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Juǀʼhoan
South(eastern) ǃXun / Ju
A Juǀʼhoan speaker, recorded in Namibia.
Native to Namibia, Botswana
Regionnear border with Angola
Ethnicity Juǀʼhoansi
Native speakers
4,000 (2003) [1]
Kxʼa
Dialects
Language codes
ISO 639-3 ktz
Glottolog juho1239
ELP Ju|'hoan
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Juǀʼhoan (English: /ˈdÊ’twæn/ JOO-twan, [2] [3] Juǀʼhoan: [Ê’uᵑ̊ǀʰwã]), also known as Southern or Southeastern ǃKung or ǃXun, is the southern variety of the ǃKung dialect continuum, spoken in northeastern Namibia and the Northwest District of Botswana by San Bushmen who largely identify themselves as Juǀʼhoansi. Several regional dialects are distinguished: Epukiro, Tsumǃkwe, Rundu, Omatako and Ç‚KxʼauÇʼein, with Tsumǃkwe being the best described and often taken as representative.

Name

The name Juǀʼhoan (in the plural: Juǀʼhoansi) is also rendered Žuǀʼhõa – or occasionally Zhuǀʼhõa or Dzuǀʼhõa, depending on orthography. Depending on the classification, it is considered the Southern or Southeastern variety of the ǃKung (also rendered ǃXun) language cluster. It may thus be referred to as Southern ǃKung, Southeastern ǃXun, etc. Juǀʼhoan is based on the word ju 'people', which is also applied to the language cluster. (see ǃKung languages for variants of those names).

Phonology

Vowels

  Oral vowels Nasal vowels
Front Back Front Back
Close i u Ä© Å©
Close-mid e o ẽ õ
Open a ã
  • When a front vowel /e/ or /i/ follows a consonant with a back vowel constraint (e.g. clicks with uvular articulation), an [É™] is inserted before the front vowel, written 'a' in the orthography. For example, mi |'ae (myself) reads /mi |'É™e/.
  • The diphthong /oa/ may be realized as [wa].

Juǀʼhoan has five vowel qualities, which may be nasalized, glottalized, murmured, or combinations of these, and most of these possibilities occur both long and short. The qualities /a/ and /o/ may also be pharyngealized and strident (epiglottalized). Besides, it is a tonal language with four tones: very high, high, low and very low tones. [4] Thus, there are a good 30 vowel phonemes, perhaps more, depending on one's analysis. There are, in addition, many vowel sequences and diphthongs.


Consonants

Juǀʼhoan has an unusually large number of consonants, as typical for ǃKung. The following occur at the beginnings of roots. For brevity, only the alveolar clicks are listed with the other consonants; the complete set of clicks is found below.

Labial Alveolar Postalveolar
/ Palatal
Velar Corresponding
Click
Glottal
Nasal voiced m n ŋ ᵑǃ
murmured ( mʱ) ᵑǃʱ
aspirated ᵑ̊ǃʰ
Plosive voiced b d dz dʒ ɡ ᶢǃ
tenuis p t ts tʃ k áµÇƒ ( Ê”)
aspirated pÊ° tÊ° tsÊ° tʃʰ kÊ° áµÇƒÊ°
prevoiced aspirated bÍ¡pÊ° dÍ¡tÊ° dÍ¡tsÊ° dÍ¡tʃʰ É¡Í¡kÊ° ᶢáµÇƒÊ°
ejective / glottalized tsʼ tʃʼ kxʼ ᵑǃˀ
prevoiced ejective d͡tsʼ d͡tʃʼ
uvularized tᵡ áµÇƒáµ¡
prevoiced uvularized dÍ¡tᵡ dÍ¡tsᵡ dÍ¡tʃᵡ ᶢáµÇƒáµ¡
uvular-ejected tᵡʼ kᵡʼ áµÇƒáµ¡Ê¼
prevoiced uvular-ejected É¡Í¡kᵡʼ ᶢáµÇƒáµ¡Ê¼
Fricative voiced z ʒ ɦ
voiceless ( f) s ʃ χ

Tenuis and modally voiced consonants (blue) may occur with any vowel quality. However, other consonants (grey, transcribed with a superscript diacritic to their right) do not occur in the same root as murmured, glottalized, or epiglottalized vowels.

