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Kuliak languages





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The Kuliak languages, also called the Rub languages,[1] are a group of languages spoken by small relict communities in the mountainous Karamoja region of northeastern Uganda.

Kuliak
Rub
Geographic
distribution
Karamoja region, northeastern Uganda
Linguistic classificationNilo-Saharan?
  • Kuliak
Proto-languageProto-Kuliak
Subdivisions
Glottologkuli1252

Nyang'i and Soo are moribund, with a handful of elderly speakers. However, Ik is vigorous and growing.

Word order in Kuliak languages is verb-initial.[2]

Names

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The Kuliak languages are also called the Rub languages by Ehret (1981), since Ehret reconstructed "Rub" to mean 'person' in Proto-Kuliak. He suggests that "Kuliak" may actually be a derogatory term used by neighboring Nilotic-speaking peoples to disparage Kuliak speakers as "poor," hence his preference for using Rub instead. [3] However, Kuliak continues to be the most widely used name, and is preferred by Roger Blench, Terrill Schrock, Sam Beer and other linguists, who note that the name "Kuliak" is not perceived as offensive or pejorative by any Kuliak speakers.[citation needed]

Classification

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Internal

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According to the classification of Heine (1976)[4], Soo and Nyang'i form a subgroup, Western Kuliak, while Ik stands by itself.

Kuliak 

Soo (Tepes, Kadam) – 50 speakers, moribund

Nyang'i (Nyangia) – 1 speaker, nearly extinct

Ik (Teuso) – 7,500 speakers, vigorous

According to Schrock (2015), "Dorobo" is a spurious language, is not a fourth Kuliak language, and may at most be a dialect of Ik.[5]

Heine finds the following numbers of correspondences between the languages on the 200-word Swadesh list:

External

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Bender (1989) had classified the Kuliak languages within the Eastern Sudanic languages. Later, Bender (2000) revised this position by placing Kuliak as basal branch of Nilo-Saharan. Glottolog treats Kuliak as an independent language family and does not accept Nilo-Saharan as a valid language family.

An early suggestion for Ik as a member of Afroasiatic was made by Archibald Tucker in the 1960s; this was criticized as weak and abandoned by the 1980s.[6]

Evolution

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The following sound correspondences are identified by Bernd Heine (1976)[4], who proposes also corresponding Proto-Kuliak reconstructions.

Kuliak consonant correspondences
Ik Tepes Nyang'i Proto-Kuliak Phonological environment
b b ~ p b *b
ɓ ɓ ɓ
ɗ ~ d d d *d
dz *dz Initially. Fricative z in Dorobo.
d s (?) Medially. No reflexes known in Nyang'i.
ɟ ~ ʄ ɟ ɟ
g g g *g Initially, before back vowels
ɟ g ɟ Initially, before front vowels
g Medially
f p p *p
t t t *t
ts c c *c
c k k *kj Initially and medially
h k k Finally
k k k *k
kw w kw *kw Word-initially
k *kʰ
tsʼ ʄ ʄ *cʼ Initially
s s s Medially
ɠ ɠ *kʼ
s s s *s Initially
r s s Medially
ɬ l ɬ Initially
ɬ l Finally
h *h Initially
ʔ Finally
z (?) s *z No reflex known in Tepes
m m m *m
n n n *n
ɲ ɲ ɲ
ŋ ŋ ŋ Initially, by default
ɲ ŋ ŋ Initially, before *ɛ
r ? ɲ Medially and finally
l l l *l Finally, a plosive /t/ in Dorobo.
r r r *r Initially and at the end of monosyllabic words
r r Elsewhere
r r r *rr Medially
j *j Initially and finally
j j j Medially
w w w *w Default
w ~ ∅ w Finally after *k, *g
Kuliak vowel correspondences
Ik Tepes Nyang'i Proto-Kuliak Phonological environment
a a a *a Default
a a ɛ Preceded by any non-open vowel
a e e Followed by a high vowel *i, *u
a ɛ ɛ Unstressed, when followed by a semivowel *j, *w
ɛ ɛ ɛ In Tepes and Nyang'i, /e/ and /ɛ/ can alternate morphophonologically.
e e e *e
i e e *ẹ
e i i *I
i i i *i
ɔ ɔ ɔ In Tepes and Nyang'i, /o/ and /ɔ/ can alternate morphophonologically.
o o o *o
u o o *ọ
o u u *U
u u u *u

For other vowel correspondences, Heine reconstructs clusters of vowels:

Heine reconstructs two classes of stress in Proto-Kuliak: "primary", which could occur in any position and remains in place in all Kuliak languages, and "secondary", which always occurred on the 2nd syllable of a word, and remains there in Ik and Nyang'i, but shifts to the first syllable in Tepes.

