ] and before the forward closure, but opened before the click release. Such clicks are not nasalized all the way through; in some tokens they are simply prenasalized glottalized clicks, [ŋkǃˀ], bearing in mind that the superscript ˀ implies coarticulation (that is, that it is pronounced together with the [k], not after).

The practical orthography is based on Xhosa and Zulu.

Tone edit

Hunziker et al. (2008) transcribe seven phonetic tones: high [á], mid [ā], low [à], high falling [â], mid falling [ā̀], low falling [ȁ], and rising [ǎː] (on long vowels only). In Sandawe orthography, they are written as exactly with their IPA spelling, but the rising tone is marked as ǎ.[2]

High and low tones are analyzed as the basic tone configurations. However, the high-falling tone is contrastive, for example in [tsʼâ] 'water', but it also occurs often due to a sequence of tones. The mid tone does not occur initially. Hunziker et al. analyze it as a downstepped high tone: //H-L-H// is realized as [H-H-M]. This rightward shift on the tones is a general process in Sandawe.[clarification needed] This analysis requires the assumption of floating low tones carried by consonant clusters, and thought to reflect a historical vowel which has been deleted. The low and mid falling[clarification needed] tones are a prosodic effect, found on final syllables, or on penultimate syllables followed by a voiceless vowel; this leftward shift of tone before voiceless vowels (which by their nature cannot carry tone) is another general process of Sandawe. Rising tone is only found on long vowels and can be analyzed as a low-high sequence.

Thus at a phonemic level, high, low, falling, and downstep are contrastive.

Phonotactics edit

The majority of Sandawe syllables are CV. Morpheme-initially, consonant clusters are of the form Cw; these are not found in the middle of morphemes. Most consonants are attested in this Cw sequence apart from the labials, the glottals (ʼ, h), sonorants (r, l, y, w), and the rather infrequent consonants n, d, dl, & the voiced clicks, which may simply be gaps in attestation. The rounded vowels o, u are not found after Cw sequences. Vowel initial syllables, as in cèú 'buffalo', are not found initially, though initial glottal stop is not written (íóó /ʔíóː/ 'mother').

Glottal stops /ʔ/ are found as syllable codas, though these may be released in an echo vowel in some circumstances. Hunziker et al. prefer to analyze these are final consonants, because the quality of the echo vowel is predictable, and otherwise this is the only place where the vowels /e a o/ would have voiceless allophones.

Hunziker et al. find complementary distribution between homorganic NC clusters, which occur only medially (there are no word-final nasal consonants), and nasal vowels, which they only transcribe word finally. It would therefore seem that NC clusters are the realization of a preceding nasal vowel.

Other final consonants are found as consonant clusters in the middle of a word. Historically, these are presumably due to vowel elision, as evidenced by records from the early 20th century and also by tone patterns. In the northwestern dialect, words are found with final consonants where tonal patterns suggest there was once a voiceless final vowel, and where the southeastern dialect retains a voiceless i or u.

Grammar edit

Pronouns edit

Free pronouns
singular plural
1st person tsi sũũ
2nd person hapu sĩĩ
3rd person masc. he-we he-so
fem. he-su
Pronominal suffixes
singular plural
1st person -és -wà
2nd person -i
3rd person masc. -ʔà
fem. -sà

Syllable structure edit

Sandawe syllables are usually of the form CV; in monosyllabic words, word-final nasals are not uncommon, CV(N). Sometimes other consonants are found in word-final position, but this is most probably the result of deletion of word-final voiceless vowels.

A syllabic nasal m is found in Swahili loanwords. The most common word structure is disyllabic with or without long vowels (CV(ː)CV(ː)), according to De Voogt (1992).

Nouns edit

Although nouns can be masculine or feminine, there is usually no particular marker that indicates the gender. Many singular feminine human nouns are marked by the ending -sù, whereas some singular masculine human nouns end in -é. Additionally, definite human feminine nouns must be marked with the suffix -sù, often repeating marking:

ncûmsù-n-sù

wife-DEF-F

ncûmsù-n-sù

wife-DEF-F

'the wife'

Gender assignment for most non-human animates as well as inanimates is largely unpredictable. However, according to Steeman (2011), all body parts are masculine, bigger plants are masculine while smaller plants are feminine, machinery nouns new to the Sandawe (whose names are typically borrowed from Swahili) are usually feminine, and deverbal nouns representing acts (nominalizations) are masculine. According to Eaton (2010), a masculine noun can be made a diminutive by treating it as a feminine noun.

