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Nilo-Saharan languages

The Nilo-Saharan languages are a proposed linguistic family consisting of around 210 Native African languages spoken by somewhere around 70 million speakers, mainly in the upper parts of the Chari and Nile rivers, including historic Nubia, north of where the two tributaries of the Nile meet. The languages extend through 17 nations in the northern half of Africa: from Algeria to Benin in the west; from Libya to the Democratic Republic of the Congo in the centre; and from Egypt to Tanzania in the east.

Characteristics
The constituent families of Nilo-Saharan are quite diverse. One characteristic feature is a tripartite singulative–collective–plurative number system, which Blench (2010) believes is a result of a noun-classifier system in the protolanguage. The distribution of the families may reflect ancient watercourses in a green Sahara during the African humid period before the 4.2-kiloyear event, when the desert was more habitable than it is today. ==Major languages==
Major languages
Within the Nilo-Saharan languages are a number of languages with at least a million speakers (most data from SIL's Ethnologue 16 (2009)). In descending order: • Luo (Dholuo, 4.4 million). Dholuo language of the Luo people of Kenya and Tanzania, Kenya's fourth largest ethnicity after the Bantu-speaking Agĩkũyũ, Luhya and the Southern Nilotic-speaking Kalenjin (the term "Luo" is also used for a wider group of languages which includes Dholuo.). • Kanuri (4.0 million, all dialects; 4.7 million if Kanembu is included). The major ethnicity around Lake Chad. • Zarma (6 million). Spread along the Niger River in Niger and into Nigeria, in the southern region of the historic Songhai Empire. • Teso (1.9 million). Related to Karamojong, Turkana, Toposa and NyangatomNubian (1.7 million, all dialects). The language of Nubia, extending today from southern Egypt into northern Sudan. Many Nubians have also migrated northwards to Cairo since the building of the Aswan Dam. • Lugbara (1.7 million, 2.2 if Aringa (Low Lugbara) is included). The major Central Sudanic language; Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. • Nandi–Markweta languages (Kalenjin, 1.6 million). Kenyan Rift Valley, Kapchorua Uganda. • Lango (1.5 million). Currently a mixed language consisting of Teso-Turkana dialects with borrowed Luo words, one of the languages of Kenya and Uganda. • Dinka (1.4 million). The major ethnicity of South Sudan. • Acholi estimated (1.9 million). Luo language of Uganda. • Nuer (1.1 million in 2011, significantly more today). The language of the Nuer, another numerous people from South Sudan and Ethiopia. • Maasai (1.0 million). Spoken by the Maasai people of Kenya and Tanzania. • Ngambay (1.0 million with Laka). Central Sudanic, the principal language of southern Chad. Some other important Nilo-Saharan languages under 1 million speakers: • Fur (500,000 in 1983, significantly more today). The eponymous language of Darfur Province in western Sudan. • Tubu (350,000 to 400,000) One of the northernmost Nilo-Saharan languages, extending from Nigeria, Niger, and Chad into Libya. Most Tubu speakers live in Northern Chad close to the Tibesti Mountains. Tubu has two main varieties: the Daza language and the Teda language. The total for all speakers of Nilo-Saharan languages according to Ethnologue 16 is 38–39 million people. However, the data spans a range from ca. 1980 to 2005, with a weighted median at ca. 1990. Given population growth rates, the figure in 2010 might be half again higher, or about 60 million. ==History of the proposal==
History of the proposal{{anchor#History}}
The Saharan family (which includes Kanuri, Kanembu, the Tebu languages, and Zaghawa) was recognized by Heinrich Barth in 1853, the Nilotic languages by Karl Richard Lepsius in 1880, the various constituent branches of Central Sudanic (but not the connection between them) by Friedrich Müller in 1889, and the Maban family by Maurice Gaudefroy-Demombynes in 1907. The first inklings of a wider family came in 1912, when Diedrich Westermann included three of the (still independent) Central Sudanic families within Nilotic in a proposal he called Niloto-Sudanic; this expanded Nilotic was in turn linked to Nubian, Kunama, and possibly Berta, essentially Greenberg's Macro-Sudanic (Chari–Nile) proposal of 1954. In 1920 G. W. Murray fleshed out the Eastern Sudanic languages when he grouped Nilotic, Nubian, Nera, Gaam, and Kunama. Carlo Conti Rossini made similar proposals in 1926, and in 1935 Westermann added Murle. In 1940 A. N. Tucker published