Omotic languages
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
The Omotic languages are a group of languages spoken mainly in southwestern Ethiopia, around the Omo River region, and in parts of southeastern Sudan (Blue Nile State).
These languages include the Damotic (North Omotic), Dizoid (Majoid), Mao and Aroid (South Omotic) languages.
Some Omotic languages are written using the Geʽez script, while others use the Latin alphabet. They are known for having complex tonal systems, like in the Bench language.
Most experts think Omotic languages belong to the larger Afroasiatic family, but some linguists question whether all Omotic languages truly belong together as one group.
Classification
The Omotic languages are a group of languages spoken in southwestern Ethiopia near the Omo River, and in parts of southeastern Sudan. They are often thought to be part of the larger Afroasiatic languages family, but this is not certain.
The main groups of Omotic languages include Damotic (North Omotic), Dizoid (Maji), Mao, and Aroid (South Omotic). Some experts believe Mao and Aroid might not belong to the Omotic family, and more study is needed. The Damotic group is usually linked to Afroasiatic languages. The Dizoid group has some special features but is still not clear. The Mao languages, spoken near the Sudan-Ethiopian border, are not well known and have been affected by nearby Koman languages. The Aroid languages are the most debated, with some ideas that they might be related to Nilo-Saharan languages, but this is unsure because of influences from other languages around them.
Characteristics
The Omotic languages have special ways to change words and show meaning. Some ways add small parts to words. Others change the sounds inside words.
These languages use certain sounds, like soft and hard consonants. Many have special sounds called tones that change meaning.
They also have special endings for words. These endings show if something is one or many. They can also show a word’s role in a sentence. For example, a word might change to show if it is doing the action or receiving the action.
| 1st person | 2nd person | 3rd person | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| sg. | pl. | sg. | pl. | sg. | pl. | |||
| m. | f. | |||||||
| Omotic | Nordomotic | |||||||
| Proto-Gonga-Gimojan | *ta | *nu~*no | *no | *int- | *isi | ? | *is- | |
| Proto-Dizi-Sheko | *ǹ | *ń | *yeta | *iti | *iz- | *iži | *iš- | |
| Proto-Mao | *ti- | ? | *hiya | *nam | ? | ? | ? | |
| Proto-Southomotic | *inta | *wo-ta | *yaa/*in | *ye-ta | *nuo | *naaa | *ke-ta | |
| Other | Afroasiatic: Akkadian | ī | nī | k-a/k-ī | k-unu/k-ina | š-u | š-a | š-unu/š-ina |
| Nilotic: Teso | ɛɔŋɔ | ɔnɪ/ɪs(y)ɔ | ɪjɔ | yɛsɪ | ŋɛsɪ | kɛsɪ | ||
Reconstruction
Bender studied the Omotic languages. He found some important basic words that were probably in the first Omotic language, called Proto-Omotic. He also looked at the North Omotic languages. These are thought to have come from Proto-Omotic.
| English gloss | Proto- Omotic | Proto-North Omotic |
|---|---|---|
| ashes | *bend | |
| bird | *kaf | |
| bite | *sats’ | |
| breast | *t’iam | |
| claw | *ts’ugum | |
| die | *hayk’ | |
| dog | *kan | |
| egg | *ɓul | |
| fire | *tam | |
| grass | *maata | |
| hand | *kuc | |
| head | *to- | |
| hear | *si- | |
| mouth | *non- | |
| nose | *si(n)t’ | |
| root | *ts’ab- | |
| snake | *šooš | |
| stand (vb.) | *yek’ | |
| this | *kʰan- | |
| thou (2.SG) | *ne(n) | |
| water | *haats’ | |
| we (1.PL) | *nu(n) | |
| ye (2.PL) | *int- | |
| green | *c’il- | |
| house | *kyet | |
| left | *hadr- | |
| elephant | *daŋgVr | |
| sister, mother | *ind | |
| armpit | *šoɓ- | |
| boat | *gong- | |
| grave | *duuk | |
| vomit | *c’oš- |
Comparative vocabulary
Here are some basic words from 40 Omotic languages. They were collected by Blažek in 2008.
