Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Tonga (Nyasa) language

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Native to
  
Malawi

Native speakers
  
170,000 (2001)

ISO 639-3
  
tog

Ethnicity
  
Tonga

ISO 639-2
  
tog

Language family
  
Niger–Congo Atlantic–Congo Benue–Congo Bantoid Bantu Rufiji–Ruvuma ? Tonga

There are about 170,000 speakers of the Malawi language called Tonga. It is spoken mainly in the Nkhata Bay district of Malawi, on the shores of Lake Malawi facing the islands of Likoma and Chizumulu.

The language is called chiTonga by its own speakers. The 'chi' means 'the language of the', the equivalent of 'ki' in kiSwahili or 'se' in seTswana.

The Tonga language of Malawi is described as "similar" to Tumbuka and Turner's dictionary lists only those words which differ from the Tumbuka, with the added comment that "the Tonga folk, being rapid speakers, slur or elide the final syllable of many words, e.g. kulira becomes kuliya, kukura becomes kukuwa, kutoa becomes kuto’." Tonga (Nyasa), i.e. Malawian Tonga, is grouped in the Glottolog classification along with Tumbuka in a single group. It is classified by Guthrie as being in Zone N15, whereas the Zambian Tonga is classified as Zone M64 and can thus be considered a different language.

An example of a folktale translated into Tonga, Tumbuka and other languages of Northern Malawi is given in the Language Mapping Survey for Northern Malawi carried out by the Centre for Language Studies of the University of Malawi.

Vocabulary

chingana - although; ndi - and; pa rweka - beyond; msuzi - blacksmith (plural: wasuzi, ʋasuzi); matchiwa - breezes; kufya - to burn; chigawu - cassava; fungu - wild damson; wiskekuru - ancestor; kutenga - to bring; gutu - ear (plural: makutu); kuwomba manja - to clap hands; mbweno! - enough!.

References

Tonga (Nyasa) language Wikipedia


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