North Cushitic
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Beja ( or ) is an
Afroasiatic The Afroasiatic languages (or Afro-Asiatic), also known as Hamito-Semitic, or Semito-Hamitic, and sometimes also as Afrasian, Erythraean or Lisramic, are a language family of about 300 languages that are spoken predominantly in the geographic su ...
language of the
Cushitic 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 ...
branch spoken on the western coast of the
Red Sea The Red Sea ( ar, البحر الأحمر - بحر القلزم, translit=Modern: al-Baḥr al-ʾAḥmar, Medieval: Baḥr al-Qulzum; or ; Coptic: ⲫⲓⲟⲙ ⲛ̀ϩⲁϩ ''Phiom Enhah'' or ⲫⲓⲟⲙ ⲛ̀ϣⲁⲣⲓ ''Phiom ǹšari''; ...
by the
Beja people The Beja people ( ar, البجا, Beja: Oobja, tig, በጃ) are an ethnic group native to the Eastern Desert, inhabiting a coastal area from southeastern Egypt through eastern Sudan and into northwestern Eritrea. They are descended from pe ...
. Its speakers number around one to two million individuals, and inhabit parts of
Egypt Egypt ( ar, مصر , ), officially the Arab Republic of Egypt, is a transcontinental country spanning the northeast corner of Africa and southwest corner of Asia via a land bridge formed by the Sinai Peninsula. It is bordered by the Medit ...
, Sudan and Eritrea.


Name

The name ''Beja'', derived from ar, بجا, bijā, is most common in English-language literature. Native speakers use the term (indefinite) or (definite).


Classification

Beja is held by most linguists to be part of the
Cushitic 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 ...
branch of the
Afroasiatic The Afroasiatic languages (or Afro-Asiatic), also known as Hamito-Semitic, or Semito-Hamitic, and sometimes also as Afrasian, Erythraean or Lisramic, are a language family of about 300 languages that are spoken predominantly in the geographic su ...
family, constituting the only member of the Northern Cushitic subgroup. As such, Beja contains a number of linguistic innovations that are unique to it, as is also the situation with the other subgroups of Cushitic (e.g. idiosyncratic features in Agaw or Central Cushitic). The characteristics of Beja that differ from those of other Cushitic languages are likewise generally acknowledged as normal branch variation. The relation of the Northern Cushitic branch of Cushitic to the other branches is unknown.
Christopher Ehret Christopher Ehret (born 27 July 1941), who currently holds the position of Distinguished Research Professor at UCLA, is an American scholar of African history and African historical linguistics particularly known for his efforts to correlate li ...
proposes, based on the devoicing of
Proto-Cushitic 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 ...
voiced velar fricatives, that Northern Cushitic is possibly more closely related to
South Cushitic The South Cushitic or Rift languages of Tanzania are a branch of the Cushitic languages. The most numerous is Iraqw, with half a million speakers. These languages are believed to have been originally spoken by Southern Cushitic agro-pastoralist ...
than to the other branches. The identification of Beja as an independent branch of Cushitic dates to the work of
Enrico Cerulli Enrico Cerulli (15 February 1898 - 19 September 1988) was an Italian scholar of Somali and Ethiopian studies, a governor and a diplomat. Biography Cerulli was born in Naples, Italy in 1898. He wrote his doctoral thesis at the University of Nap ...
between 1925 and 1951. Due to Beja's linguistic innovations,
Robert Hetzron Robert Hetzron, born Herzog (31 December 1937, Budapest – 12 August 1997, Santa Barbara, California), was a Hungarian-born linguist known for his work on the comparative study of Afro-Asiatic languages, as well as for his study of Cushitic ...
argued that it constituted an independent branch of Afroasiatic. Hetzron's proposal was generally rejected by other linguists, and Cerulli's identification of Beja as the sole member of a North Cushitic branch remains standard today across otherwise divergent proposals for the internal relations of the Cushitic language family.


