Abstract
It is now a century since the publication of Reinisch’s Chamirsprache, which has remained irtually the only source of information we have on this Agaw lanhuage to date. As a result of his acquaintance with a native speaker from Soqota(Säk’wät ’a), whist working in Massawa on his study of Bilin, the northernmost agaw language, Reinisch was able to collect enough information to mproduce a reasonable descripiton of the language. He himself neer had the opporunity to work on chamir in its home environment and was forced to curtail his studies of the language when his informant was obliged to leave Massawa. After the publication of Die Chamirsprache in 1884, no new information on the language until Conti Rossini’s brief description of Khamta was published in 1904, twenty years later. The dialect he recorded is material, though scanty, contains a number of very interesting features, both phonemis and morphological: for example, he cites the only known instance of prefix conjugating erds in Agaw outside Awngi, the southernmost and most divergent mermber of the group. Unfortunately his morphological description is all too cursory and does not permit a proper analysis of this highly idiosyncratic dialect. It may well be that Conti Rossini’s Khamta should be regarded as a separate language from Reinisch’ Chamie, or the Khamtanga dialect presented here. I shall have occasion to return briefly to this question below.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference8 articles.
1. Appunti sulla lingua Khamta dell’ Averghelle;Conti;Giornale della Società Asiatica Italiana,1904
2. Die Hilfselmente der Konjugation in den Kuschitischen Sprachen;Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft,1957
3. Note sur la distribution géographique des dialectes agaw;Tubiana;Cahiers de i' Afrique et de I' Asie 5,1957
4. The nominal system of Awngi(soughern Agaw);Hertzron;BSOAS,1978
Cited by
8 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献