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Ewe (''Eʋe'' or ''Eʋegbe'' ) is a language spoken by approximately 20 million people in West Africa, mainly in
Ghana Ghana (; tw, Gaana, ee, Gana), officially the Republic of Ghana, is a country in West Africa. It abuts the Gulf of Guinea and the Atlantic Ocean to the south, sharing borders with Ivory Coast in the west, Burkina Faso in the north, and To ...
, Togo and Benin, and also in some other countries like Liberia and southwestern
Nigeria Nigeria ( ), , ig, Naìjíríyà, yo, Nàìjíríà, pcm, Naijá , ff, Naajeeriya, kcg, Naijeriya officially the Federal Republic of Nigeria, is a country in West Africa. It is situated between the Sahel to the north and the Gulf o ...
. Ewe is part of a cluster of related languages commonly called the Gbe languages. The other major Gbe language is Fon, which is mainly spoken in Benin. Like many African languages, Ewe is tonal as well as a possible member of the Niger-Congo family. The German Africanist Diedrich Hermann Westermann published many dictionaries and grammars of Ewe and several other Gbe languages. Other linguists who have worked on Ewe and closely related languages include Gilbert Ansre (tone, syntax), Herbert Stahlke (morphology, tone), Nick Clements (tone, syntax),
Roberto Pazzi Roberto Pazzi (born 1946, in Ameglia, Italy) is an Italian novelist and poet. His works have been translated into twenty six languages. Pazzi graduated in classics in Bologna with a thesis on Luciano Anceschi and aesthetics on the poetry of Umb ...
(anthropology, lexicography), Felix K. Ameka (semantics, cognitive linguistics),
Alan Stewart Duthie Alan Stewart Duthie (19 May 1938 - 6 July 2013) was a Scottish linguist and academic who settled and worked in Ghana all his adult life. He was a pioneer in linguistics at the University of Ghana, Legon for 49 years. Early life and education Al ...
(semantics, phonetics), Hounkpati B. Capo (phonology, phonetics),
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(syntax), and Chris Collins (syntax).


Dialects

Some of the commonly named Ewe ('Vhe') dialects are ''Aŋlɔ, Tɔŋu (Tɔŋgu), Avenor,
Agave people The Agave (also Crophy) are an ethnic group of Ghana, belonging to the Ewe people. They are mainly in the west of the Volta River and north of the Songhor Lagoon. The Agave people are one of the largest Ewe subgroups. They live in the southern p ...
, Evedome, Awlan, Gbín, Pekí, Kpándo, Vhlin, Hó, Avɛ́no, Vo, Kpelen, Vɛ́, Danyi, Agu, Fodome, Wancé, Wací, Adángbe'' (Capo). '' Ethnologue'' 16 considers Waci and Kpesi (Kpessi) to be distinct enough to be considered separate languages. They form a
dialect continuum A dialect continuum or dialect chain is a series of language varieties spoken across some geographical area such that neighboring varieties are mutually intelligible, but the differences accumulate over distance so that widely separated varie ...
with Ewe and
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(Mina), which share a mutual intelligibility level of 85%; the Ewe varieties Gbin, Ho, Kpelen, Kpesi, and Vhlin might be considered a third cluster of Western Gbe dialects between Ewe and Gen, but Kpesi is as close or closer to the Waci and Vo dialects, which remain in Ewe in that scenario. Waci intervenes geographically between Ewe proper and Gen; Kpesi forms a Gbe island in the Kabye area. Ewe is itself a dialect cluster of the Gbe languages, which include Gen, Aja, and Xwla and are spoken from the southern part of Ghana to Togo, Benin and Western Nigeria. All Gbe languages share at least some intelligibility with one another. Some coastal and southern dialects of Ewe include Aŋlɔ, Tongu (Tɔŋu), Avenor, Dzodze, and Watsyi. Some inland dialects indigenously characterized as Ewedomegbe include: Ho, Kpedze, Hohoe, Peki, Kpando, Aveme, Liati, Fódome, Danyi, and Kpele. Though there are many classifications, distinct variations exist between towns that are just miles away from one another.