History

Christopher Ehret proposes the following sequence of sound changes between Proto-Cushitic and Beja: # PC * → * (
alveolar ejective affricate The alveolar ejective affricate is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is . Features Features of the alveolar ejective affricate: Occurr ...
becomes palatal ejective stop) # PC * → * (
dental ejective stop The alveolar and dental ejective stops are types of consonantal sound, usually described as voiceless, that are pronounced with a Airstream mechanism#Glottalic initiation, glottalic egressive airstream. In the International Phonetic Alphabet, ej ...
becomes
alveolar ejective affricate The alveolar ejective affricate is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is . Features Features of the alveolar ejective affricate: Occurr ...
) # *C' → C (
ejectives In phonetics, ejective consonants are usually voiceless consonants that are pronounced with a glottalic egressive airstream. In the phonology of a particular language, ejectives may contrast with aspirated, voiced and tenuis consonants. Some l ...
become their non-ejective voiceless counterparts) #
lateral Lateral is a geometric term of location which may refer to: Healthcare *Lateral (anatomy), an anatomical direction * Lateral cricoarytenoid muscle * Lateral release (surgery), a surgical procedure on the side of a kneecap Phonetics *Lateral co ...
/+obstruent] → [+retroflex consonant, retroflex/+obstruent] (that is, and become and , respectively) # PC * → * (voiced alveolar affricate becomes voiceless alveolar affricate, voiceless) # * → ; * → (
voiceless alveolar affricate A voiceless alveolar affricate is a type of affricate consonant pronounced with the tip or blade of the tongue against the alveolar ridge (gum line) just behind the teeth. This refers to a class of sounds, not a single sound. There are several ty ...
becomes a
fricative A fricative is a consonant produced by forcing air through a narrow channel made by placing two articulators close together. These may be the lower lip against the upper teeth, in the case of ; the back of the tongue against the soft palate in t ...
,
voiceless palatal plosive The voiceless palatal plosive or stop is a type of consonantal sound used in some vocal languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is , and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is c. If distinction is neces ...
becomes a postalveolar fricative # * → # PC * → * (
labialized Labialization is a secondary articulatory feature of sounds in some languages. Labialized sounds involve the lips while the remainder of the oral cavity produces another sound. The term is normally restricted to consonants. When vowels involve ...
voiced velar fricative The voiced velar fricative is a type of consonantal sound that is used in various spoken languages. It is not found in Modern English but existed in Old English. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is , ...
becomes
voiceless In linguistics, voicelessness is the property of sounds being pronounced without the larynx vibrating. Phonologically, it is a type of phonation, which contrasts with other states of the larynx, but some object that the word phonation implies ...
) # * → * (velar fricatives become plosives) # PC * → /V_V ( lateral fricative becomes
alveolar tap Alveolus (; pl. alveoli, adj. alveolar) is a general anatomical term for a concave cavity or pit. Uses in anatomy and zoology * Pulmonary alveolus, an air sac in the lungs ** Alveolar cell or pneumocyte ** Alveolar duct ** Alveolar macrophage * M ...
between vowels) # PC * → /#_ (lateral fricative becomes
lateral approximant A lateral is a consonant in which the airstream proceeds along one or both of the sides of the tongue, but it is blocked by the tongue from going through the middle of the mouth. An example of a lateral consonant is the English ''L'', as in ''Larr ...
word-initially) # PC *z → /V_ (a consonant of unknown value becomes palatal approximant after vowels) # PC *z → /#_ (the same consonant of unknown value becomes
voiced alveolar stop The voiced alveolar, dental and postalveolar plosives (or stops) are types of consonantal sounds used in many spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents voiced dental, alveolar, and postalveolar plosiv ...
word-initially) # PC *, * → (all nasals but collapse into
alveolar nasal The voiced alveolar nasal is a type of consonantal sound used in numerous spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents dental, alveolar, and postalveolar nasals is , and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is ...
) Ehret's reconstructed Proto-Cushitic /z/ is not a
voiced alveolar fricative The voiced alveolar fricatives are consonantal sounds. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents these sounds depends on whether a sibilant or non-sibilant fricative is being described. * The symbol for the alveolar sibilant ...
, but a consonant of unknown value. Ehret proposes that it might be a
voiced palatal plosive The voiced palatal plosive or stop is a type of consonantal sound in some vocal languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is , a barred dotless that was initially created by turning the type for a ...
. Some linguists and paleographers believe that they have uncovered evidence of an earlier stage of Beja, referred to in different publications as "Old Bedauye" or "Old Beja." Helmut Satzinger has identified the names found on several third century CE
ostraca An ostracon ( Greek: ''ostrakon'', plural ''ostraka'') is a piece of pottery, usually broken off from a vase or other earthenware vessel. In an archaeological or epigraphical context, ''ostraca'' refer to sherds or even small pieces of ...
(potsherds) from the Eastern Desert as likely Blemmye, representing a form of Old Beja. He also identifies several epigraphic texts from the fifth and sixth centuries as representing a later form of the same language. Nubiologist Gerald Browne, Egyptologist Helmut Satzinger, and Cushiticist Klaus Wedekind believed that an ostracon discovered in a monastery in Saqqarah also represents the Old Beja language. Browne and Wedekind identified the text as a translation of
Psalm 30 Psalm 30 is the 30th psalm of the Book of Psalms, beginning in English in the King James Version: "I will extol thee, O ; for thou hast lifted me up". The Book of Psalms is part of the third section of the Hebrew Bible, and a book of the Christi ...
.