The prevoiced aspirated and ejective consonants, both pulmonic and clicks, contain a voiceless interval, which Miller (2003) attributes to a larger glottal opening than is found in Hindustani breathy-voiced consonants. Phonetically, however, they are voice contours, starting out voiced but becoming voiceless for the aspiration or ejection. [5]

The phonemic status of [ʔ], [dz] and [dʒ] is uncertain. [ʔ] may be epenthetic before vowel-initial words; alternatively, it may be that no word may begin with a vowel. /mʱ/ occurs only in a single morpheme, the plural diminutive enclitic /mʱi/. /f/ and /l/ (not shown) only occur in loan words, and some accounts posit a /j/ and /w/. Labials (/p, pʰ, b, b͡pʰ, m/) are very rare initially, though β̞ is common between vowels. Velar stops (oral and nasal) are rare initially and very rare medially.

The uvulo-ejective consonants are analyzed as epiglottalized in Miller-Ockhuizen (2003). They have uvular frication and glottalization, and are similar to consonants in NÇ€u described as uvular ejective by Miller et al. (2009).[ full citation needed] Their epiglottal character may be a phonetic consequence of the raised larynx involved in making them ejective.

Only a small set of consonants occur between vowels within roots. These are:

Labial Alveolar Velar Uvular Glottal
β̞ ɾ ɣ
m n Å‹
k, ᵑk q͡χʼ
χ ɦ

Medial [β̞, ɾ, m, n] (green) are very common; [ɣ, ŋ] are rare, and the other medial consonants occur in only a very few roots, many of them loans. [β̞, ɾ, ɣ] are generally analyzed as allophones of /b, d, ɡ/. However, [ɾ] especially may correspond to multiple root-initial consonants.

Juǀʼhoan has 48 click consonants. There are four click "types": dental, lateral, alveolar, and palatal, each of which found in twelve series or "accompaniments" (combinations of manner, phonation, and contour). These are perfectly normal consonants in Juǀʼhoan, and indeed are preferred over non-clicks in word-initial position.

'noisy' clicks 'sharp' clicks series
dental lateral alveolar palatal
áµÇ€ áµÇ áµÇƒ áµÇ‚ Tenuis
ᶢǀ á¶¢Ç á¶¢Çƒ ᶢǂ Voiced
ᵑǀ áµ‘Ç áµ‘Çƒ ᵑǂ Nasal
áµÇ€Ê° áµÇÊ° áµÇƒÊ° áµÇ‚Ê° Aspirated
ᶢáµÇ€Ê° ᶢáµÇÊ° ᶢáµÇƒÊ° ᶢáµÇ‚Ê° Pre-voiced aspirated
ᵑ̊ǀʰ ᵑ̊ÇÊ° ᵑ̊ǃʰ ᵑ̊ǂʰ Aspirated nasal
ᵑǀʱ ᵑÇʱ ᵑǃʱ ᵑǂʱ Murmured nasal
ᵑǀˀ ᵑÇË€ ᵑǃˀ ᵑǂˀ Glottalized nasal
áµÇ€áµ¡ áµÇᵡ áµÇƒáµ¡ áµÇ‚ᵡ Linguo-pulmonic contour
ᶢáµÇ€áµ¡ ᶢáµÇᵡ ᶢáµÇƒáµ¡ ᶢáµÇ‚ᵡ Voiced linguo-pulmonic
áµÇ€áµ¡Ê¼ áµÇᵡʼ áµÇƒáµ¡Ê¼ áµÇ‚ᵡʼ Epiglottalized (heterorganic contour)
ᶢǀᵡʼ ᶢÇᵡʼ ᶢǃᵡʼ ᶢǂᵡʼ Voiced epiglottalized

As above, tenuis and modally voiced consonants (blue) may occur with any vowel quality. However, other consonants (grey, transcribed with a superscript diacritic to their right) do not occur in the same root as murmured, glottalized, or epiglottalized vowels.

Glottalized clicks occur almost exclusively before nasal vowels. This suggests they are nasalized, as in most if not all other languages with glottalized clicks. The nasalization would not be audible during the click itself due to the glottalization, which would prevent any nasal airflow, but the velum would be lowered, potentially nasalizing adjacent vowels.