Phonology

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Consonants

''H'' is a voiced fricative, which has also been described as
uvular Uvulars are consonants articulated with the back of the tongue against or near the uvula, that is, further back in the mouth than velar consonants. Uvulars may be stops, fricatives, nasals, trills, or approximants, though the IPA does not prov ...
, , pharyngeal, , or glottal . Stops are heard as dental . is typically alveolar as , but can also be dental as . The nasal consonants are not distinctive since they appear before only nasal vowels; therefore, Ewe is sometimes said to have no nasal consonants. However, it is more economical to argue that nasal are the underlying form and so are denasalized before oral vowels. occurs before unrounded (non-back) vowels and before rounded (back) vowels. Palatalization of alveolar consonants before a high-front vowel occur in the Southern dialect, and are heard as . Ewe is one of the few languages known to contrast vs. and vs. . The ''f'' and ''v'' are stronger than in most languages, and , with the upper lip noticeably raised, and thus more distinctive from the rather weak and . may occur in consonant clusters. It becomes (or ) after coronals.


Vowels

The tilde (˜) marks nasal vowels, though the Peki dialect lacks . Many varieties of Ewe lack one or another of the front mid vowels, and some varieties in Ghana have the additional vowels and . Ewe does not have a nasal–oral contrast in consonants. It does, however, have a syllabic nasal, which varies as , depending on the following consonant, and carries tone. Some authors treat it as a vowel, with the odd result that Ewe would have more nasal than oral vowels, and one of these vowels has no set place of articulation. If it is taken to be a consonant, there is the odd result of a single nasal consonant that cannot appear before vowels. If nasal consonants are taken to underlie , however, there is no such odd restriction, and the only difference from other consonants is that only nasal stops may be syllabic, a common pattern cross-linguistically.


Tones

Ewe is a tonal language. In a tonal language, pitch differences are used to distinguish one word from another. For example, in Ewe the following three words differ only by tone: * tó 'mountain' (High tone) * tǒ 'mortar' (Rising tone) * tò 'buffalo' (Low tone) Phonetically, there are three tone registers, High, Mid, and Low, and three rising and falling contour tones. However, most Ewe dialects have only two distinctive registers, High and Mid. These are depressed in nouns after voiced obstruents: High becomes Mid (or Rising), and Mid becomes Low. Mid is also realized as Low at the end of a phrase or utterance, as in the example 'buffalo' above. In writing, tones are marked by acute accent, grave accent, caron, and circumflex. They may be used along with the tilde that marks nasal vowels.


Pragmatics

Ewe has phrases of overt politeness, such as ''meɖekuku'' (meaning "please") and ''akpe'' (meaning "thank you").Translations of "please" and "thank you" from ''Omniglot.com''


Orthography

The African Reference Alphabet is used when Ewe is represented orthographically, so the written version is somewhat like a combination of the Latin alphabet and the International Phonetic Alphabet. An "n" is placed after vowels to mark nasalization. Tone is generally unmarked, except in some common cases, which require disambiguation: the first person plural pronoun ''mí'' 'we' is marked high to distinguish it from the second person plural ''mi'' 'you', and the second person singular pronoun ''wò'' 'you' is marked low to distinguish it from the third person plural pronoun ''wó'' 'they/them' * ekpɔ wò — 'he saw you' * ekpɔ wo — 'he saw them'


Naming system

The Ewe use a system of giving the first name to a child, based on the day of the week that the child was born. That arises from a belief that the real name of a child can be determined only after the child has shown its character. However, as a child is a person, not an object, the child must be referred to by some name in the interim and so a name is provided based on the day of birth. A final name is given at a naming ceremony, seven days after the date of birth. As a matter of pride in their heritage, especially since the 1970s, many educated Ewe, who were given Western names, have dropped those names formally/legally or informally and use their birthday name as their official name. The Ewe birthday-naming system is as follows: Often, people are called by their birthday name most of the time; the given name being used only on formal documents. In such cases, children with the same birth name are delineated by suffixes: -gã meaning big, -vi meaning little. So for example, after the birth of another Kofi, the first child called Kofi becomes Kofigã, and the new child Kofi. A subsequent Kofi, would be Kofivi, or Kofitse, mostly among Wedome and Tɔngu Ewes. Sometimes, the renaming happens twice, as the second Kofi might have originally been called Kofivi, while the eldest retained Kofi, thereby necessitating that they both be renamed on the birth of a third Kofi.