Phonology

Nasals other than and are positional variants of . The consonants and only appear in Arabic loanwords in some speakers' speech; in others', they are replaced by or and . Some speakers replace in Arabic loanwords with . Beja has the five vowels , , , , and . and only appear long, while , , and have long and short variants. Beja has
pitch accent A pitch-accent language, when spoken, has word accents in which one syllable in a word or morpheme is more prominent than the others, but the accentuated syllable is indicated by a contrasting pitch ( linguistic tone) rather than by loudness ...
.


Orthography

Both Roman and Arabic script have been used to write Beja. The Roman orthography below is that used by the Eritrean government and was used in a literacy program at
Red Sea University Red Sea University ( ar, جامعة البحر الأحمر, ''Jām'ah al-Baḥr al-aḥmar'') is located in the city of Port Sudan, in the state of The Red Sea in eastern Sudan. It was established in 1994. It is a member of the Federation of the U ...
in
Port Sudan Port Sudan ( ar, بور سودان, Būr Sūdān) is a port city in eastern Sudan, and the capital of the state of Red Sea. , it has 489,725 residents. Located on the Red Sea, Port Sudan is recognized as Sudan's main seaport and the source of 90% ...
from 2010 to 2013. Three Arabic orthographies have seen limited use: The first below was that used by the now defunct Website Sakanab; the second was devised by Muhammad Adaroob Muhammad and used in his translation of E.M. Roper's Beja lexicon; the third was devised by Mahmud Ahmad Abu Bikr Ooriib, and was employed briefly at Red Sea University in 2019. No system of writing has gained wide support. The only system to have been employed in publications by more than one writer is the Latin script. In the Roman orthography, the vowels are written with the letters corresponding to the IPA symbols (i.e., ‹a›, ‹e›, ‹i›, ‹o›, ‹u›). Long vowels are written with doubled signs. As and cannot be short vowels, they only appear as ‹ee› and ‹oo›, respectively. The single ‹e› sign, however, does have a use: To distinguish between and , ‹dh› is used for the former and ‹deh› for the latter. Similarly, ‹keh› is , ‹teh› is , ‹seh› is . Single ‹o› is not used. In all Arabic orthographies, short vowels are written with the same diacritics used in Arabic:
fatḥah The Arabic script has numerous diacritics, which include: consonant pointing known as (), and supplementary diacritics known as (). The latter include the vowel marks termed (; singular: , '). The Arabic script is a modified abjad, where sh ...
for (ﹶ),
kasrah The Arabic script has numerous diacritics, which include: consonant pointing known as (), and supplementary diacritics known as (). The latter include the vowel marks termed (; singular: , '). The Arabic script is a modified abjad, where sh ...
for (ﹺ),
ḍammah The Arabic script has numerous diacritics, which include: consonant pointing known as (), and supplementary diacritics known as (). The latter include the vowel marks termed (; singular: , '). The Arabic script is a modified abjad, where s ...
for ( ُ). 'Alif (ا) is used as the seat for these diacritics at the beginning of a word. Long is written with 'alif (ا) preceded by fatḥah, or alif maddah (آ) when word-initial. Long is written with yā' ي preceded by kasrah. Long is written with wāw و preceded by ḍammah. The systems vary on the representation of long and long . In the Usakana system, is written with a modified Kurdish yā' ێ; in the system devised by Muhammad Adaroob Muhammad it is represented by yā' with a shaddah يّ; in the Red Sea University system, it is not distinguished from the yā' for or . In the Usakana system, is written with a modified Kurdish wāw ۆ; in the system devised by Muhammad Adaroob Muhammad it is represented by wāw with a shaddah وّ; in the Red Sea University system, it is not distinguished from the wāw for or . Pitch accent is not marked in any orthography. In Wedekind, Wedekind, and Musa (2006 and 2007), stressed syllables are indicated in boldface. In addition to these two systems and several academic systems of transcribing Beja texts, it is possible that Beja was at least occasionally written in the
Greek alphabet The Greek alphabet has been used to write the Greek language since the late 9th or early 8th century BCE. It is derived from the earlier Phoenician alphabet, and was the earliest known alphabetic script to have distinct letters for vowels as w ...
-based Coptic script during the Middle Ages.


