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Iraqw (;) is a
Cushitic language The Cushitic languages are a branch of the Afroasiatic language family. They are spoken primarily in the Horn of Africa, with minorities speaking Cushitic languages to the north in Egypt and the Sudan, and to the south in Kenya and Tanzania. As o ...
spoken in
Tanzania Tanzania (; ), officially the United Republic of Tanzania ( sw, Jamhuri ya Muungano wa Tanzania), is a country in East Africa within the African Great Lakes region. It borders Uganda to the north; Kenya to the northeast; Comoro Islands an ...
in the Arusha and Manyara Regions. It is expanding in numbers as the Iraqw people absorb neighbouring ethnic groups. The language has many Datooga loanwords, especially in poetic language. The Gorowa language to the south shares numerous similarities and is sometimes considered a dialect.


Phonology


Vowels

Whiteley (1958) lists the following vowel phonemes for Iraqw. All of the vowels except /ə/ occur in both short and long versions: can be heard as within the environment of pharyngeal consonants.


Consonants

Whiteley (1958) and Mous (1993) list the following consonants: In the popular orthography for Iraqw used in Lutheran and Catholic materials as well as in collections of traditional Iraqw stories and academic literature (e.g. Nordbustad 1988, Mous 1993 ), the majority of the orthography follows the Swahili orthography with the addition of x and q. Other additions to the orthography are the sound is spelled , the is spelled , the is spelled , and is spelled (Mous 1993:16). Consonants /ɲ, tʃ, dʒ, ʃ/ mainly occur from loanwords of Swahili and Datooga (Mous 1993:19).


Morphology


Noun morphology


Gender

Nouns in Iraqw have three genders: masculine, feminine, and neuter. The gender of a noun can be deduced from the type of agreement that it triggers on other elements in the sentence, but the agreement system is unusual, and obeys the following principle (Mous 1993:41): * Masculine nouns require the masculine form of the verb * Feminine nouns require the feminine form of the verb * Neuter nouns require the plural form of the verb The masculine, feminine, and plural forms of the verb are identified by the form the verb takes when the subject is pronoun which is a.) a third person masculine singular ('he'), b.) a third person feminine singular ('she'), or c.) a third person plural ('they'). There are several unusual things that are worth noting. One is that 'tail' is neuter in the singular and feminine in the plural; despite this, the plural verb form is used for 'tail', since it is neuter, and neuters use the plural verb form. This is why "plural" is often used as a label for this gender; plural gender is common in a number of Cushitic languages. Another is that the verbs do not agree with their subjects in number, so the masculine plural ''daaqay'' 'boys' takes the masculine form of the verb, not the plural form of the verb.


Number

Nouns typically have separate singular and plural forms, but there are many distinct plural suffixes. Mous (1993:44) reports that there are fourteen different plural suffixes. The lexical entry for a noun must specify the particular plural suffix it takes. The gender of a plural noun is usually different from the gender of the corresponding singular. Compare the following singular and plural nouns, with their genders: While it is not possible to predict the gender of a noun or which plural suffix it will take, the form of the plural suffix determines the gender of the plural noun. So, for example, all plural nouns with the /-eemo/ suffix are neuter (Mous 1993:58).


Construct case suffixes and gender linkers

The gender of a noun is important for predicting the construct case suffix and the gender linker that it will use. When a noun is directly followed by *an adjective *a possessive noun phrase *a numeral *a relative clause *a verb then a construct case suffix must appear after the noun. The construct case marker is /-ú/ or /-kú/ for masculine nouns; /-Hr/ or /-tá/ for feminine nouns; and /-á/ for neuter nouns (Mous 1993:95-96): The gender linkers are similar to the construct cases suffixes, but appear between the noun and other suffixes (such as the demonstrative, indefinite, and possessive suffixes). The following example shows masculine, feminine, and neuter nouns before the 'their' possessive suffix and the demonstrative -qá' 'that (far, but visible)' (Mous 1993:90-92)


Adverbial case clitics

Iraqw has four adverbial case clitics: the directive, the ablative, the instrumental and the reason case clitics. Adverbial case clitics occur in the position immediately before the verb and are cliticised to the preceding noun with the gender linker, or they might occur in a position after the verb, in which case they are obligatorily followed by a resumptive pronoun ''alé''.


Syntax


Noun phrases

The noun comes first in the noun phrase, and precedes possessors, adjectives, numerals, and relative clauses. An element called the construct case suffix appears between the noun and these modifiers, as discussed in the Morphology section above:


Sentences

An Iraqw sentence contains a verb in final position, and an auxiliary-like element called the 'selector'. Either the subject or the object of the sentence may precede the selector (Mous 2004:110), and the selector agrees with the preceding noun. So in the first example below, ''iri'' shows agreement with ''/ameenirdá' '' 'that woman', and in the second example, ''uná'' shows agreement with ''gitladá' '':


References

* Mous, Maarten. 1993. ''A grammar of Iraqw''. Hamburg: Buske. * Mous, Maarten, Martha Qorro, Roland Kießling. 2002. ''Iraqw-English Dictionary. With an English and a Thesaurus Index''. Cushitic Language Studies Volume 18. * Whiteley, W.H. 1958. ''A short description of item categories in Iraqw''. Kampala:East African Institute of Social Research.


External links


Iraqw language topical vocabulary list
(from th
World Loanword Database
{{Authority control South Cushitic languages Languages of Tanzania