The 'uvularized' clicks are actually linguo-pulmonic contours, [ǃ͡qχ], etc. The 'uvulo-ejective' clicks are heterorganic affricates, and equivalent to linguo-glottalic consonants transcribed [ǃ͡kxʼ], etc., in other languages (Miller 2011).[ full citation needed]

See Ekoka ǃXung for a related variety with a somewhat larger click inventory.

Orthographic history

Juǀʼhoan is the only variety of ǃKung to be written. Three orthographies have been used over the past half century, two based on pipe letters for clicks and one using only the basic Latin alphabet.

In the 1960s, the South African Department of Education set about establishing official orthographies for the languages of Southwest Africa (Namibia). Jan Snyman was selected to develop an orthography for the then-unwritten Juǀʼhoasi, which was accepted in 1969. In this orthography, the name of the language is spelled Žuǀʼhõasi. A slightly modified form (Snyman 1975) is shown below. [6]

In the 1980s, the Bible Society of South Africa requested a new orthography, one that used only letters of the Latin alphabet, avoided diacritics as much as possible, and conformed as much as possible to the conventions of Afrikaans. This second orthography was accepted in 1987, in which the language is spelled Zjuc'hôa.

A third orthography was developed by the Juǀwa Bushman Development Foundation in 1994. This is the orthography that is currently in use in Namibia; there does not seem to be any publication in Botswana.

The three orthographies, along with the IPA, are compared below. Tone is evidently unmarked.

Comparison of Juǀʼhoan orthographies
Labial plosives Alveolar plosives Velar plosives Alveolar affricates Postalveolar affricates
IPA [b] [p] [b͡pʰ] [pʰ] [d] [t] [d͡tʰ] [tʰ] [ɡ] [k] [ɡ͡kʰ] [kʰ] [ts] [d͡tsʰ] [tsʰ] [d͡tsʼ] [tsʼ] [tʃ] [d͡tʃʰ] [tʃʰ] [d͡tʃʼ] [tʃʼ] [kxʼ]
1994–present b p bh ph d t dh th g k gh kh ts dsh tsh ds tz tc dch tch dc tj kx
1975–1987 dsʼ tsʼ tš dšh tšh dšʼ tšʼ kxʼ
1987–1994 gh ʼgh tj djh tjh djʼ tjʼ kg
Hetero-organic affricates Fricates Nasals Syllabic
Nasals
Approximants
IPA [dÍ¡tᵡ] [tᵡ] [tᵡʼ] [dÍ¡tsᵡ] [tsᵡ] [dÍ¡tʃᵡ] [tʃᵡ] [z] [s] [Ê’] [ʃ] [χ] [h] [ɽ] [m] [n] [mÌ©] [Å‹Ì] [mÌ°] [m̤] [j] [w]
1994–present dx tx tk dzx tsx djx tcx z s j c x h r m n m ang mq mh y w
1975–1987 txʼ dx tx ž š m̭
1987–1994 dg tg tgʼ - tsg djg tjg zj sj g m̹
Dental clicks Alveolar clicks
IPA [ᶢǀ] [áµÇ€] [ᶢáµÇ€Ê°] [áµÇ€Ê°] [ᵑǀˀ] [ᵑ̊ǀʰ] [ᵑǀ] [ᵑǀʱ] [ᶢáµÇ€áµ¡] [áµÇ€áµ¡] [ᶢáµÇ€áµ¡Ê¼] [áµÇ€áµ¡Ê¼] [ᶢǃ] [áµÇƒ] [ᶢáµÇƒÊ°] [áµÇƒÊ°] [ᵑǃˀ] [ᵑ̊ǃʰ] [ᵑǃ] [ᵑǃʱ] [ᶢáµÇƒáµ¡] [áµÇƒáµ¡] [ᶢáµÇƒáµ¡Ê¼] [áµÇƒáµ¡Ê¼]
1994–present gǀ ǀ gǀh ǀh ǀʼ ǀʼh nǀ nǀh gǀx ǀx gǀk ǀk gǃ ǃ gǃh ǃh ǃʼ ǃʼh nǃ nǃh gǃx ǃx gǃk ǃk
1975–1987 nǀʼh gǀxʼ ǀxʼ nǃʼh gǃxʼ ǃxʼ
1987–1994 gc c dch ch cʼ cʼh nc nch dcg cg dcgʼ cgʼ gq q dqh qh qʼ qʼh nq nqh dqg qg dqgʼ qgʼ
Palatal clicks Lateral clicks
IPA [ᶢǂ] [áµÇ‚] [ᶢáµÇ‚Ê°] [áµÇ‚Ê°] [ᵑǂˀ] [ᵑ̊ǂʰ] [ᵑǂ] [ᵑǂʱ] [ᶢáµÇ‚ᵡ] [áµÇ‚ᵡ] [ᶢáµÇ‚ᵡʼ] [áµÇ‚ᵡʼ] [ᶢÇ] [áµÇ] [ᶢáµÇÊ°] [áµÇÊ°] [ᵑÇË€] [ᵑ̊ÇÊ°] [ᵑÇ] [ᵑÇʱ] [ᶢáµÇᵡ] [áµÇᵡ] [ᶢáµÇᵡʼ] [áµÇᵡʼ]
1994–present gÇ‚ Ç‚ gÇ‚h Ç‚h ǂʼ ǂʼh nÇ‚ nÇ‚h gÇ‚x Ç‚x gÇ‚k Ç‚k Ç gÇh Çh Çʼ Çʼh nÇh gÇx Çx gÇk Çk
1975–1987 nǂʼh gÇ‚xʼ Ç‚xʼ nÇʼh gÇxʼ Çxʼ
1987–1994 gç ç dçh çh çʼ çʼh nç nçh dçg çg dçgʼ çgʼ gx x dxh xh xʼ xʼh nx nxh dxg xg dxgʼ xgʼ
Plain vowels Pressed
vowels
Nasal vowels Pressed
Nasal vowels
IPA [i] [e] [a, ə] [o] [u] [aˤ] [oˤ] [ĩ] [ã] [õ] [ũ] [ãˤ] [õˤ]
1994–present i e a o u aq oq in an on un aqn oqn
1975–1987 a̭ o̭ ĩ ã õ ũ ã̭ õ̭
1987–1994 a, e a̦ o̦ î â ô û â̦ ô̦