According to Eaton (2010), definite plural nouns are marked with the suffix -khéé, while definite associative plurals are marked with the suffix -khì. According to Steeman (2011), definite human plurals are marked with -sò.

Adjectives edit

The same roots may be used as adjectives or verbs according to Kagaya (1993:ix).

Syntax edit

Basic word order in Sandawe is SOV according to De Voogt (1992). However, word order in the Sandawe sentence is very flexible due to the presence of several 'subject identification strategies'.

Sample sentence (mid tones are not marked):

úte-s

yesterday-I

kxʼaré-és

boy-I

hàʔǃà

called

úte-s kxʼaré-és hàʔǃà

yesterday-I boy-I called

'Yesterday I called a boy.'[3]

An article in Studies in African Linguistics, Volume 10, Number 3, 1979, by Gerard Dalgish, describes these 'subject identification strategies' in detail. Numerous permutations of sentence constituents are allowed in certain tenses, the pattern being: (a) the first constituent is the subject or (b) any non-subject that is first in the sentence must be marked for the subject. Non-subject constituents include verbs, a progressive marker, objects, indirect objects, adverbs, prepositional phrases, complementizers. Similar results are obtained in WH-Questions. [4]

Tone edit

Elderkin (1989) analyzes Sandawe as having two level tones (High, Low) and two contour tones (Falling, Rising). His thesis considers the behavior of tone at word-, sentence- and discourse-level. De Voogt (1992) and Kagaya (1993) list three level tones (High, Mid, Low) and two contour tones (Falling, Rising).

Classification edit

 
Map of the "Khoisan" languages; Sandawe is shaded olive.

The most promising candidate as a relative of Sandawe are the Khoe languages of Botswana and Namibia. Most of the putative cognates Greenberg (1976) gives as evidence for Sandawe being a Khoisan language in fact tie Sandawe to Khoe. Gueldemann and Elderkin have strengthened that connection, with several dozen likely cognates, while casting doubts on other Khoisan connections. Although there are not enough similarities to reconstruct a Proto-Khoe–Sandawe language, there are enough to suggest that the connection is real. However, other linguists have criticized the proposal as cherry-picking among a large number of non-matching pronominal forms.

The pronominal system is quite similar:

Sandawe Proto-Khoe–Kwadi
1sg PN tsi *ti (Kwadi tʃi)
2sg PN ha- *sa
3 PN base he- xa (Kwadi ha-)
3ms suffix -w(e), -m (Khoe *-bV, *-mV)
3fs suffix su (Khoe *-sV)

These may cast some light on the development of clicks. For example, the Sandawe word for 'horn', tlana, may be a cognate with the root nǁâ found throughout the Khoe family. This and other words suggests that clicks may form from consonant clusters when the first vowel of a word is lost: *tlana > *tlna > ǁna (nǁa).

Another word common to Sandawe and Khoe, the numeral haka 'four', is also found in the neighboring Cushitic languages Aasax and Kwʼadza, and was perhaps borrowed into them from Sandawe.

Since the Khoe family appears to have migrated to southern Africa from the northeast,[why?] it may be that Sandawe is closer to their common homeland than the modern Khoe languages are.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Sandawe at Ethnologue (19th ed., 2016)  
  2. ^ "Sandawe language". Omniglot. Retrieved 13 October 2021.
  3. ^ Source: De Voogt 1992:19, adapted from Tucker 1977.
  4. ^ elanguage.net/journals/index.php/sal/article/viewPDFInterstitial/1062/823