Grammar


Nouns, articles, and adjectives

Beja nouns and adjectives have two genders: masculine and feminine, two numbers: singular and plural, two cases: nominative and oblique, and may be definite, indefinite, or in
construct state In Afro-Asiatic languages, the first noun in a genitive phrase of a possessed noun followed by a possessor noun often takes on a special morphological form, which is termed the construct state (Latin ''status constructus''). For example, in Arabi ...
. Gender, case, and definiteness are not marked on the noun itself, but on clitics and affixes. Singular-plural pairs in Beja are unpredictable.


Plural forms

Plurals may be formed by: * the addition of a suffix to the singular stem: 'house', 'houses' (the final -b is an indefinite suffix) * the shortening of the final syllable of the singular stem (or
Ablaut In linguistics, the Indo-European ablaut (, from German '' Ablaut'' ) is a system of apophony (regular vowel variations) in the Proto-Indo-European language (PIE). An example of ablaut in English is the strong verb ''sing, sang, sung'' and its ...
in this syllable): 'camel', 'camels' * shift of the accent from the ultimate to the penultimate syllable: 'lion', 'lions' (orthographically identical) * a combination of these. A small number of nouns do not distinguish between singular and plural forms. Some nouns are always plural. A few nouns have suppletive plurals.


Case and definiteness

A noun may be prefixed by a clitic definite article, or have an indefinite suffix. Definite articles indicate gender, number, and case. The indefinite suffix marks gender only, and does not appear in the nominative case. For feminine common nouns, the indefinite suffix is ; for masculine nouns and feminine proper nouns, . The indefinite suffixes only appear after vowels. The definite article is proclitic. It has the following forms with masculine monosyllabic nouns that do not begin with or (note that an initial glottal stop is usually omitted in writing, and that all words that appear to be vowel-initial actually begin with a glottal stop): The feminine definite articles begin with ‹› but are otherwise identical (, , , ). With nouns longer than one syllable and with nouns that begin with or , reduced forms of the definite article are used which do not distinguish between cases, but maintain gender distinctions. In some dialects (e.g. that described by Wedekind, Wedekind, and Musa for Port Sudan) the reduced forms maintain number distinctions; in others (e.g. that described by Vanhove and Roper for Sinkat) they do not.


Possession

Possessive relationships are shown through a genitive suffix (singular possessed) or (plural possessed) which attaches to the possessing noun. If the possessing noun is feminine, the genitive marker will begin with ; if the possessed is feminine, the suffix will end with . When the suffix does not end with the feminine marker , it reduces to , whether singular or plural (that is, the singular/plural distinction is only marked for feminine possessa). Because this suffix adds a syllable to the noun, full forms of articles cannot be used; thus, the article on the noun itself does not indicate case. However, agreeing adjectives will be marked for oblique case. No article or indefinite suffix may be applied to the possessed noun. The possessed noun follows the possessor. Examples: * 'the man's friend (m)' * 'the man's friend (f)' * 'the woman's friend (m)' * 'the woman's friend (f)' * 'the men's friends (f)' (The noun 'man' has the suppletive plural 'men'; 'friend' has the shortened plural 'friends'.) Postpositions follow nouns in the genitive. Examples: * 'The man came toward the chief/elder.' (: 'toward') * 'The boy is with the girls.' (: 'with')


Adjectives

Adjectives follow the nominal heads of noun phrases. They agree in gender, number, case, and definiteness, and carry case and definiteness markers of the same form as nouns.