The modern (1994) orthography also has ih, eh, ah, oh, uh for breathy (murmured) vowels, and ihn, ahn, ohn, uhn for breathy nasal vowels. However, Snyman maintains that these are positional variants of low-tone vowels, and not needed in an orthography (at least, not if tone were marked). Glottalized vowels are written with an apostrophe in all three orthographies.

Grammar

Source: Dickens (2009).

Juǀ'hoan is basically isolating, being a zero-marking language in both clauses and noun phrases. The word order is SVO.

Nouns and pronouns

Nouns are grouped into noun classes based on animacy and species, with each class having a pronoun-set. The plural is formed by the suffixing of -si or -sín or by no change, -Ø. Many nouns have irregular plurals, such as jù (person, plural jú).

For example, the noun gǂhòà, "dog", belongs to class 2, and may be referred to with the pronoun ha, whereas gǀúí, "forest", belongs to class 5, which has ká as its corresponding pronoun.

The noun classes and their pronoun-sets are as follows:

Class General Possessed Deictic Example
1 ha (sg); sá (dual); hì, sì (pl) mà (sg); hìsì (pl) Çʼàhaà (sg); Çʼàsà (dual); Çʼàsìsà, Çʼàhìsà (pl) jù "person"
2 ha (sg); hì (pl) mà (sg); hìsì (pl) Çʼàhaà (sg); Çʼàhìsà (pl) gÇ‚hòà "dog"
3 ha (sg & pl) mà (sg); màsì (pl) Çʼàhaà (sg & pl) Çxòè "meteor"
4 hì (sg & pl) hì (sg); hìsì (pl) Çʼàhìà (sg); Çʼàhìsà (pl) gÇùú, "meteor"
5 ká (sg & pl) gá (sg); gásì (pl) Çʼàkáà (sg); Çʼàkásà (pl) gǀúí "forest"

Pronouns

Personal and demonstrative pronouns are:

Singular Dual Plural
1st person exclusive mí ètsá è, èǃá
inclusive mtsá m, mǃá
2nd person à; há (hort.) ìtsá ì, ìǃá
3rd person ha (n1-3), hì (n4), ká (n5) sá (n1) hì (n1-2), sì (n1)