Grammar

Ewe is a subject–verb–object language.Ameka, Felix K. (1991). ''Ewe: Its Grammatical Constructions and Illocutionary Devices''. Australian National University: Sydney. The possessive precedes the head noun. Adjectives, numerals, demonstratives and relative clauses follow the head noun. Ewe also has
postposition Prepositions and postpositions, together called adpositions (or broadly, in traditional grammar, simply prepositions), are a class of words used to express spatial or temporal relations (''in'', ''under'', ''towards'', ''before'') or mark various ...
s rather than prepositions.Warburton, Irene and Ikpotufe, Prosper and Glover, Roland (1968). ''Ewe Basic Course''. Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University-African Studies Program. Ewe is well known as a language having
logophoric pronoun Logophoricity is a phenomenon of binding relation that may employ a morphologically different set of anaphoric forms, in the context where the referent is an entity whose speech, thoughts, or feelings are being reported. This entity may or may ...
s. Such pronouns are used to refer to the source of a reported statement or thought in indirect discourse, and can disambiguate sentences that are ambiguous in most other languages. The following examples illustrate: * Kofi be e-dzo 'Kofi said he left' (he ≠ Kofi) * Kofi be yè-dzo 'Kofi said he left' (he = Kofi) In the second sentence, yè is the logophoric pronoun. Ewe also has a rich system of serial verb constructions.


Status

Ewe is a national language in Togo and
Ghana Ghana (; tw, Gaana, ee, Gana), officially the Republic of Ghana, is a country in West Africa. It abuts the Gulf of Guinea and the Atlantic Ocean to the south, sharing borders with Ivory Coast in the west, Burkina Faso in the north, and To ...
.


Citations


General sources

* Ansre, Gilbert (1961) ''The Tonal Structure of Ewe''. MA thesis, Kennedy School of Missions of Hartford Seminary Foundation. * Ameka, Felix Kofi (2001). "Ewe". In Garry and Rubino (eds.), ''Fact About the World's Languages: An Encyclopedia of the World's Major Languages, Past and Present''. New York/Dublin: The H. W. Wilson Company. pp. 207–213. * Clements, George N. (1975)
"The logophoric pronoun in Ewe: Its role in discourse"
''Journal of West African Languages''. 10(2): 141–177. * Collins, Chris. (1993) ''Topics in Ewe Syntax''. Doctoral Dissertation, MIT. * Capo, Hounkpati B. C. (1991). ''A Comparative Phonology of Gbe'', Publications in African Languages and Linguistics, 14. Berlin/New York: Foris Publications & Garome, Bénin: Labo Gbe (Int). * Pasch, Helma (1995). ''Kurzgrammatik des Ewe''. Köln: Köppe. * Westermann, Diedrich Hermann (1930). ''A Study of the Ewe Language''. London: Oxford University Press.


External links



Institut für Afrikanistik der Universität zu Köln * https://web.archive.org/web/20111118234109/http://www.uni-koeln.de/phil-fak/afrikanistik/sprachen/ewe/ Ewe being taught at University of Cologne (Institute for African Studies Cologne)
Ewe Basic Course
by Irene Warburton, Prosper Kpotufe, Roland Glover, and Catherine Felten (textbook in Portable Digital Format and audio files in MP3 format) at Indiana University Bloomington's Center for Language Technology and Instructional Enrichment (CELTIE).
Articles on Ewe
(Journal of West African Languages)

at Verba Africana

page at Omniglot
Free virtual keyboard for Ewe language
at GhanaKeyboards.Com

Recordings of Ewe being spoken.
My First Gbe Dictionary
Online Gbe(Ewe)-English Glossary
PanAfriL10n page



Ewe online grammar
in French. Apparently the text o
''Grammaire ev̳e: aide-mémoire des règles d'orthographe de l'ev̳e''
by Kofi J. Adzomada, 1980.
Biblia Le Internet Dzi
online bible in Ewe language by Jehovah's Witnesses
Ewe Bible (Èʋegbe Biblia) Nublabla Xoxo and Yeye
{{DEFAULTSORT:Ewe Language Ewe people Gbe languages Languages of Ghana Languages of Togo Subject–verb–object languages