evidence linking five of the six branches of Central Sudanic alongside his more explicit proposal for East Sudanic. In 1950 Greenberg retained Eastern Sudanic and Central Sudanic as separate families, but accepted Westermann's conclusions of four decades earlier in 1954 when he linked them together as Macro-Sudanic (later Chari–Nile, from the Chari and Nile Watersheds). Greenberg's later contribution came in 1963, when he tied Chari–Nile to Songhai, Saharan, Maban, Fur, and Koman-Gumuz and coined the current name Nilo-Saharan for the resulting family. Lionel Bender noted that Chari–Nile was an artifact of the order of European contact with members of the family and did not reflect an exclusive relationship between these languages, and the group has been abandoned, with its constituents becoming primary branches of Nilo-Saharan—or, equivalently, Chari–Nile and Nilo-Saharan have merged, with the name Nilo-Saharan retained. When it was realized that the Kadu languages were not Niger–Congo, they were commonly assumed to therefore be Nilo-Saharan, but this remains somewhat controversial. Progress has been made since Greenberg established the plausibility of the family. Koman and Gumuz remain poorly attested and are difficult to work with, while arguments continue over the inclusion of Songhai. Blench (2010) believes that the distribution of Nilo-Saharan reflects the waterways of the wet Sahara 12,000 years ago, and that the protolanguage had noun classifiers, which today are reflected in a diverse range of prefixes, suffixes, and number marking. ==Internal relationships==
Internal relationships
Dimmendaal (2008) notes that Greenberg (1963) based his conclusion on strong evidence and that the proposal as a whole has become more convincing in the decades since. Mikkola (1999) reviewed Greenberg's evidence and found it convincing. Roger Blench notes morphological similarities in all putative branches, which leads him to believe that the family is likely to be valid. Koman and Gumuz are poorly known and have been difficult to evaluate until recently. Songhay is markedly divergent, in part due to massive influence from the Mande languages. }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} Bender revised his model of Nilo-Saharan again in 1996, at which point he split Koman and Gumuz into completely separate branches of Core Nilo-Saharan. Ehret 1989, 2001 Christopher Ehret came up with a novel classification of Nilo-Saharan in 1989, though most of the evidence was not published until 2001. His classification, which was not accepted by other researchers, }} }} }} Blench 2006 Niger-Saharan, a language macrofamily linking the Niger-Congo and Nilo-Saharan phyla, was proposed by Blench (2006). It was not accepted by other linguists. Blench's (2006) internal classification of the Niger-Saharan macrophylum is as follows: • Proto-Niger-Saharan • Songhay, Saharan, Maba, Fur, Kuliak, Berta, Kunama, Komuz, Shabo • Kado-Sudanic • Kado (Kadugli-Krongo) • Niger-Sudanic • East Sudanic • Niger-Central Sudanic • Central SudanicNiger-Congo According to Blench (2006), typological features common to both Niger-Congo and Nilo-Saharan include: • Phonology: ATR vowel harmony and the labial-velars /kp/ and /gb/ • Noun-class affixes: e.g., ma- affix for mass nouns in Nilo-Saharan • Verbal extensions and plural verbs Blench 2010 With a better understanding of Nilo-Saharan classifiers, and the affixes or number marking they have developed into in various branches, Blench believes that all of the families postulated as Nilo-Saharan belong together. He proposes the following tentative internal classification, with Songhai closest to Saharan, a relationship that had not previously been suggested: }} }} }} }} }} ? Mimi of Decorse Blench 2015 By 2015, and again in 2017, Blench had refined the subclassification of this model, linking Maban with Fur, Kadu with Eastern Sudanic, and Kuliak with the node that contained them, and added a tentative, extinct branch he names "Plateau" as to explain a possible Nilo-Saharan substrate in the Malian Dogon and Bangime languages, for the following structure: }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} }} Blench (2021) concludes that Maban may be close to Eastern Sudanic. Starostin (2016) Georgiy Starostin (2016), using lexicostatistics based on Swadesh lists, is more inclusive than Glottolog, and in addition finds probable and possible links between the families that will require reconstruction of the proto-languages for confirmation. Starostin also does not consider Greenberg's Nilo-Saharan to be a valid, coherent clade. In addition to the families