Common words and phrases

  • ján ǀàm – Good day
  • Ç‚xáí – Good morning
  • Çáú tzà – Good evening
  • gÇàán - Good afternoon
  • à ján – How are you?
  • Çáú gè – Goodbye
  • jù – person
  • jú – people
  • gǃú, dohmsoan – water
  • nǃaisi u – Bon voyage

Sample texts

Following are some sample texts in the Juǀʼhoan language. [7] [8]

ex:

E

we

nÇurì

try

tè

and

kxóní

fix

ǀʼùrì

bicycle

ǃóm

wheel

E nÇurì tè kxóní ǀʼùrì ǃóm

we try and fix bicycle wheel

'We tried to fix the bicycle wheel.'

ex:

Uto

car

dchuun-a

hit- TRANS

Ç€Kaece

Ç€Kaece

ko

LK

nǃama

road

nǃang

in

Uto dchuun-a ǀKaece ko nǃama nǃang

car hit-TRANS ǀKaece LK road in

'A car hit ǀKaece in the road'

ex:

Besa

Besa

komm

EMPH

Çʼama-ǀʼan

buy-give

Oba

Oba

ko

LK

tcisi

things

Besa komm Çʼama-ǀʼan Oba ko tcisi

Besa EMPH buy-give Oba LK things

'Besa bought Oba some things'

ex:

dshau

woman

nǂai

cause

ʻm-a

eat- TRANS

ha

her

daʼabi

child

ko

LK

dshau nǂai ʻm-a ha daʼabi ko mari

woman cause eat-TRANS her child LK mielie-meal

'The woman fed her child mealie meal.' (Dickens 2005:84)

ex:

mi

my

ba

father

Çohm-a

chop- TRANS

ǃaihn

tree

ko

LK

ǀʼai

axe

mi ba Çohm-a ǃaihn ko ǀʼai

my father chop-TRANS tree LK axe

'My father chopped the tree with an axe.'

Films

Bibliography

  • Dickens, Patrick J. (2005). A Concise Grammar of Juǀʼhoan With a Juǀʼhoan–English Glossary and a Subject Index. Köln: Rüdiger Köppe Verlag. ISBN  978-3-89645-145-3.
  • Miller-Ockhuizen, Amanda (2003). The phonetics and phonology of gutturals: case study from Juǀʼhoansi (PDF). Routledge. ISBN  0-203-50640-5. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 January 2024.
  • Snyman, Jan W. (1983). "Zuǀʼhõasi, a Khoisan Dialect of South West Africa/Namibia". In Dihoff, Ivan R. (ed.). Current Approaches to African Linguistics. Vol. 1. pp. 115–125. doi: 10.1515/9783112420065-007. ISBN  9783112420058.
  • Snyman, Jan W. (1997). "A preliminary classification of the ǃXÅ©Å© and Zuǀʼhõasi Dialects". In Haacke, W. H. G.; Elderkin, E. D. (eds.). Namibian Languages: Reports and Papers. Namibian African Studies. Vol. 4. Köln: Rüdiger Köppe. pp. 21–106. ISBN  978-3-89645-080-7.
  • Snyman, Jan W. An Official Orthography for Žuǀʼhõasi Kokxʼoi. Pretoria.

