Everything about Sandawe Language totally explained
Sandawe or
Sandawi is a
tonal language spoken by about 40,000
Sandawe people in the
Dodoma region of
Tanzania. Language use is vigorous among both adults and children, with people in some areas monolingual. Sandawe has generally been classified as a
Khoisan language since Albert Drexel in the
1920s, due at first just to the presence of
clicks in the language. Recent investigations (Güldemann forthcoming) show that Sandawe is most likely related to the
Khoe family regardless of the validity of Khoesan as a whole. A recent discussion of Sandawe's linguistic classification can be found in Sands (1998).
SIL International began work on Sandawe in 1996 and to date (2004), Daniel and Elisabeth Hunziker and Helen Eaton continue to work on the analysis of the language. They have so far produced a phonological description, a dialect survey report and several papers on aspects of grammar. Sandawe is also currently (since 2002) studied by Sander Steeman of
Leiden University.
Sounds
Vowels
Sandawe has five vowel qualities:
All five vowel qualities may be found as short oral, long oral and long nasal vowels. There are therefore fifteen vowel phonemes. In word-final position, devoiced u and i vowels occur frequently.
Consonants
Non-click consonants
The glyphs in
italics are the practical orthography developed by Hunziker and Hunziker, followed by approximate equivalents in the IPA.
Clicks
(source: Wright
et al. 1995)
| |
Word-initial clicks |
|
Word-medial clicks |
|
Laminal Denti-alveolar |
Lateral alveolar |
Apical postalveolar |
|
Laminal Denti-alveolar |
Lateral alveolar |
Apical postalveolar |
| Nasal |
nc [ŋǀ] |
nx [ŋǁ] |
nq [ŋǃ] |
Nasal |
[ŋǀ] |
[ŋǁ] |
[ŋǃ] |
| Voiced |
gc [ɡǀ] |
gx [ɡǁ] |
gq [ɡǃ] |
Prenasalized |
[ᵑɡǀ] |
[ᵑɡǁ] |
[ᵑɡǃ] |
| Tenuis |
c [kǀ] |
x [kǁ] |
q [kǃ] |
| Aspirated |
ch [kǀʰ] |
xh [kǁʰ] |
qh [kǃʰ] |
| Glottalised |
c’ [kǀˀ] |
x’ [kǁˀ] |
q’ [kǃˀ] |
Glottalized nasal |
[ŋʔǀ] |
[ŋʔǁ] |
[ŋʔǃ] |
The clicks in Sandawe are not particularly loud, when compared to more famous click languages in southern Africa. The lateral click [kǁ] can be confused with the ejective lateral affricate [tɬʼ]. With the postalveolar clicks, the tongue often slaps the bottom of the mouth, and this slap may be louder than the actual release of the click. Wright
et al. transcribe this slapped click with the
ad hoc symbol [kǃ¡], although this isn't the standard
Extended IPA usage of that symbol. The voiced click series isn't very stable, and this is precisely the series that's missing from Hadaz.
Only three of the five click effluxes occur between vowels, and all are nasalized. (Nasal clicks are the easiest to pronounce; in
Dahalo and
Damin, for example, all clicks are nasal.) The glottalized click efflux is something like
creaky voice; it's
not an
ejective. In initial position, the glottis is closed during the entire occlusion of the click, but not opened until after the burst of the [k], which is after the click release [ǃ]. In medial position, the glottis is closed after the velar closure [ŋ] and before the forward closure, but opened
before the click release. Such clicks are not always nasalized all the way through; in some tokens they're simply prenasalized glottalized clicks, [ŋkǃˀ], bearing in mind that the superscript [ˀ] implies coarticulation (that is, that it's pronounced together with the [k], not after, as explained above).
The practical orthography is based on
Xhosa and
Zulu.
Grammar
Pronouns
Free pronouns
|
singular |
plural |
| 1 | tsi |
sũũ
|
| 2 | hapu |
sĩĩ
|
| 3m | he-we |
he-so
|
| 3f | he-su
|
Pronominal suffixes
|
singular |
plural |
| 1 | -és |
-wà
|
| 2 | -i |
-è
|
| 3m | -à |
-ʔà
|
| 3f | -sà
|
Syllable structure
Sandawe syllables are usually of the form CV; in monosyllabic words, word-final nasals are not uncommon, CV(N). Sometimes other consonants are found in word-final position, but this is most probably the result of deletion of word-final voiceless vowels.
A syllabic nasal
m is found in
Swahili loanwords. The most common word structure is disyllabic with or without long vowels (CV(ː)CV(ː)), according to De Voogt (1992).
Nouns
A noun consists generally of a stem and a suffix which indicates gender (masculine, feminine, neuter) and number (singular, plural).
[suffixesto be added]
Adjectives
Adjectival concepts are mostly expressed as verbs in Sandawe according to Kagawe (1993:ix).
Syntax
Basic word order in Sandawe is SOV according to De Voogt (1992). However, word order in the Sandawe sentence is very flexible due to the presence of several 'subject identification strategies'.
Sample sentence (mid tones are not marked):
úte-s kxʼaré-és hàʔǃà
yesterday-I boy-I called
Yesterday I called a boy
(source: De Voogt 1992:19 adapted from Tucker 1977)
Tone
Elderkin (1989) analyzes Sandawe as having two level tones (High, Low) and two contour tones (Falling, Rising). His thesis considers the behavior of tone at word-, sentence- and discourse-level. De Voogt (1992) and Kagaya (1993) list three level tones (High, Mid, Low) and two contour tones (Falling, Rising).
Classification
The most promising candidate as a relative of Sandawe are the
Khoe languages of
Botswana and
Namibia. Most of the putative cognates Greenberg (1976) gives as evidence for Sandawe being a Khoesan language in fact tie Sandawe to Khoe. Recently Gueldemann and Elderkin have strengthened that connection, with several dozen likely cognates, while casting doubts on other Khoisan connections. Although there are not enough similarities to reconstruct a Proto-Khoe-Sandawe language, there are enough to suggest that the connection is real.
The pronominal system is quite similar:
|
Sandawe |
Proto-Khoe-Kwadi |
| 1sg PN | tsi |
*ti (Kwadi tʃi)
|
| 2sg PN | ha- |
*sa
|
| 3 PN base | he- |
xa (Kwadi ha-)
|
| 3ms suffix | -w(e), -m |
(Khoe *-bV, *-mV)
|
| 3fs suffix | su |
(Khoe *-sV)
|
These may cast some interesting light on the development of clicks. For example, the Sandawe word for 'horn',
tlana, may be a cognate with the root
n||â found throughout the Khoe family. This and other words suggests that clicks may form from consonant clusters when the first vowel of a word is lost:
tlana > tlna > ||na (n||a).
Since the Khoe family appears to have migrated to southern Africa from the northeast, it may be that Sandawe is closer to their common homeland than the modern Khoe languages are.
» On the external relationships of the Khoe family. Tom Güldemann and Edward Elderkin.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Sandawe Language'.
|
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