Bibliography edit

  • Dalgish, Gerard (1979). "Subject Identification Strategies and Free Word Order: The Case of Sandawe". Studies in African Linguistics. 10 (3): 273–310.
  • Dobashi, Yoshihito (Spring 2001). (PDF). Cornell Working Papers in Linguistics. 18: 57–74. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2023-11-06.
  • Eaton, Helen C. (2002). A Grammar of Focus in Sandawe (PhD thesis). University of Reading.
  • Eaton, Helen (2006). "Sandawe". Journal of the International Phonetic Association. 36 (2): 235–242. doi:10.1017/S0025100306002647.
  • Eaton, Helen C. (2010). A Sandawe grammar. SIL International. ISBN 978-1-55671-252-4.
  • Elderkin, Edward D. (1989). The Significance and Origin of the Use of Pitch in Sandawe (DPhil thesis). University of York.
  • Güldemann, Tom; Elderkin, Edward D. (2010). "On external genealogical relationships of the Khoe family". In Brenzinger, Matthias; König, Christa (eds.). Khoisan languages and linguistics: proceedings of the 1st International Symposium January 4-8, 2003, Riezlern/Kleinwalsertal. Köln: Rüdiger Köppe. pp. 15–52.
  • Hunziker, Daniel; Hunziker, Elisabeth; Eaton, Helen (2008). A Description of the Phonology of the Sandawe Language (PDF). SIL Electronic Working Papers. Vol. 79. SIL.
  • Kagaya, Ryohei (1993). A Classified Vocabulary of The Sandawe Language. Asian & African Lexicon. Vol. 26. Tokyo: Institute for the Study of Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa. OCLC 490291783.
  • Sands, Bonny Eva (1998). Eastern and Southern African Khoisan: evaluating claims of distant linguistic relationships. Quellen zur Khoisan-Forschung. Vol. 14. Köln: Köppe. ISBN 9783896451422.
  • Steeman, Sander (2011). (PDF). Utrecht: Landelijke Onderzoekschool Taalwetenschap. ISBN 978-94-6093-076-8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-08-09.
  • de Voogt, A.J. (1992). Some phonetic aspects of Hatsa and Sandawe clicks (MA thesis). Leiden University.
  • Wright, Richard; Maddieson, Ian; Ladefoged, Peter; Sands, Bonny (October 1995). "A phonetic study of Sandawe clicks". UCLA Working Papers in Phonetics. 91.

External links edit

  • Sandawe wordlists and accompanying soundfiles at UCLA
  • Helen Eaton More information on SIL International's work on Sandawe, with papers for downloading.
  • Sandawe basic lexicon at the Global Lexicostatistical Database