References

  1. ^ Güldemann, Tom (2003). "Khoisan Languages". International Encyclopedia of Linguistics. Vol. 1: AAVE-Esperanto. Oxford University Press. p. 362. ISBN  9780195139778.
  2. ^ Wade, Nicholas (18 March 2003). "In Click Languages, an Echo of the Tongues of the Ancients". New York Times. Archived from the original on 15 August 2009.
  3. ^ Feinberg, Jody (7 October 2018). "A SIMPLE EXISTENCE In photos, a recollection of life among the Bushmen". The Patriot Ledger. Quincy, MA. Archived from the original on 11 November 2022.
  4. ^ Dickens, Patrick (2009) [1992]. English-JuÇ€'hoan/JuÇ€'hoan-English Dictionary. Quellen zur Khoisan-Forschung. Vol. 8. Köln: Rüdiger Köppe Verlag. pp. 15–16. ISBN  978-3-89645-868-1.
  5. ^ Ladefoged, Peter; Maddieson, Ian (1996). The Sounds of the World's Languages. Oxford: Blackwell. pp. 63, 80–81. ISBN  0-631-19815-6.
  6. ^ Snyman, Jan W. (1975). Zuǀʼhõasi Fonologie en Woordeboek. Cape Town: AA Balkema.
  7. ^ Pratas, Fernanda; Pereira, Sandra; Pinto, Clara, eds. (2016). Coordination and Subordination: Form and Meaning—Selected Papers from CSI Lisbon 2014. ISBN  978-1-4438-8950-6.
  8. ^ Kandybowicz, Jason; Torrence, Harold, eds. (2017). Africa's Endangered Languages: Documentary and Theoretical Approaches. doi: 10.1093/oso/9780190256340.001.0001. ISBN  9780190256340.

External links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Juǀʼhoan)

Juǀʼhoan
South(eastern) ǃXun / Ju
A Juǀʼhoan speaker, recorded in Namibia.
Native to Namibia, Botswana
Regionnear border with Angola
Ethnicity Juǀʼhoansi
Native speakers
4,000 (2003) [1]
Kxʼa
Dialects
Language codes
ISO 639-3 ktz
Glottolog juho1239
ELP Ju|'hoan
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Juǀʼhoan (English: /ˈdÊ’twæn/ JOO-twan, [2] [3] Juǀʼhoan: [Ê’uᵑ̊ǀʰwã]), also known as Southern or Southeastern ǃKung or ǃXun, is the southern variety of the ǃKung dialect continuum, spoken in northeastern Namibia and the Northwest District of Botswana by San Bushmen who largely identify themselves as Juǀʼhoansi. Several regional dialects are distinguished: Epukiro, Tsumǃkwe, Rundu, Omatako and Ç‚KxʼauÇʼein, with Tsumǃkwe being the best described and often taken as representative.

Name

The name Juǀʼhoan (in the plural: Juǀʼhoansi) is also rendered Žuǀʼhõa – or occasionally Zhuǀʼhõa or Dzuǀʼhõa, depending on orthography. Depending on the classification, it is considered the Southern or Southeastern variety of the ǃKung (also rendered ǃXun) language cluster. It may thus be referred to as Southern ǃKung, Southeastern ǃXun, etc. Juǀʼhoan is based on the word ju 'people', which is also applied to the language cluster. (see ǃKung languages for variants of those names).

Phonology

Vowels

  Oral vowels Nasal vowels
Front Back Front Back
Close i u Ä© Å©
Close-mid e o ẽ õ
Open a ã
  • When a front vowel /e/ or /i/ follows a consonant with a back vowel constraint (e.g. clicks with uvular articulation), an [É™] is inserted before the front vowel, written 'a' in the orthography. For example, mi |'ae (myself) reads /mi |'É™e/.
  • The diphthong /oa/ may be realized as [wa].

Juǀʼhoan has five vowel qualities, which may be nasalized, glottalized, murmured, or combinations of these, and most of these possibilities occur both long and short. The qualities /a/ and /o/ may also be pharyngealized and strident (epiglottalized). Besides, it is a tonal language with four tones: very high, high, low and very low tones. [4] Thus, there are a good 30 vowel phonemes, perhaps more, depending on one's analysis. There are, in addition, many vowel sequences and diphthongs.


Consonants

Juǀʼhoan has an unusually large number of consonants, as typical for ǃKung. The following occur at the beginnings of roots. For brevity, only the alveolar clicks are listed with the other consonants; the complete set of clicks is found below.