Copula

Clauses may be composed of two noun phrases or a noun phrase and a predicative adjective followed by a copular clitic. The copula agrees in person, gender, and number with the copula complement (the second term), but the first- and third-person forms are identical. The copular subject will be in the nominative case, the copular complement in the oblique. Oblique becomes before . Copular complements that end in a vowel will employ an epenthetic between the final vowel and any vowel-initial copular clitic. Examples: * "I am strong." * "You are strong." * "He is a lion." * "This is a five-piastre piece." * "We are Amirab." * "They are the donkeys." * "They are the thieves."


Verbs

Beja verbs have two different types, first noted by Almkvist: "strong verbs," which conjugate with both prefixes and suffixes and have several
principal parts In language learning, the principal parts of a verb are those forms that a student must memorize in order to be able to conjugate the verb through all its forms. The concept originates in the humanist Latin schools, where students learned verbs ...
; and "weak verbs," which conjugate with suffixes only and which have a fixed root. Verbs conjugate for a number of tense, aspect, modality, and polarity variations, which have been given different names by different linguists: (Roper analyzes additional subjunctive forms where Wedekind, Wedekind, and Musa, and Vanhove see a conditional particle.) Each of the above forms has a corresponding negative. (Vanhove refers to the imperative negative as the "prohibitive".) The past continuous and past share a past negative. Negative forms are not derived from corresponding positive forms, but are independent conjugations. Every verb has a corresponding deverbal noun, which Wedekind, Wedekind, and Musa refer to as a "noun of action", Vanhove calls an "action noun", and Roper a "nomen actionis". Numerous serial verb constructions exist which connote different aspectual and potential meanings.


Imperative

The third person masculine singular positive imperative is the
citation form In morphology and lexicography, a lemma (plural ''lemmas'' or ''lemmata'') is the canonical form, dictionary form, or citation form of a set of word forms. In English, for example, ''break'', ''breaks'', ''broke'', ''broken'' and ''breaking'' a ...
of the verb. Weak verbs have a long final suffix while strong verbs have a short final suffix . For both weak and strong verbs, the negative imperative is formed by an identical set of prefixes (for masculine singular and common plural) and (for feminine singular). Strong verbs use a negative imperative root which has a lengthened vowel.


Deverbal and dependent forms


=Deverbal noun

= Every Beja verb has a corresponding deverbal noun (Wedekind, Wedekind, and Musa: "noun of action"; Vanhove: "action noun"; Roper: "nomen actionis"). For weak verbs, the deverbal noun is formed by a suffix attached to the imperative root (see above). For strong verbs, deverbal nouns are not entirely predictable. Examples: * Weak verbs: "to sleep" → "sleeping"; "to forgive" → "forgiving" * Strong verbs: "to hobble" → "hobbling"; "to be pregnant" → "being pregnant" There are patterns in strong verb deverbal nouns related to the structure of the citation form of the verb. However, these are not consistent.


=Deverbal adjective

= A further derived form is a suffix attached to the citation root, and then followed by for masculine nouns and for feminine. Examples: This form may be used as an adjective, but it is also employed in the construction of multiple conjugated negative forms. Wedekind, Wedekind, and Musa analyse this form as a participle. Martine Vanhove analyses it as a manner
converb In theoretical linguistics, a converb (abbreviated ) is a nonfinite verb form that serves to express adverbial subordination: notions like 'when', 'because', 'after' and 'while'. Other terms that have been used to refer to converbs include ''adver ...
.


Tense-conjugated forms


=Past continuous/aorist

= The past continuous stem for strong verbs is not derivable from any other verb stem. The negative of the past continuous is identical to that of the past: There is only one past tense negative form. For both weak and strong verbs, the past negative is formed through a deverbal participial or converbal form (see above) followed by the present negative of the irregular verb "to be". Wedekind, Wedekind, and Musa describe the past continuous as being used for "habitual, repeated actions of the (more distant) past." It is the verb conjugation used for counterfactual conditionals, which leads to Roper's identifying this tense as the "conditional". It is also frequently used in narratives.


