Tegali language: Difference between revisions

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{{Distinguish|Javanese language{{!}}Tegal language}}
{{Short description|Rashad language spoken in Sudan}}
{{Infobox language
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|region=[[South Kordofan]]
|ethnicity=[[Tagale]]
|speakers={{sigfig|99108,000|12}}
|date=20172022
|ref=e25e27
|familycolor=Niger–Congo
|fam1=[[Niger–Congo languages|Niger–Congo]]?
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<!-- Instructions for the language info box are at [[Template talk:Language]]) -->==Classification==
The Rashad family of language consists of two [[Dialect continuum|dialect clusters]], Tegali and [[Tagoi language|Tagoi]], which share about 70% basic vocabulary on the 100-word [[Swadesh list]]. They are spoken on two mountain ranges to the north and north-west of Rashad.<ref>{{Cite book|title=A description of the Orig language: (Southern Kordofan), based on the notes of Fr. Carlo Muratori. Tervuren: Musée royal de l'Afrique centrale|last1=Schadeberg|first1=Thilo C.|last2=Elias|first2=Philip|publisher=Musee Royal De L'afrique Centrale|year=1979|pages=3}}</ref> These languages are spoken in the Tegali Hills in the north-east of the [[Nuba Mountains]], the home of the former "Tegali Kingdom".<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Stevenson|first=R. C.|title=Linguistic Research in the Nuba Mountains—Ii|date=January 1964|jstor=41716860|journal=Sudan Notes and Records|volume=45|pages=79–102}}</ref> The most conspicuous difference between the two dialect clusters is that Tagoi has a complex system of [[noun class]]es while Tegali does not. Different explanations exist for why Tegali dialects lack ofa noun class system. [[Joseph Greenberg|Greenberg]] (1963) excludes the possibility of mass borrowing of basic vocabulary in Tagoi and assumes the loss of noun classes in the Tegali dialects.<ref>{{Cite book|title=A survey of Kordofanian|last=Schadeberg|first=Thilo C.|publisher=Hamburg: Helmut Buske|year=1981|pages=67–80}}</ref>
 
==Dialects/varieties==
Tegali has three varieties, Rashad (Gom, Kom, Kome, Ngakom), Tegali, and Tingal (Kajaja, Kajakja). ''[[Ethnologue]]'' states that Rashed and Tegali dialects are nearly identical.<ref name=e25e27/> Tucker and Bryan list Rashad as almost identical to Tegali, "perhaps a mere variation of one language";<ref name=":2">{{Cite book|title=The Non-Bantu Languages of North-Eastern Africa|last1=Tucker|first1=A. N.|last2=Bryan|first2=M. A.|publisher=Oxford University Press Published for the International African Institute|year=1956|location=London|pages=270}}</ref> however, Greenberg lists it as a separate language.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Greenberg|first=Joseph H.|date=1950-01-01|title=Studies in African Linguistic Classification: VII. Smaller Families; Index of Languages|jstor=3628564|journal=Southwestern Journal of Anthropology|volume=6|issue=4|pages=388–398|doi=10.1086/soutjanth.6.4.3628564|s2cid=146929514}}</ref> Welmers suggests Tingal as a dialect of Tegali;<ref>{{Cite book|title=African Language Structures|last=Welmers|first=William Everett|publisher=University of California Press|year=1973|location=Berkeley}}</ref> Tucker and Bryan report this as different from Tegali and Rashad, but as definitely belonging to the Tegali branch.<ref name=":2" />
 
==Geographic distribution==
There are 35108,700000 native speakers of Tegali in [[South Kordofan]] state, [[Sudan]].<ref name=e25e27/> Speakers are distributed in the hills between the Rashud-Rashad and Rashad-Umm Ruwaba roads, with a few outlying hills west of Rashad (including Tagoi and Tarjok) and scattered hills south of Rashad.<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last1=Voegelin|first1=C.F.|last2=Voegelin|first2=F.M.|date=May 1964|title=Languages of the World: Indo-Pacific Fascicle One|jstor=30022465|journal=Anthropological Linguistics|volume=6|pages=195–196}}</ref>
 
===Dialects/varieties distribution===
Among the three dialects, Tegali has about 1688,000 speakers located on the [[Taqali|Tegali]] range. Rashad has about 520,000 speakers in the Rashad hills in the southern part of the Tegali range, also in Rashad town. Tingal (Kajakja) has about 2,100 speakers.<ref name=":0" />
 
== Phonology ==
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|-
! rowspan="23" |[[Plosive]]
!<small>voiceless</small>
|{{IPA link|p}}
|{{IPA link|t}}
|{{IPA link|c}}
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|{{IPA link|d}}
|{{IPA link|ɟ}}
|{{IPA link|ɡ}}
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|-
![[Prenasalized consonant|<small>prenasal</small>]]
|{{IPA link|ᵐb}}
|{{IPA link|ⁿd}}
|{{IPA link|ᵑɡ}}
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|-
! colspan="2" |[[Fricative]]
!<small>voiceless</small>
|{{IPA link|f}}
|{{IPA link|s}}
|{{IPA link|ʃ}}
|
|({{IPA link|h}})
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! colspan="2" |[[Rhotic consonant|Rhotic]]
|
|({{IPA link|r}})
|{{IPA link|ɽ}}
|
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* /ɽ/ corresponds to [r] commonly heard in Tagoi
* A retroflex plosive /ɖ/ is heard in the Tagom dialect.<ref name=":1">{{Cite book |last=Aldawi |first=Maha Abdu |title=An initial sketch of the Tagom noun phrase |last2=Mohammed Nashid |first2=Sawsan Abdel-Aziz |publisher=Cologne: Köppe |year=2018 |location=In Gertrud Schneider-Blum and [[Birgit Hellwig]] and Gerrit Jan Dimmendaal (eds.), Nuba Mountain Language Studies: New Insights |pages=129-151}}</ref>
* /s/ and /h/ vary between dialects.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bryan |first=M. A. |title=Tegali-Tagoi |last2=Tucker |first2=A. N. |publisher=Routledge |year=2017 |location=Linguistic Analyses: The Non-Bantu Languages of North-Eastern Africa |pages=367}}</ref>
 
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* Sounds [ɨ, ʌ] are also heard in the Tagom dialect.<ref name=":1" />
 
==Examples==