Peve language

The Pévé language, sometimes referred to as Lamé, is a member of the Masa branch of the Chadic family that is spoken in parts of Cameroon and the Republic of Chad. An Ethnologue survey in 1999 identified about 30,000 speakers of Pévé in the Republic of Chad and 6,000 speakers in the North and Far North regions of Cameroon (www.ethnologue.com). Like most speakers of Chadic languages, Pévé speakers tend to be fluent in their language of heritage as well as well as the vehicular languages of their respective areas. These include the Mundang and Fula languages, both of which are members of the Niger-Congo language family, as well as French, English, and other languages. Unlike many neighboring languages, the number of speakers of Pévé appears to have increased over the past two decades. This is in part due to the Comité pour le Promotion de la Langue et de la Culture Lamé (CPLCL), an organization based in Cameroon and Chad whose goal is to share and preserve cultural customs and traditions, including language use. Like other Chadic languages, Pévé has a rich set of grammatical forms and functions that differ from those of closely related languages, even though the related languages may be spoken just a few kilometers away. For example, Pévé differs from many Chadic languages in having a copula corresponding to ‘to be’. Unlike most languages with an inherent copula, the copula in Pévé can be used in reference to past or future time but not in reference to present time. Another interesting feature of Pévé is the use of pronouns to mark tense, mood, and aspect, along with the grammatical functions of subject and object. These and other unusual form-function relationships make Pévé a likely source for future linguistic studies.

Pévé
Lamé
Zime
Native toChad, Cameroon
Native speakers
ca. 35,000 (1999–2000)[1]
Afro-Asiatic
Language codes
ISO 639-3lme
Glottologpeve1243[2]

One unusual feature of Peve is that it contrasts voiceless and voiced glottal fricatives ([h] vs. [ɦ]).[3]

Publications concerning Pévé

The grammatical and semantic forms and functions of Pévé, along with many cultural features, are described in detail in A Grammar of Pévé (see below), published in January 2020 by Brill Publishers (Wikipedia Link https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brill_Publishers). The volume, based on data gathered from 2012 to present, is written by Erin Shay, professor of Linguistics at the University of Colorado, Boulder, in collaboration with Lazare Wambadang, a native speaker of Pévé, professional educator and president of Comité pour le Promotion de la Langue et de la Culture Lamé.

gollark: Also, I think what lyricly said implies we do approval voting, not evil FPTP.
gollark: I think HelloBoi for owner could be good.
gollark: We haven't decided yet.
gollark: Well, we have access to roles on heavserver.
gollark: If we win.

For a brief example of how publication of a written grammar of a lesser-known language may have a positive effect on native speakers of that language, take a look at this link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zv1dwZN61Ps&feature=share

References

  1. Pévé at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  2. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Peve". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
  3. Grønnum, Nina (2005), Fonetik og fonologi, Almen og Dansk (3rd ed.), Copenhagen: Akademisk Forlag, ISBN 87-500-3865-6

Shay, Erin, with Lazare Wambadang. 2020. A Grammar of Pévé. Leiden: Brill, 359 pp. Pévé, also called Lamé after its chief dialect, is an Afro-Asiatic language of Chad and Cameroon. Zime is a generic name, and Lamé is also used for a dialect of the related Ngeté-Herdé language.


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