sandawe, language, this, article, should, specify, language, english, content, using, lang, transliteration, transliterated, languages, phonetic, transcriptions, with, appropriate, code, wikipedia, multilingual, support, templates, also, used, august, 2021, sa. This article should specify the language of its non English content using lang transliteration for transliterated languages and IPA for phonetic transcriptions with an appropriate ISO 639 code Wikipedia s multilingual support templates may also be used See why August 2021 Sandawe is a language spoken by about 60 000 Sandawe people in the Dodoma Region of Tanzania Sandawe s use of click consonants a rare feature shared with only two other languages of East Africa Hadza and Dahalo had been the basis of its classification as a member of the defunct Khoisan family of Southern Africa since Albert Drexel in the 1920s Recent investigations however Guldemann 2010 suggest that Sandawe may be related to the Khoe family regardless of the validity of Khoisan as a whole A discussion of Sandawe s linguistic classification can be found in Sands 1998 SandaweSandawe ki ingPronunciation sandawekiʔiŋ Native toTanzaniaRegionRift ValleyEthnicitySandaweNative speakers60 000 2013 1 estimates run from 30 000 to 90 000Language familyLanguage isolate possibly related to the Khoe Kwadi languagesLanguage codesISO 639 2 span class plainlinks sad span ISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code sad class extiw title iso639 3 sad sad a Glottologsand1273ELPSandaweDistribution of the Sandawe language grey in TanzaniaThis article contains IPA phonetic symbols Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Unicode characters For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA Language use is vigorous among both adults and children with people in some areas monolingual Sandawe has two dialects northwest and southeast Differences include speaking speed vowel dropping some word taboo and minor lexical and grammatical differences Some Alagwa have shifted to Sandawe and are considered a Sandawe clan SIL International began work on Sandawe in 1996 and to date 2004 Daniel and Elisabeth Hunziker and Helen Eaton continue to work on the analysis of the language They have so far produced a phonological description a dialect survey report and several papers on aspects of grammar Sandawe is also currently since 2002 studied by Sander Steeman of Leiden University Contents 1 Phonology 1 1 Vowels 1 2 Consonants 1 2 1 Non click consonants 1 2 2 Clicks 1 3 Tone 1 4 Phonotactics 2 Grammar 2 1 Pronouns 2 2 Syllable structure 2 3 Nouns 2 4 Adjectives 2 5 Syntax 2 6 Tone 3 Classification 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Bibliography 6 External linksPhonology editVowels edit nbsp Sandawe vowel chart from Eaton 2006 237 Sandawe has five vowel qualities Front Back Close i u Mid e o Open a All five vowel qualities may be found as short oral long oral and long nasal vowels Thus a can be found as a aː and aː respectively There are therefore fifteen basic vowel phonemes Short nasal vowels also occur apparently from the historical elision of a nasal consonant that is still attested in related forms Long vowels are written double aa and long nasal vowels with a tilde a Long vowels are about 50 longer than short vowels In morpheme final position low tone u and i are frequently devoiced though this may not occur after j w or h Consonants edit Non click consonants edit The glyphs in brackets are the practical orthography developed by Hunziker and Hunziker along with approximate equivalents in the IPA Labial Coronal Palatal Velar Glottal Central Lateral Sibilant Nasal m m n n PlosiveandAffricate Voiced b b d d ɟ ʎ dl a dʒ dz dz ɡ g Tenuis p bp t dt c tl a tʃ ts tc k gk ʔ ʼ Aspirated pʰ p tʰ t tʃʰ tsʰ tch kʰ k Ejective tsʼ tsʼ c ʼ tlʼ kʼ kʼ Fricative f f a s s ɬ lh x kh Approximant ɾ r l l j y a w w h h a b c d Rare consonants Tc and dz are tʃ and dʒ in the northwestern dialect but often ts and dz or even z in the southeast tsʰ for tch occurs but is less common Clicks edit LaminalDenti alveolar Lateralalveolar Apicalpostalveolar Nasal ŋǀ nc ŋǁ nx ŋǃ nq Voiced ɡǀ gc ɡǁ gx ɡǃ gq Tenuis kǀ c kǁ x kǃ q Aspirated kǀʰ ch kǁʰ xh kǃʰ qh Glottalised ᵑǀˀ cʼ ᵑǁˀ xʼ ᵑǃˀ qʼ The clicks in Sandawe are not particularly loud when compared to better known click languages in southern Africa The lateral click kǁ can be confused with the alveolar lateral ejective affricate tɬʼ even by native speakers With the postalveolar clicks the tongue often slaps the bottom of the mouth and this slap may be louder than the actual release of the click Wright et al transcribe this slapped click with the extended IPA symbol ǃ The voiced clicks are uncommon being found in a few words such as gqokomi greater kudu and gcingco sp bird Labialized clicks are found in word initial position The glottalized click phonation is something like creaky voice not an ejective In initial position the glottis is closed during the entire occlusion of the click and not opened until after the release burst In medial position the glottis is closed after the velar closure ŋ and before the forward closure but opened before the