Labial Alveolar Postalveolar
/ Palatal
Velar Corresponding
Click
Glottal
Nasal voiced m n ŋ ᵑǃ
murmured ( mʱ) ᵑǃʱ
aspirated ᵑ̊ǃʰ
Plosive voiced b d dz dʒ ɡ ᶢǃ
tenuis p t ts tʃ k áµÇƒ ( Ê”)
aspirated pÊ° tÊ° tsÊ° tʃʰ kÊ° áµÇƒÊ°
prevoiced aspirated bÍ¡pÊ° dÍ¡tÊ° dÍ¡tsÊ° dÍ¡tʃʰ É¡Í¡kÊ° ᶢáµÇƒÊ°
ejective / glottalized tsʼ tʃʼ kxʼ ᵑǃˀ
prevoiced ejective d͡tsʼ d͡tʃʼ
uvularized tᵡ áµÇƒáµ¡
prevoiced uvularized dÍ¡tᵡ dÍ¡tsᵡ dÍ¡tʃᵡ ᶢáµÇƒáµ¡
uvular-ejected tᵡʼ kᵡʼ áµÇƒáµ¡Ê¼
prevoiced uvular-ejected É¡Í¡kᵡʼ ᶢáµÇƒáµ¡Ê¼
Fricative voiced z ʒ ɦ
voiceless ( f) s ʃ χ

Tenuis and modally voiced consonants (blue) may occur with any vowel quality. However, other consonants (grey, transcribed with a superscript diacritic to their right) do not occur in the same root as murmured, glottalized, or epiglottalized vowels.

The prevoiced aspirated and ejective consonants, both pulmonic and clicks, contain a voiceless interval, which Miller (2003) attributes to a larger glottal opening than is found in Hindustani breathy-voiced consonants. Phonetically, however, they are voice contours, starting out voiced but becoming voiceless for the aspiration or ejection. [5]

The phonemic status of [ʔ], [dz] and [dʒ] is uncertain. [ʔ] may be epenthetic before vowel-initial words; alternatively, it may be that no word may begin with a vowel. /mʱ/ occurs only in a single morpheme, the plural diminutive enclitic /mʱi/. /f/ and /l/ (not shown) only occur in loan words, and some accounts posit a /j/ and /w/. Labials (/p, pʰ, b, b͡pʰ, m/) are very rare initially, though β̞ is common between vowels. Velar stops (oral and nasal) are rare initially and very rare medially.

The uvulo-ejective consonants are analyzed as epiglottalized in Miller-Ockhuizen (2003). They have uvular frication and glottalization, and are similar to consonants in NÇ€u described as uvular ejective by Miller et al. (2009).[ full citation needed] Their epiglottal character may be a phonetic consequence of the raised larynx involved in making them ejective.

Only a small set of consonants occur between vowels within roots. These are:

Labial Alveolar Velar Uvular Glottal
β̞ ɾ ɣ
m n Å‹
k, ᵑk q͡χʼ
χ ɦ

Medial [β̞, ɾ, m, n] (green) are very common; [ɣ, ŋ] are rare, and the other medial consonants occur in only a very few roots, many of them loans. [β̞, ɾ, ɣ] are generally analyzed as allophones of /b, d, ɡ/. However, [ɾ] especially may correspond to multiple root-initial consonants.

Juǀʼhoan has 48 click consonants. There are four click "types": dental, lateral, alveolar, and palatal, each of which found in twelve series or "accompaniments" (combinations of manner, phonation, and contour). These are perfectly normal consonants in Juǀʼhoan, and indeed are preferred over non-clicks in word-initial position.

'noisy' clicks 'sharp' clicks series
dental lateral alveolar palatal
áµÇ€ áµÇ áµÇƒ áµÇ‚ Tenuis
ᶢǀ á¶¢Ç á¶¢Çƒ ᶢǂ Voiced
ᵑǀ áµ‘Ç áµ‘Çƒ ᵑǂ Nasal
áµÇ€Ê° áµÇÊ° áµÇƒÊ° áµÇ‚Ê° Aspirated
ᶢáµÇ€Ê° ᶢáµÇÊ° ᶢáµÇƒÊ° ᶢáµÇ‚Ê° Pre-voiced aspirated
ᵑ̊ǀʰ ᵑ̊ÇÊ° ᵑ̊ǃʰ ᵑ̊ǂʰ Aspirated nasal
ᵑǀʱ ᵑÇʱ ᵑǃʱ ᵑǂʱ Murmured nasal
ᵑǀˀ ᵑÇË€ ᵑǃˀ ᵑǂˀ Glottalized nasal
áµÇ€áµ¡ áµÇᵡ áµÇƒáµ¡ áµÇ‚ᵡ Linguo-pulmonic contour
ᶢáµÇ€áµ¡ ᶢáµÇᵡ ᶢáµÇƒáµ¡ ᶢáµÇ‚ᵡ Voiced linguo-pulmonic
áµÇ€áµ¡Ê¼ áµÇᵡʼ áµÇƒáµ¡Ê¼ áµÇ‚ᵡʼ Epiglottalized (heterorganic contour)
ᶢǀᵡʼ ᶢÇᵡʼ ᶢǃᵡʼ ᶢǂᵡʼ Voiced epiglottalized