=Past/perfective

= The past or perfective stem for strong verbs is identical to the citation form (imperative) stem, with predictable phonetic modifications. The negative is identical to that of the past continuous/aorist (above).


=Present/imperfective

= The present or imperfective has two stems for positive strong verbs, while the negative strong stem is identical to that used for the imperative (and thus also for past/perfective verbs). Weak negative verbs add the prefix to positive past/perfective forms.


=Future

= The strong future stem is described differently by Wedekind, Wedekind, and Musa and by Vanhove. Both agree that it is a fixed stem followed by a present/imperfective conjugated form of the verb "to say." Wedekind, Wedekind, and Musa's strong stem is similar to the past continuous/aorist stem (next section), and identical for all numbers, genders, and persons, except the first person plural, which has a prefixed . For Vanhove, there are distinct singular and plural stems which are identical to the past continuous/aorist first person singular and plural, respectively. Similarly, for weak verbs, Wedekind, Wedekind, and Musa have a future stem ending in with a first person plural , followed by a present tense/imperfective conjugation of . Vanhove sees the as a singular future, and the as a general plural. For negative verbs, the negative present/imperfective of is used as the conjugated auxiliary. (NB: Wedekind, Wedekind, and Musa see verbs of the form CiCiC as having identical past continuous oristand future stems. Some verbs of other forms have different stems, which would lead to a greater divergence between the forms described by them and those described by Vanhove.) E.M. Roper, describing the same dialect as Vanhove, identifies the stem employed as being identical to the past continuous/aorist (for him, "conditional"—see above), just as Vanhove does. However, he understands the form with as being used only with the first person plural, as Wedekind, Wedekind, and Musa do.


Intentional/desiderative

In addition to the future, Bidhaawyeet has a similar form expressing desire to undertake an act or intention to do so. The citation root takes a suffix for all persons, genders, and numbers, and is followed by a present tense/imperfective conjugated form of the verb "to say", as the future is.


Jussive, optative, potential

There is distinct disagreement between the major grammars of the past century on the modal conjugation or conjugations referred to as "jussive," "optative," and "potential." Wedekind, Wedekind, and Musa describe a "jussive" with the following paradigm. For strong verbs, the first person is based on the past/perfective stem, and the persons are based on the future stem; no negative jussive is given: They give various examples of the jussive with translations into English, in order to give a sense of the meaning: * "Let me ask!" * "What would you (m) like to drink?" * "Please let us look for it!" (Atmaan dialect) Vanhove identifies a complex "potential" form composed of a nominalizing suffix followed by a present/imperfective reduced conjugation of the verb 'come' ( in the non-reduced present/imperfective). Vanhove describes the potential as expressing "epistemic modalities of inference or near-certainty." Examples below, with the potential verbs in bold: * "'I am really exhausted, so I should rest a while,' he says." Additionally, she recognizes an optative with positive and negative polarity. The positive optative is formed from a prefix to the past continuous/aorist. The negative construction is more complex. In some dialects, the final of most forms of the weak negative is a short : Vanhove gives no explanation for the use of the optative positive. The optative negative is used in conditional clauses with meanings of incapacity and necessity: * "'Don't let it come from behind me!' I told myself." * "The donkey stopped in a place where nothing can arrive." * "I thought he would not be able to run." * "Oh, man, hit the leopard! I don't need to shout at you and…"