click release Such clicks are not nasalized all the way through in some tokens they are simply prenasalized glottalized clicks ŋkǃˀ bearing in mind that the superscript ˀ implies coarticulation that is that it is pronounced together with the k not after The practical orthography is based on Xhosa and Zulu Tone edit Hunziker et al 2008 transcribe seven phonetic tones high a mid a low a high falling a mid falling a low falling ȁ and rising ǎː on long vowels only In Sandawe orthography they are written as exactly with their IPA spelling but the rising tone is marked as ǎ 2 High and low tones are analyzed as the basic tone configurations However the high falling tone is contrastive for example in tsʼa water but it also occurs often due to a sequence of tones The mid tone does not occur initially Hunziker et al analyze it as a downstepped high tone H L H is realized as H H M This rightward shift on the tones is a general process in Sandawe clarification needed This analysis requires the assumption of floating low tones carried by consonant clusters and thought to reflect a historical vowel which has been deleted The low and mid falling clarification needed tones are a prosodic effect found on final syllables or on penultimate syllables followed by a voiceless vowel this leftward shift of tone before voiceless vowels which by their nature cannot carry tone is another general process of Sandawe Rising tone is only found on long vowels and can be analyzed as a low high sequence Thus at a phonemic level high low falling and downstep are contrastive Phonotactics edit The majority of Sandawe syllables are CV Morpheme initially consonant clusters are of the form Cw these are not found in the middle of morphemes Most consonants are attested in this Cw sequence apart from the labials the glottals ʼ h sonorants r l y w and the rather infrequent consonants n d dl amp the voiced clicks which may simply be gaps in attestation The rounded vowels o u are not found after Cw sequences Vowel initial syllables as in ceu buffalo are not found initially though initial glottal stop is not written ioo ʔioː mother Glottal stops ʔ are found as syllable codas though these may be released in an echo vowel in some circumstances Hunziker et al prefer to analyze these are final consonants because the quality of the echo vowel is predictable and otherwise this is the only place where the vowels e a o would have voiceless allophones Hunziker et al find complementary distribution between homorganic NC clusters which occur only medially there are no word final nasal consonants and nasal vowels which they only transcribe word finally It would therefore seem that NC clusters are the realization of a preceding nasal vowel Other final consonants are found as consonant clusters in the middle of a word Historically these are presumably due to vowel elision as evidenced by records from the early 20th century and also by tone patterns In the northwestern dialect words are found with final consonants where tonal patterns suggest there was once a voiceless final vowel and where the southeastern dialect retains a voiceless i or u Grammar editPronouns edit Free pronouns singular plural 1st person tsi sũũ 2nd person hapu sĩĩ 3rd person masc he we he so fem he su Pronominal suffixes singular plural 1st person es wa 2nd person i e 3rd person masc a ʔa fem sa Syllable structure edit Sandawe syllables are usually of the form CV in monosyllabic words word final nasals are not uncommon CV N Sometimes other consonants are found in word final position but this is most probably the result of deletion of word final voiceless vowels A syllabic nasal m is found in Swahili loanwords The most common word structure is disyllabic with or without long vowels CV ː CV ː according to De Voogt 1992 Nouns edit Although nouns can be masculine or feminine there is usually no particular marker that indicates the gender Many singular feminine human nouns are marked by the ending su whereas some singular masculine human nouns end in e Additionally definite human feminine nouns must be marked with the suffix su often repeating marking ncumsu n suwife DEF Fncumsu n suwife DEF F the wife Gender assignment for most non human animates as well as inanimates is largely unpredictable However according to Steeman 2011 all body parts are masculine bigger plants are masculine while smaller plants are feminine machinery nouns new to the Sandawe whose names are typically borrowed from Swahili are usually feminine and deverbal nouns representing acts nominalizations are masculine According to Eaton 2010 a masculine noun can be made a diminutive by treating it as a feminine noun According to Eaton 2010 definite plural nouns are marked with the suffix khee while definite associative plurals are marked with the suffix khi According to Steeman 2011 definite human plurals are marked with so Adjectives edit The same roots may be used as adjectives or verbs according to Kagaya 1993 ix Syntax edit Basic word order in Sandawe is SOV according to De Voogt 1992 However word order in the Sandawe sentence is very flexible due to the presence of several subject identification strategies Sample sentence mid tones