listed in Glottolog (previous section), Starostin considers the following to be established: • Northern "K" Eastern Sudanic or "NNT" (Nubian, Nara, and Tama; see below for Nyima) • Southern "N" Eastern Sudanic (Surmic, Temein, Jebel, Daju, Nilotic), though their exact relationships to each other remain obscure • Central Sudanic (including Birri and Kresh–Aja, which may prove to be closest to each other) • Koman (including Gule) A relationship of Nyima with Nubian, Nara, and Tama (NNT) is considered "highly likely" and close enough that proper comparative work should be able to demonstrate the connection if it's valid, though it would fall outside NNT proper (see Eastern Sudanic languages). Other units that are "highly likely" to eventually prove to be valid families are: • East Sudanic as a whole • Central Sudanic – Kadu (Central Sudanic + Kadugli–Krongo) • Maba–Kunama (Maban + Kunama) • Komuz (Koman + Gumuz) In summary, at this level of certainty, "Nilo-Saharan" constitutes ten distinct and separate language families: Eastern Sudanic, Central Sudanic – Kadu, Maba–Kunama, Komuz, Saharan, Songhai, Kuliak, Fur, Berta, and Shabo. Possible further "deep" connections, which cannot be evaluated until the proper comparative work on the constituent branches has been completed, are: • Eastern Sudanic + Fur + Berta • Central Sudanic – Kadu + Maba–Kunama There are faint suggestions that Eastern and Central Sudanic may be related (essentially the old Chari–Nile clade), though that possibility is "unexplorable under current conditions" and could be complicated if Niger–Congo were added to the comparison. Starostin finds no evidence that the Komuz, Kuliak, Saharan, Songhai, or Shabo languages are related to any of the other Nilo-Saharan languages. Mimi-D and Meroitic were not considered, though Starostin had previously proposed that Mimi-D was also an isolate despite its slight similarity to Central Sudanic. In a follow-up study published in 2017, Starostin reiterated his previous points as well as explicitly accepting a genetic relationship between Macro-East Sudanic and Macro-Central Sudanic. Starostin names this proposal "Macro-Sudanic". The classification is as follows. • Macro-Sudanic • Macro-Sudanic macrofamily • Macro-Central Sudanic family • Central Sudanic family • Sara-Bongo-Bagirmi (West-Central Sudanic branch) • Kresh-Aja-Birri • East-Central Sudanic branch • Mangbutu-EfeMangbetu-AsoaLendu-NgitiMoru-MadiKrongo-Kadugli (Kadu) group • Maba group • Macro-Eastern Sudanic family • Eastern Sudanic family • Northeast Sudanic family • Nubian group • Tama group • Nara language • Nyimang-Afitti Group • Southeast Sudanic family • Surmic languages (Southern Surmic + Northern Surmic / Majang branches) • Nilotic languages (Western, Eastern, Southern branches) • Jebel group • Temein group • Daju group • Berta group • Fur-Amdang group • Kunama-Ilit group • Koman-Gumuz ("Komuz") family • Koman family • "Narrow Koman" group • Gule (Anej) language • Gumuz languages (group) • Saharan family • Western Saharan group (Kanuri-Kanembu + Teda-Dazaga) • Eastern Saharan group (Zaghawa + Berti) • Kuliak group • Songhay group • Shabo language (Mikeyir) Starostin (2017) finds significant lexical similarities between Kadu and Central Sudanic, while some lexical similarities also shared by Central Sudanic with Fur-Amdang, Berta, and Eastern Sudanic to a lesser extent. Dimmendaal 2016, 2019 Gerrit J. Dimmendaal suggests the following subclassification of Nilo-Saharan: }} }} }} }} Dimmendaal et al. consider the evidence for the inclusion of Kadu and Songhay too weak to draw any conclusions at present, whereas there is some evidence that Koman and Gumuz belong together and may be Nilo-Saharan. The large Northeastern division is based on several typological markers: • tolerance of complex syllable structure • higher amount of both inflectional and derivational morphology, including the presence of cases • verb-final (SOV or OSV) word order • coverb + light verb constructions • converbs Blench 2023 By 2023, Blench had slightly revised the model for a deep primary split between Koman–Gumuz and the rest. Kunama and Berta are "provisionally" placed as the next to branch off, because they only partially share the features that unite the rest of the family. However, it is not clear if this is because they actually diverged early, or if they might have lost those features at a later date. For example, Berta shares plausible lexical cognates with the Eastern Jebel languages (East Sudanic) and its system of grammatical number "closely resembles" those of the East Sudanic languages; Kunama could