Afar language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Afar
Qafár af
Spoken in: Ethiopia, Eritrea and Djibouti
Total speakers: 1.4–1.5 million
Language family: Afro-Asiatic
 Cushitic
  East Cushitic
   Lowland East Cushitic
    Saho-Afar
     Afar
Language codes
ISO 639-1: aa
ISO 639-2: aar
ISO 639-3: aar

Afar (Qafár af) is a Lowland East Cushitic language spoken in Ethiopia, Eritrea and Djibouti. It is believed to have 1.5 million speakers, the Afar. The basic word order in Afar, like in other East Cushitic languages, is Subject Object Verb. Its speakers have a literacy rate of between one and three per cent. Its closest relative is the Saho language.

Contents

The consonants of the Afar language in the standard orthography are listed below (with IPA notation in brackets):

  Bilabial Labiodental Alveolar Lateral Palatal Retroflex Velar Pharyngeal Glottal
Stop voiced   b  [b]     d  [d]       x  [ɖ]   g  [g]    
voiceless       t  [t]         k  [k]    
Fricative voiced                 q  [ʕ]  
voiceless     f  [f]   s  [s]           c  [ħ]   h  [h]
Nasal     m  [m]     n  [n]            
Approximant     w  [w]       l  [l]   y  [j]        
Tap         r  [r]          

Consonants which close syllables are released, e.g., akʰˡme.

  • short
    • a [ʌ]
    • e [e]
    • i [i]
    • o [o]
    • u [u]
  • long
    • aa [aː]
    • ee [eː]
    • ii [iː]
    • oo [oː]
    • uu [uː]

Sentence final vowels of affirmative verbs are aspirated (and stressed), e.g., abeh = aˡbeʰ 'He did.' Sentence final vowels of negative verbs are not aspirated (nor stressed), e.g.,maabinna = ˡmaabinna 'He did not do.' Sentence final vowels of interrogative verbs are lengthened (and stressed), e.g. abee? = aˡbe: 'Did he do?'

Stress is word-final. Syllables are of the form (C)V(V)(C). One exception is the three-consonant cluster -str-.

Afar may be written either with Latin script or Amharic script.

A, B, T, S, E, C, K, X, I, D, Q, R, F, G, O, L, M, N, U, W, H, Y
a, ba, ta, sa, e, ca, ka, xa, i, da, qa, ra, fa, ga, o, la, ma, na, u, wa, ha, ya

For a list of words in Afar, see the Afar language category of words in Wiktionary, the free dictionary

  • Bliese, Loren F. (1976) Afar, in Bender, Lionel M. (ed.) The Non-Semitic Languages of Ethiopia. Michigan: African Studies Center, Michigan State University, 133–164.
  • Bliese, Loren F. (1981) A generative grammar of Afar (Summer Institute of Linguistics publications in linguistics vol. 65). Dallas: Summer Institute of Linguistics / Arlington, Texas: University of Texas at Arlington.
  • Colby, J.G. (1970) Notes on the northern dialect of the 'Afar language, Journal of Ethiopian Studies, 8, 1, 1–8.
  • Hayward, R.J. and Parker, Enid M. (1985) Afar-English-French dictionary with Grammatical Notes in English, London, School of Oriental and African Studies.
  • Morin, Didier (1997) Poésie traditionnelle des Afars (Langues et cultures africaines, 21 / SELAF vol. 363). Paris/Louvain: Peeters.
  • Parker, Enid M. (2006), English-Afar Dictionary, Washington DC, Dunwoody Press
  • Voigt, Rainer M. (1975) Bibliographie des Saho-Afar, Africana Marburgensia, vol. 8, 53–63.

Wikipedia
Afar language edition of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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