Masalit language
Masalit (autonym Masala/Masara) (Arabic: ماساليت) is a Maban language spoken by the Masalit people in western Darfur, Sudan.
Masalit | |
---|---|
kana masalaka/masaraka | |
Native to | Sudan, Chad |
Region | West Darfur, South Darfur (Sudan), Ouaddaï Region (Chad) |
Ethnicity | Masalit |
Native speakers | 440,000 (2011-2013)[1] |
Nilo-Saharan?
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | Either:mls – Masalitmdg – Massalat |
Glottolog | nucl1440 Nuclear Masalit[2]mass1262 Massalat[3] |
A group of Masalit known as the Massalat moved west into central-eastern Chad and have almost entirely switched to Arabic. Their ethnic population in Chad was 30,000 as of the 1993 census, but only 10 speakers of their language were reported in 1991.[4]
Sociolects
The Masalit language has two sociolects:
- "Heavy" Masalit, spoken by higher-ranking people and those in the countryside, with a complicated agglutinative grammar
- "Light" Masalit, spoken particularly in the home and in the market, with a somewhat simplified grammatical structure and many borrowings from Sudanese Arabic, the regional lingua franca and language of education.
gollark: I'm available to come up with vaguely unsettling things to say, if you ping me.
gollark: No communist revolutions! They never go well and communism bad.
gollark: Or, well, *sentence semantics evaluation error*.
gollark: *Parse error.*
gollark: Nuclear power plant, but ACRONYM™™?
References
- "Masalit". Ethnologue. Retrieved 2018-09-14.
- Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Masalit". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
- Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Massalat". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
- Masalit language at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
External links
Further reading
- Abdo, Alsadig Adam (2013). "Contrastive Analysis Between Masalit and English Language" (PDF). (in Masalit and English). University of Khartoum, Sadan: unpublished. Retrieved 8 May 2015. Cite journal requires
|journal=
(help) - Edgar, J. (1990). Masalit stories. African Languages and Cultures, 3(2), 127-148.
- Jakobi, A. (1991). Au Masali Grammar: With Notes on Other Languages of Darfur and Wadai. Anthropos, 86(4-6), 599-601.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.