| Language | eye | ear | nose | tooth | tongue | mouth | blood | bone | tree | water | eat | name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basketo | af | waytsi | sints | ačči | B ɪnts'ɨrs | no·na | suuts | mεk'εts | B mɪts | B waːtse | A moy- | B sumsa |
| Dokka | af | waytsi | si·nts | ačči | ɨrs'ɪns | no·na | su·ts | mik'әts | mittse | wa·tsi | m- | suntsa |
| Male | ’aːpi | waizi | sied‘i | ’ači | ’ɪndɪrsi | daŋka | sugutsi | mεgεtsi | mitsi | waːtsi | mo- | sunsi |
| Wolaita | ayf-iya; A ayp'-iya | haytta | sir-iya | acca; A acc'a | int'arsa | doona | suutta; Ch maččamié | mek'etta | mitta | hatta | m- | sunta |
| Dawro | ayp'-iya | haytsa | siid'-iya | acc'a | ins'arsa | doona | sutsa | mek'etsa | barzap'-iya | hatsa | m- | sutta |
| Cancha | ayp'e | hayts | sire | acc‘a | ins‘arsa | doona | suts | mek'etsa | mits | haats | m- | sunts |
| Malo | ’áɸe | hʌ́je | síd'e | ’áčʰә | ’irɪ́nts | dɔ́nʌ | sútsʰ | mεk‘ɨ́ts‘ | mɪ́ts | ’átsә | m- | sʊns |
| Gofa | ayp'e | haytsa | siide | acc'a | intsarsa | doona | sutsa | mek'etta | mitsa | hatse | m- | suntsa |
| Zala | ayfe | (h)aytsa | sid'e | ačča | int'arsa | duna | tsutsa | mitsa | hatsa | maa- | ||
| Gamu | ayp'e | haytsa | siire | acc'a | ins'arsa | doona | suuts | mek'ets | mitsa | hatse | m- | sunts |
| Dache | ayfe | hayts'e | siyd'e | acé | ɪntsεrs | duna | suts | mek'ets | šara | hatse | m- | sunts |
| Dorze | ayp'e | waye | sire | acc'a | ins'arsa | duuna | suts | mek'etsa | mits | haats | m- | sunts |
| Oyda | ápe, ayfe | B haːye | sid'e | ’ač, pl. o·či | iláns | B doːna | suts | mεk'εts | mɪns'a | haytsi | mu’- | suntsu |
| Zayse | ’áaɸε | waayέ | kuŋké | ’acc' | ints'έrε | baadέ | súuts' | mεk'έεte | mits'a | wáats'i | m- | č'úuč'e |
| Zergulla | ’aːɸe | wai | kuŋki | ’ac'e | ’insәre | haː’e | suːts | nεkεtε | mintsa | waːtse | m- | suːns |
| Ganjule | ’áaɸε | waašέ | kuŋkε | gaggo | ints'úrε | baadέ | súuts' | mεk'έtε | mits'i | waats'i | m- | ts'únts'i |
| Gidicho | ’áaɸε | waašέ | kuŋké | gaggo | ints'úrε | baadέ | súuts'i | mεk'εte | míts'i | wáats'i | m- | ts'únts'i |
| Kachama | ’áaɸε | uwaašέ | kuŋkέ | gaggo | ints'úrε | baadέ | súuts'ε | mέk‘έtee | mits'i | wáats'i | m- | ts'únts'i |
| Koyra | ’áɸε | waayέ | siid'ε | gaggo | ’únts'úrε | ’áaša | súuts' | mεk‘έεte | míts'e; Ce akka | wáats'e | múuwa | súuntsi |
| Chara | áːpa | wóːya | sínt'u | áč'a | ’íns'ila | noːná | súːta | mertá | mítsa | áːs'a | ḿ-na | sumá |
| Bench | ap | (h)ay | sint' | gaš; san | eyts' | non | sut | mert | inč | so’ | m’ | sum |
