Shubi language
Shubi is a Bantu language spoken by the Shubi people in north-western Tanzania. It may use labiodental plosives /p̪/, /b̪/ (sometimes written ȹ, ȸ) as phonemes, rather than as allophones of /p, b/. Peter Ladefoged wrote:
- We have heard labiodental stops made by a Shubi speaker whose teeth were sufficiently close together to allow him to make an airtight labiodental closure. For this speaker this sound was clearly in contrast with a bilabial stop; but we suspect that the majority of Shubi speakers make the contrast one of bilabial stop versus labial-labiodental affricate (i.e. bilabial stop closure followed by a labiodental fricative), rather than bilabial versus labiodental stop.[4]
Not to be confused with Subi language.
Shubi | |
---|---|
Region | Kagera Region in Tanzania |
Ethnicity | Shubi people |
Native speakers | (153,000 cited 1987)[1] |
Niger–Congo
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | suj |
Glottolog | shub1238 [2] |
JD.64 [3] | |
References
- Shubi at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
- Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Shubi". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
- Jouni Filip Maho, 2009. New Updated Guthrie List Online
- LINGUIST List 5.219: Labiodental nasals
External links
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Note: The Guthrie classification is geographic and its groupings do not imply a relationship between the languages within them. |
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