Eastern Jebel languages

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Eastern Jebel
Geographic
distribution
An Nil al Azraq
province

The Eastern Jebel languages are a small subfamily belonging to the

Arabic
for "mountain".)

Languages

The Eastern Jebel languages are:

  • Gaam (also called "Ingassana" or "Tabi")
  • Aka
    (Silak)
  • Kelo (Tornasi)
  • Molo (Malkan)

Gaam has some 40,000–80,000 speakers, whereas the other three are threatened languages with far fewer speakers. Gaam was believed to be the only member of this group until more information about Aka, Kelo, and Molo was obtained by Bender; the latter three languages have been significantly influenced by

Sawda
in the Tabi Hills, roughly 11°15′–30′ N by 33°55′–34°10′ E.

The other three were spoken in isolated pockets to its south, but are now probably extinct: Aka in the Sillok Hills, Kelo in the Tornasi Hills on jebels Tornasi (

Kayli village) and Beni Sheko, and Molo at Jebel Malkan near the Ethiopian
border.

Reconstruction

Proto-Eastern Jebel has been reconstructed by Bender (1998).[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ Bender, M. Lionel. 1998. The Eastern Jebel Languages of Sudan. Afrika und Übersee 81: 39-64.

Bibliography

  • Malik Agaar Ayre & M.
    Lionel Bender
    , Preliminary Gaam-English-Gaam Dictionary. Addis Abeba 1980.
  • M. Lionel Bender. "The Eastern Jebel Languages of Sudan". Afrika und Übersee 80 (1997), 81 (1998):189-215, 39-64.
  • W. J. Crewe. "The Phonological Features of the Ingessana Language". 1975
  • E. E.
    Dar Fung
    ", Sudan Notes and Records 15.1, 1932. pp. 1–61.
  • F. S. & J. Lister. "The Ingessana Language: A Preliminary Description", Journal of Ethiopian Studies 4.1, 1966. pp. 41–44.
  • B. Z. Seligman. "Notes on Two Languages Spoken in the Sennar Province of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan", Zeitschrift für Kolonialsprachen 2.4, 1912. pp. 297–308.
  • Timothy M. Stirtz. "Phonology and Orthography in Gaahmg", in ed. Leoma C. Gilley, Occasional Papers in the Study of Sudanese Languages No. 9, Entebbe: SIL-Sudan 2004.
  • Sisto Verri. "Il Linguaggio degli Ingessana nell'Africa Occidentale", Anthropos 50, 1955. pp. 282–318.