Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Ingessana language

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Native to
  
Sudan

Native speakers
  
67,000 (2000)

Glottolog
  
gaam1241

Ethnicity
  
Ingessana

ISO 639-3
  
tbi

Language family
  
Nilo-Saharan? Eastern Sudanic Kir–Abbaian Eastern Jebel Gaam

The Ingessana language, also known as Gaam, Gaahmg, (Me/Mun)Tabi, Kamanidi, or Mamedja/Mamidza, is an Eastern Sudanic language spoken by the Ingessana people in the Tabi Hills in eastern Sudan, near Ethiopia. It was considered an isolate within Eastern Sudanic until the other Eastern Jebel languages were discovered in the late 20th century. Dialects are Soda (Tao), Kukur (Gor), Kulang (Kulelek, Bau), Buwahg (Buek).

Contents

Consonants

There are 21 distinct consonant phonemes. The fricative, nasal, lateral and rhotic consonants also distinguish length.

Vowels

There are six distinct vowel phonemes. All six can also occur in sequential (and thus lengthened) form but may change phonetic quality. Stirtz (2012) proposes the following system:

Tone

Gaam is a tonal language. There are three level tones, High, Mid, and Low, which can be combined to form rising and falling tones. A total of nine tone melodies is possible, all of them contrastive.

References

Ingessana language Wikipedia


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