| She | af | ai | sint' | gaš | ets' | non | sut | mεrt | enc | so’ | mma | sum |
| Yemsa | aafa; kema | odo | siya | a’ya | terma | noono | anna | mega | i’o | aka | me | suna |
| Bworo | aawa | waaza | šint'a | gaša | albeera | noona | ts'atts'a | mak'әttsa | mitta | aatsa | maa- | šuutsa |
| Anfillo | aːfo | waːjo | šiːnto | gaːššo | εrɪːtso | nɔːno | ts'antso | šaušo | mɪːtso | yuːro | m | šiːgo |
| Kafa | affo, aho | wammo; kendo | muddo | gašo | eč'iyo | nono; koko | dammo | šawušo | met'o | ač'o | mammo; č‘okko | šiggo |
| Mocha | á·p̱o | wa·mmo | šit'ó | gášo | häč'awo | no·no | damo | ša·wúšo | mit'ó | à·č'o | ma̱·(hä) | šəgo |
| Proto-Omotic | *si(n)t’ | *non- | *haats’ | |||||||||
| Maji | ||||||||||||
| Proto-Maji | *ʔaːb | *háːy | *aːç’u | *eːdu | *uːs | *inču | *haːy | *um | ||||
| Dizi | ab-u | aːi | sin-u | ažu | yabɪl | εd-u | yεrm-u | us | wɪč | aːi | m- | sɪm-u |
| Shako | áːb | aːy | B sɪnt' | áːč'u | érb | eːd | yärm | uːsu | íːnču | áːy | m̥̀- | suːm |
| Nayi | ’aːf | B haːy | si.n | B acu | B yalb | eːdu | yarbm | ’uːs | B incus | B hai | m- | suːm |
| Mao | ||||||||||||
| Mao | áːfέ | wáːlέ | šíːnt'έ | àːts'ὲ | ánts'ílὲ | pɔ́ːnsὲ | hándέ | máːlt‘έ | ’íːntsὲ | hàːtsὲ | hà míjà | jèːškέ |
| Seze | aːb, áːwi | wέὲ | šíːnté | háːts'έ, haːnsì | jántsílὲ/ t'agál | waːndè | hámbìlὲ | bàk‘ílí | ’innsì | háːns'ì | máːmɔ́ | nìːší |
| Hozo | abbi | wεεra | šini | ats'i | S wìntə́lә | waandi | hambilε | bak‘ilε | S ’íːnti | haani | maa | iiši |
| Aroid | ||||||||||||
| Dime | ’afe, ’aɸe | k'aːme | nʊkʊ | F baŋgɪl; ɪts; kәsɪl | ’ɨdәm | ’afe; B ’app- | maχse; F dzumt | k‘oss; F k‘ʊs | ’aχe; B haːɣo | naχe; B nәːɣ- | ’ɨčɨn | mɨze; F naːb |
| Hamer | api, afi | k'a(ː)m- | nuki | ’ats' | ’ad’ab | ap- | zum’i | leːfi | ak'- | noko | kʊm- | nam- |
| Banna | afi | k'ami | nuki | atsi | adʌb/adɪm | afa | zump'i | lεfi | ɑhaka/haːk'a | noko | its-; kum- | na(a)bi |
| Karo | afi | k'ami | nuki | asi | attәp' | M ’apo | mәk'әs | lefi | aka | nuk'o | isidi | |
| Ari | afi | k'ami | nuki | atsi; B kasel geegi | adim | afa | zom’i | lεfi | ahaka | noɣa; B nɔk'ɔ | its- | nami |
| Ubamer | a·fi | ɣ/k'a·mi | nuki | atsi | admi | afa | mək'əs ~ -ɣ- | lεfí | aɣa | luk'a, luɣa | ’its- | na·mi |
| Galila | a·fi | k'a·mi | nuki | ači | admi | afa | mәk'әs | lεfí | aɣa/aháɣa | lu·ɣa/lo·ɣa | ič- | la·mi |
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Omotic languages, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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