are not marked ute syesterday Ikxʼare esboy Ihaʔǃacalledute s kxʼare es haʔǃayesterday I boy I called Yesterday I called a boy 3 An article in Studies in African Linguistics Volume 10 Number 3 1979 by Gerard Dalgish describes these subject identification strategies in detail Numerous permutations of sentence constituents are allowed in certain tenses the pattern being a the first constituent is the subject or b any non subject that is first in the sentence must be marked for the subject Non subject constituents include verbs a progressive marker objects indirect objects adverbs prepositional phrases complementizers Similar results are obtained in WH Questions 4 Tone edit Elderkin 1989 analyzes Sandawe as having two level tones High Low and two contour tones Falling Rising His thesis considers the behavior of tone at word sentence and discourse level De Voogt 1992 and Kagaya 1993 list three level tones High Mid Low and two contour tones Falling Rising Classification edit nbsp Map of the Khoisan languages Sandawe is shaded olive The most promising candidate as a relative of Sandawe are the Khoe languages of Botswana and Namibia Most of the putative cognates Greenberg 1976 gives as evidence for Sandawe being a Khoisan language in fact tie Sandawe to Khoe Gueldemann and Elderkin have strengthened that connection with several dozen likely cognates while casting doubts on other Khoisan connections Although there are not enough similarities to reconstruct a Proto Khoe Sandawe language there are enough to suggest that the connection is real However other linguists have criticized the proposal as cherry picking among a large number of non matching pronominal forms The pronominal system is quite similar Sandawe Proto Khoe Kwadi 1sg PN tsi ti Kwadi tʃi 2sg PN ha sa 3 PN base he xa Kwadi ha 3ms suffix w e m Khoe bV mV 3fs suffix su Khoe sV These may cast some light on the development of clicks For example the Sandawe word for horn tlana may be a cognate with the root nǁa found throughout the Khoe family This and other words suggests that clicks may form from consonant clusters when the first vowel of a word is lost tlana gt tlna gt ǁna nǁa Another word common to Sandawe and Khoe the numeral haka four is also found in the neighboring Cushitic languages Aasax and Kwʼadza and was perhaps borrowed into them from Sandawe Since the Khoe family appears to have migrated to southern Africa from the northeast why it may be that Sandawe is closer to their common homeland than the modern Khoe languages are See also editClick language Hadza language Khoisan languagesReferences edit Sandawe at Ethnologue 19th ed 2016 nbsp Sandawe language Omniglot Retrieved 13 October 2021 Source De Voogt 1992 19 adapted from Tucker 1977 elanguage net journals index php sal article viewPDFInterstitial 1062 823 Bibliography edit Dalgish Gerard 1979 Subject Identification Strategies and Free Word Order The Case of Sandawe Studies in African Linguistics 10 3 273 310 Dobashi Yoshihito Spring 2001 Agreement and Word Order in Sandawe PDF Cornell Working Papers in Linguistics 18 57 74 Archived from the original PDF on 2023 11 06 Eaton Helen C 2002 A Grammar of Focus in Sandawe PhD thesis University of Reading Eaton Helen 2006 Sandawe Journal of the International Phonetic Association 36 2 235 242 doi 10 1017 S0025100306002647 Eaton Helen C 2010 A Sandawe grammar SIL International ISBN 978 1 55671 252 4 Elderkin Edward D 1989 The Significance and Origin of the Use of Pitch in Sandawe DPhil thesis University of York Guldemann Tom Elderkin Edward D 2010 On external genealogical relationships of the Khoe family In Brenzinger Matthias Konig Christa eds Khoisan languages and linguistics proceedings of the 1st International Symposium January 4 8 2003 Riezlern Kleinwalsertal Koln Rudiger Koppe pp 15 52 Hunziker Daniel Hunziker Elisabeth Eaton Helen 2008 A Description of the Phonology of the Sandawe Language PDF SIL Electronic Working Papers Vol 79 SIL Kagaya Ryohei 1993 A Classified Vocabulary of The Sandawe Language Asian amp African Lexicon Vol 26 Tokyo Institute for the Study of Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa OCLC 490291783 Sands Bonny Eva 1998 Eastern and Southern African Khoisan evaluating claims of distant linguistic relationships Quellen zur Khoisan Forschung Vol 14 Koln Koppe ISBN 9783896451422 Steeman Sander 2011 A Grammar of Sandawe A Khoisan Language from Tanzania PDF Utrecht Landelijke Onderzoekschool Taalwetenschap ISBN 978 94 6093 076 8 Archived from the original PDF on 2017 08 09 de Voogt A J 1992 Some phonetic aspects of Hatsa and Sandawe clicks MA thesis Leiden University Wright Richard Maddieson Ian Ladefoged Peter Sands Bonny October 1995 A phonetic study of Sandawe clicks UCLA Working Papers in Phonetics 91 External links editSandawe wordlists and accompanying soundfiles at UCLA Helen Eaton More information on SIL International s work on Sandawe with papers for downloading Sandawe basic lexicon at the Global Lexicostatistical Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sandawe language amp oldid 1204891635, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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