Sociolingo’s African Linguistics

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Niger-Kordofan: Fulbe (Cameroon/Nigeria)

Posted by sociolingo on December 11, 2007

Seen on Mandaras

The Fulbe (Cameroon/Nigeria)                   Name:

The ethnic name ‘Fulbe’ is the plural of ‘Pullo’, and the autonym for the Fulbe people as an ethnic group. ‘Pullo’ (Peul in French) is singular referring to ‘one Fulbe’ person (Barreteau 1984:172). The Fulbe often choose their clan names in relation to the name of an ethnic group or a place name close to them (Boulet at al 1984:126ff). For example the ‘Badaway’, which is the Kanuri word ‘nomade’, or ‘Sawa’ for the river Sava. The most frequent Fulbe clans in the area are the Yllaga, Wollarbe, Fereoobe, Ngara, Tara, Maoudi, Sava, Djenne and Djafoun. There are other Fulbe clans, but the largest ones are the Yllaga, Wollarbe, and Fereoobe. For the Northern Mandaras the Yllaga and the Fereoobe are the most important Fulbe clans (ibid). The montagnards of the Gwoza Hills refer to the Fulbe of Madagali as ‘Plata/Pelata’.

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Posted in AFRICA, African languages, Cameroon, LINGUISTICS, Niger-Kordofanian, Nigeria, West Atlantic | No Comments »

Niger-Kordofanian Languages in Africa

Posted by sociolingo on April 28, 2007

The following was found in an article on African Languages from

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition.  2001-05.

http://www.bartleby.com/65/af/Africanlng.html 

Niger-Kordofanian
The Niger-Kordofanian family has two branches, Niger-Congo and Kordofanian. The Kordofanian tongues are spoken in Sudan and form five small groups (Koalib, Tegali, Talodi, Tumtum, and Katla). Niger-Congo is an enormous branch whose languages are found throughout S and central Africa and in most of W Africa below the Sahara. It is generally subdivided into six groups: West Atlantic; Mande; Gur, or Voltaic; Kwa; Benue-Congo; and Adamawa-Eastern.    3
The West Atlantic branch includes many languages, among them Wolof (in Senegal), Temne (in Sierra Leone), and Fulani, the tongue of several million people inhabiting an area from Senegal to a region E of Lake Chad. The Mande group consists of languages prevalent in the Niger valley, Liberia, and Sierra Leone, such as Mende in Liberia and Malinke in Mali. Gur, or Voltaic, is made up of several language groups and includes Mossi, the dominant tongue of Burkina Faso, as well as the Dagomba and Mamprusi of N Ghana. The Kwa languages, spoken chiefly in Ghana, Côte d’Ivoire, Benin, Nigeria, and Liberia, include Ewe, Yoruba, Igbo, Nupe, Bini, Ashanti, and possibly Ijo (which is sometimes considered a separate branch). Benue-Congo includes the huge Bantu group of hundreds of tongues found throughout central and S Africa (see Bantu languages), as well as such non-Bantu languages as Tiv, Jukun, and Efik, which are spoken in Nigeria and Cameroon. The Adamawa-Eastern branch, to which Banda, Zande, and Sango belong, is composed of a number of languages spoken in Nigeria, Cameroon, and an area north of the Bantu territory to Sudan.    4
A characteristic feature of most of the Niger-Congo languages is the use of tones. Case inflection is entirely lacking, and gender marking is almost unknown in the Niger-Congo family. The verb root tends to remain unchanged; moods and tenses are denoted either by particles or by auxiliary verbs. For example, in a number of languages the infinitival is the auxiliary designating the future. Typical of the Niger-Kordofanian stock as a whole is the division of nouns, which has been compared to the gender system of the Indo-European tongues. However, Indo-European features only three classifications (masculine, feminine, and neuter), whereas some of the Niger-Kordofanian languages have as many as 20 noun classes. One class, for example, designates human beings, another is used for liquids, and a third class is used for animals. Each class has its own pair of affixes to indicate the singular and the plural.

 

Posted in AFRICA, African languages, LINGUISTICS, Niger-Kordofanian | No Comments »