Lexicon

Through lexicostatistical analysis, David Cohen (1988) observed that Beja shared a basic vocabulary of around 20% with the East Cushitic Afar and Somali languages and the Central Cushitic Agaw languages, which are among its most geographically near Afroasiatic languages. This was analogous to the percentage of common lexical terms that was calculated for certain other Cushitic languages, such as Afar and Oromo. Václav Blažek (1997) conducted a more comprehensive glottochronological examination of languages and data. He identified a markedly close ratio of 40% cognates between Beja and Proto-East Cushitic as well as a cognate percentage of approximately 20% between Beja and Central Cushitic, similar to that found by Cohen. A fairly large portion of Beja vocabulary is borrowed from Arabic. In Eritrea and Sudan, some terms are instead Tigre loanwords. Andrzej Zaborski has noted close parallels between Beja and Egyptian vocabulary. The only independent Beja dictionary yet printed is Leo Reinisch's 1895 ''Wörterbuch der Beḍauye-Sprache''. An extensive vocabulary forms an appendix to E.M. Roper's 1928 ''Tu Beḍawiɛ: An Elementary Handbook for the use of Sudan Government Officials'', and this has formed the basis for much recent comparative Cushitic work. Klaus and Charlotte Wedekind and Abuzeinab Musa's 2007 ''A Learner's Grammar of Beja (East Sudan)'' comes with a CD which contains a roughly 7,000-word lexicon, composed mostly of one-word glosses. Klaus Wedekind, Abuzeinab Muhammed, Feki Mahamed, and Mohamed Talib were working on a Beja-Arabic-English dictionary, but publication appears to have been stalled by Wedekind's death. Martine Vanhove announced a forthcoming Beja-Arabic-English-French dictionary in 2006. It has not yet been published. The Beja scholar Muhammed Adarob Ohaj produced a Beja-Arabic dictionary as his masters thesis in 1972. It has not yet been published.


Swadesh List

The following list is drawn from Wedekind, Wedekind, and Musa's 2007 grammar and Roper's 1928 handbook. Nouns are given in indefinite accusative forms (the citation form); unless marked otherwise, forms that end in ‹t› are feminine and all others are masculine. Verbs are given in the singular masculine imperative. #Beja handles negation through distinct negative polarity conjugation. There is no lexical "not." # In some dialects means "pupil." # refers to the foot and leg. # This is a rare
suppletive In linguistics and etymology, suppletion is traditionally understood as the use of one word as the inflected form of another word when the two words are not cognate. For those learning a language, suppletive forms will be seen as "irregular" or even ...
imperative. Other forms of the verb have no and are constructed around a consonantal root . # covers the blue-green range.


Numbers

"Ten" has combining forms for the production of teens and products of ten. Numbers from 11 to 19 are formed by followed by the units. E.g., "fourteen" is . Combining ones use the form ; e.g., "eleven" is . "Twenty" is . "Twenty-one" is . "Thirty" is ; "forty" is ; "fifty" is ; etc. "One hundred" is . For higher numbers, Beja-speakers use Arabic terms. Ordinal numbers are formed by the addition of a suffix . "First" is , borrowed from Arabic. "Half" is . Other fractions are borrowed from Arabic.


Literature

Beja has an extensive oral tradition, including multiple poetic genres. A well-known epic is the story of the hero Mhamuud Oofaash, portions of which have appeared in various publications by Klaus Wedekind. An edition appears in Mahmud Mohammed Ahmed's ''Oomraay'', published in Asmara. In the 1960s and '70s, the Beja intellectual Muhammed Adarob Ohaj collected oral recordings of poetic and narrative material which are in the
University of Khartoum The University of Khartoum (U of K) ( ar, جامعة الخرطوم) is a public university located in Khartoum, Sudan. It is the largest and oldest university in Sudan. UofK was founded as Gordon Memorial College in 1902 and established in 195 ...
Institute of African and Asian Studies Sound Archives. Didier Morin and Mohamed-Tahir Hamid Ahmed have used these, in addition to their own collections, for multiple academic publications in French on Beja poetics.
Red Sea University Red Sea University ( ar, جامعة البحر الأحمر, ''Jām'ah al-Baḥr al-aḥmar'') is located in the city of Port Sudan, in the state of The Red Sea in eastern Sudan. It was established in 1994. It is a member of the Federation of the U ...
and the NGO Uhaashoon worked with oral story-tellers to produce a collection of 41 short readers and a longer collection of three short stories in Beja between 2010 and 2013.


Notes


Sources

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External links


Abuzeinab Muhammed's papers on Academia.edu
(alternate name of Abuzeinab Musa)
Klaus Wedekind's papers on Academia.eduMartine Vanhove's papers on Academia.eduBidhaawyeetiit Kitaabaati Kitab Website
(literacy primers and stories in Beja)
BejaLanguage.org Website
(texts in Beja including stories, songs, missionary Bible translations with audio) {{Authority control Cushitic languages Languages of Sudan Languages of Eritrea Languages of Egypt Beja people