be divergent "due to long-term interaction with Afroasiatic languages." Saharan–Songhay (especially Songhay) have seen substantial erosion of key characteristics, but this appears to be a secondary development and not evidence of early branching. "Core" Nilo-Saharan ("Central African" in Blench 2015) thus appears to be a typological rather than genetic grouping, though Maban is treated as a divergent branch of Eastern Sudanic; Kadu also seems to be quite close. The resulting structure is as follows: }} }} }} }} }} }} Beyond the work of Colleen Ahland, Blench notes that the inclusion of Koman is buttressed by the work of Manuel Otero. The argument for Songhay is mostly lexical, especially the pronouns. Blench gives Greenberg credit for both East and Central Sudanic. Saharan and Songhay have some "striking" similarities in their lexicon, which Blench argues is genetic, though the absence of reliable proto-Sarahan and proto-Songhay reconstructions makes evaluation difficult. Glottolog 4.0 (2019) In summarizing the literature to date, Hammarström et al. in Glottolog do not accept that the following families are demonstrably related with current research: • BertaCentral Sudanic (excluding Kresh–Aja; Birri is also questionable as Central Sudanic) • Daju (putatively East Sudanic) • Eastern Jebel (putatively East Sudanic) • FuranGuleGumuzKadugli–KrongoKoman (excluding Gule) • Kresh–Aja (putatively Central Sudanic) • KuliakKunamaMaban (including Mimi-N) • Mimi-Gaudefroy (Mimi-D) • Nara (putatively East Sudanic) • Nilotic (putatively East Sudanic) • Nubian (putatively East Sudanic) • Nyimang (putatively East Sudanic) • SaharanSonghaiSurmic (putatively East Sudanic) • Tama (putatively East Sudanic) • Temein (putatively East Sudanic) ==External relations==
External relations
Proposals for the external relationships of Nilo-Saharan typically center on Niger–Congo: Gregersen (1972) grouped the two together as Kongo–Saharan. However, Blench (2011) proposed that the similarities between Niger–Congo and Nilo-Saharan (specifically Atlantic–Congo and Central Sudanic) are due to contact, with the noun-class system of Niger–Congo developed from, or elaborated on the model of, the noun classifiers of Central Sudanic. ==Phonology==
Phonology
Nilo-Saharan languages present great differences, being a highly diversified group. It has proven difficult to reconstruct many aspects of Proto-Nilo-Saharan. Two very different reconstructions of the proto-language have been proposed by Lionel Bender and Christopher Ehret. Bender's reconstruction The consonant system reconstructed by Bender for Proto-Nilo-Saharan is: The phonemes correspond to coronal plosives, the phonetic details are difficult to specify, but clearly, they remain distinct from and supported by many phonetic correspondences (another author, Cristopher Ehret, reconstructs for the coronal area the sound and which perhaps are closer to the phonetic detail of , see infra) Bender gave a list of about 350 cognates and discussed in depth the grouping and the phonological system proposed by Ehret. Blench (2000) compares both systems (Bender's and Ehret's) and prefers the former because it is more secure and is based in more reliable data. For example, Bender points out that there is a set of phonemes including implosives , ejectives and prenasal constants , but it seems that they can be reconstructed only for core groups (E, I, J, L) and the collateral group (C, D, F, G, H), but not for Proto-Nilo-Saharan. Ehret's reconstruction Christopher Ehret used a less clear methodology and proposed a maximalist phonemic system: Ehret's maximalist system has been criticized by Bender and Blench. These authors state that the correspondences used by Ehret are not very clear and because of this many of the sounds in the table may only be allophonic variations. ==Morphology==
Morphology
Dimmendaal (2016) cites the following morphological elements as stable across Nilo-Saharan: • Causative prefix: *ɪ- or *i- • Deverbal noun (abstract / participial / agent) prefix: *a- • Number suffixes: *-i, *-in, *-k • Reflexive marker: *rʊ • Personal pronouns: first person singular *qa, second person singular *yi • Logophoric pronoun: *(y)ɛ • Deictic markers: singular *n, plural *k • Postpositions: possessive *ne, locative *ta • Preposition: *kɪ • Negative verb: *kʊ ==Comparative vocabulary==
Comparative vocabulary
Sample basic vocabulary in different Nilo-Saharan branches: Note: In table cells with slashes, the singular form is given before the slash, while the plural form follows the slash. ==See also==
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