Blench[7] notes that Kuliak languages do not have extensive internal diversity and clearly had a relatively recent common ancestor. There are many monosyllabic VC (vowel + consonant) lexical roots in Kuliak languages, which is typologically unusual among Nilo-Saharan languages and is more typical of some Australian languages such as Kunjen. Blench considers these VC roots to have cognates in other Nilo-Saharan languages, and suggests that the VC roots may have been eroded from earlier Nilo-Saharan roots that had initial consonants.[7]

Significant influences from Cushitic languages,[8] and more recently Eastern Nilotic languages, are observable in the vocabulary and phonology of Kuliak languages. Blench[7] notes that Kuliak appears to retain a core of non-Nilo-Saharan vocabulary, suggesting language shift from an indigenous language like that seen in Dahalo.

Numerals

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Comparison of numerals in individual languages:[9]

Language 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Ik (1) kɔ̀nʊ̀kᵓ (lit. and it's one) lèɓètsìn (lit. and it's two) àɗìn (lit. and it's three) tsʼàɡùsìn (lit. and it's four) tùdìn (lit. and it's five) tudini ńda kɛɗɪ kɔn (5+ 1) tudini ńda kiɗi léɓetsᵉ (5+ 2) tudini ńda kiɗi aɗ (5+ 3) tudini ńda kiɗi tsʼaɡús (5+ 4) tomín
Ik (2) kɔnᵃ léɓetsᵃ aɗᵃ / aɗᵉ tsʔaɡúsᵃ túdᵉ ńda-keɗi-kɔnᵃ (5+ 1) ńda-kiɗi-léɓetsᵃ (5+ 2) ńda-kiɗiá-aɗᵉ (5+ 3) ńda-kiɗi-tsʔaɡúsᵃ (5+ 4) tomín
Nyang'i nardok nɛʔɛc iyʔɔn nowʔe tud mɔk kan kapei mɔk tomin
Soo (Tepes) (1) nɛ́dɛ̀s ínɛ̀'bɛ́c ínì'jɔ̀n ín'ùáʔ íntùd ˌíntùd ká ˈnɛ́dɛ̀s (5+ 1) ˌíntùd ká ínɛ̀'bɛ̀c (5+ 2) ˌíntùd ká ínì'jɔ́n (5+ 3) ˌíntùd ká ínùáʔ (5+ 4) mì'míɾínìk
Soo (Tepes) (2) ɛdɛs nɛbɛc iyon nowa tuɗ tuɗ ka nɪ ɛdɛs (5+ 1) tuɗ ka nɪ nɛbɛc (5+ 2) tuɗ ka nɪ iyon (5+ 3) tuɗ ka nɪ nowa (5+ 4) tuɗ en-ek iɠe (hand-PL all)

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Ehret, Christopher (2001) A Historical-Comparative Reconstruction of Nilo-Saharan (SUGIA, Sprache und Geschichte in Afrika: Beihefte 12), Cologne: Rüdiger Köppe Verlag, ISBN 3896450980.
  • ^ Beer, Sam, Amber McKinney, Lokiru Kosma 2009. The So Language: A Grammar Sketch. m.s.
  • ^ Ehret, Christopher. 1981. Revising Proto-Kuliak. Afrika und Übersee 64: 81-100.
  • ^ a b Heine, Bernd. 1976. The Kuliak Languages of Eastern Uganda. Nairobi: East African Publishing House.
  • ^ Schrock, Terrill. 2015. On Whether 'Dorobo' was a Fourth Kuliak Language. Studies in African Linguistics 44: 47-58.
  • ^ Hetzron, Robert (1980). "The Limits of Cushitic". Sprache und Geschichte in Afrika. 2: 12–13.
  • ^ a b c Blench, Roger. Segment reversal in Kuliak and its relationship to Nilo-Saharan.
  • ^ Lamberti, Marcello. 1988. Kuliak and Cushitic: A Comparative Study. (Studia linguarum africae orientalis, 3.) Heidelberg: Carl Winter.
  • ^ Chan, Eugene (2019). "The Nilo-Saharan Language Phylum". Numeral Systems of the World's Languages.
  • Fleming, Harold C. (1982). "Kuliak External Relations: Step One" in Nilotic Studies (Proceedings of the International Symposium on Languages and History of the Nilotic Peoples, Cologne, January 4–6, 1982, Vol 2, 423–478.
  • Blench, Roger M. (2006). Archaeology, Language, and the African Past. Lanham: Altamira Press.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Kuliak_languages&oldid=1232656871"
     



    Last edited on 4 July 2024, at 22:24  





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    This page was last edited on 4 July 2024, at 22:24 (UTC).

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