The Qimant language is a highly endangered language spoken by a small and elderly fraction of the Qemant people in northern Ethiopia, mainly in the Chilga woreda in Semien Gondar Zone between Gondar and Metemma.
Classification
The language belongs to the western branch of the Agaw or Central Cushitic languages.[3] Other (extinct) members of this branch are Qwara and Kayla. Along with all other Cushitic languages, Qimant belongs to the Afro-Asiatic language family.
Geographic distribution and sociolinguistic situation
Qimant is the original language of the Qemant people of Semien Gondar Zone and Ethiopia. Although the ethnic population of the Qemant was 172,327 at the 1994 census, only a very small fraction of these speak the language nowadays. All speakers live either in Chilga woreda or in Lay Armachiho woreda.[4] The number of first-language speakers is 1625, the number of second language speakers 3450.[5] All speakers of the language are older than 30 years, and more than 75% are older than 50 years.[6] The language is no longer passed on to the next generation of speakers. Most ethnic Qemant people speak Amharic. Qimant is not spoken in public or even at house as a means of day communication any more, but is reduced to a secret code.[7]
Dialects/Varieties
It is not clear to what extent Kayla, Qwara and Qimant have been dialects of the same Western Agaw language, or were languages distinct from each other.
Phonology
Consonants
Continuants can be geminated word-medially.
Vowels
Phonotactics
The maximum syllable structure in Qimant is CVC, which implies that consonant clusters are only allowed word-medially.[9] In loanwords from Amharic there may also be consonant-clusters within a syllable. Vowel clusters are not allowed.
Phonological processes
Consonant clusters with more than two consonants are broken up by inserting the epenthetic vowel /ɨ/. Other phonological processes are nasal assimilation and devoicing of /ɡ/ at word boundaries.[10]
Prosody
The prosodic features of Qimant have not been studied yet.
Grammar
Morphology
The personal marking system distinguishes between first person singular and plural, second person singular, polite, and plural, and third person masculine, feminine and plural. On the verb, all inflectional categories are marked by suffixes. Zelealem (2003, p. 192) identifies three different aspect forms in Qimant: Perfective, Imperfective and Progressive. Like in other Central Cushitic languages, the numbers one to nine go back to an ancient quinary system, where the suffix /-ta/ added to the numbers two to four results in the numbers six to nine (2-4 are three numbers, 6-9 are four numbers).[11]
The basic constituent order in Qimant, like in all other Afro-Asiatic languages of Ethiopia, is SOV. The presence of a case marking system allows for other, more marked orders. In the noun phrase the head noun follows its modifiers. Numbers, however, can also follow the head noun. All kind of subordinate clauses precede the main verb of the sentence.
Vocabulary/Lexis
As a consequence of the looming language death, many items of the vocabulary are already replaced by Amharic words.
References
-
Zelealem Leyew. 2003. The Kemantney Language – A Sociolinguistic and Grammatical Study of Language Replacement. Cologne: Rüdiger Köppe Verlag.
-
David L. Appleyard. 1975. "A descriptive outline of Kemant," Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 38:316-350.
Notes
-
^ a b Qimant at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
-
^
-
^ Zelealem 2003, p. 30
-
^ see map in Zelealem 2003, p. 31
-
^ Zelealem 2003, p. 62
-
^ Zelealem 2003, p. 63
-
^ Zelealem 2003, p. 75
-
^ a b Zelealem 2003, p. 158
-
^ Zelealem 2003, p. 160f
-
^ Zelealem 2003, p. 164ff
-
^ Zelealem 2003, p. 233
-
^ Zelealem 2003, p. 252-262
External links
|
|
Official language
|
|
|
Regional languages
|
|
|
This article was sourced from Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. World Heritage Encyclopedia content is assembled from numerous content providers, Open Access Publishing, and in compliance with The Fair Access to Science and Technology Research Act (FASTR), Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., Public Library of Science, The Encyclopedia of Life, Open Book Publishers (OBP), PubMed, U.S. National Library of Medicine, National Center for Biotechnology Information, U.S. National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health (NIH), U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, and USA.gov, which sources content from all federal, state, local, tribal, and territorial government publication portals (.gov, .mil, .edu). Funding for USA.gov and content contributors is made possible from the U.S. Congress, E-Government Act of 2002.
Crowd sourced content that is contributed to World Heritage Encyclopedia is peer reviewed and edited by our editorial staff to ensure quality scholarly research articles.
By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. World Heritage Encyclopedia™ is a registered trademark of the World Public Library Association, a non-profit organization.