As above, tenuis and modally voiced consonants (blue) may occur with any vowel quality. However, other consonants (grey, transcribed with a superscript diacritic to their right) do not occur in the same root as murmured, glottalized, or epiglottalized vowels.

Glottalized clicks occur almost exclusively before nasal vowels. This suggests they are nasalized, as in most if not all other languages with glottalized clicks. The nasalization would not be audible during the click itself due to the glottalization, which would prevent any nasal airflow, but the velum would be lowered, potentially nasalizing adjacent vowels.

The 'uvularized' clicks are actually linguo-pulmonic contours, [ǃ͡qχ], etc. The 'uvulo-ejective' clicks are heterorganic affricates, and equivalent to linguo-glottalic consonants transcribed [ǃ͡kxʼ], etc., in other languages (Miller 2011).[ full citation needed]

See Ekoka ǃXung for a related variety with a somewhat larger click inventory.

Orthographic history

Juǀʼhoan is the only variety of ǃKung to be written. Three orthographies have been used over the past half century, two based on pipe letters for clicks and one using only the basic Latin alphabet.

In the 1960s, the South African Department of Education set about establishing official orthographies for the languages of Southwest Africa (Namibia). Jan Snyman was selected to develop an orthography for the then-unwritten Juǀʼhoasi, which was accepted in 1969. In this orthography, the name of the language is spelled Žuǀʼhõasi. A slightly modified form (Snyman 1975) is shown below. [6]

In the 1980s, the Bible Society of South Africa requested a new orthography, one that used only letters of the Latin alphabet, avoided diacritics as much as possible, and conformed as much as possible to the conventions of Afrikaans. This second orthography was accepted in 1987, in which the language is spelled Zjuc'hôa.

A third orthography was developed by the Juǀwa Bushman Development Foundation in 1994. This is the orthography that is currently in use in Namibia; there does not seem to be any publication in Botswana.

The three orthographies, along with the IPA, are compared below. Tone is evidently unmarked.

Comparison of Juǀʼhoan orthographies
Labial plosives Alveolar plosives Velar plosives Alveolar affricates Postalveolar affricates
IPA [b] [p] [b͡pʰ] [pʰ] [d] [t] [d͡tʰ] [tʰ] [ɡ] [k] [ɡ͡kʰ] [kʰ] [ts] [d͡tsʰ] [tsʰ] [d͡tsʼ] [tsʼ] [tʃ] [d͡tʃʰ] [tʃʰ] [d͡tʃʼ] [tʃʼ] [kxʼ]
1994–present b p bh ph d t dh th g k gh kh ts dsh tsh ds tz tc dch tch dc tj kx
1975–1987 dsʼ tsʼ tš dšh tšh dšʼ tšʼ kxʼ
1987–1994 gh ʼgh tj djh tjh djʼ tjʼ kg
Hetero-organic affricates Fricates Nasals Syllabic
Nasals
Approximants
IPA [dÍ¡tᵡ] [tᵡ] [tᵡʼ] [dÍ¡tsᵡ] [tsᵡ] [dÍ¡tʃᵡ] [tʃᵡ] [z] [s] [Ê’] [ʃ] [χ] [h] [ɽ] [m] [n] [mÌ©] [Å‹Ì] [mÌ°] [m̤] [j] [w]
1994–present dx tx tk dzx tsx djx tcx z s j c x h r m n m ang mq mh y w
1975–1987 txʼ dx tx ž š m̭
1987–1994 dg tg tgʼ - tsg djg tjg zj sj g m̹
Dental clicks Alveolar clicks
IPA [ᶢǀ] [áµÇ€] [ᶢáµÇ€Ê°] [áµÇ€Ê°] [ᵑǀˀ] [ᵑ̊ǀʰ] [ᵑǀ] [ᵑǀʱ] [ᶢáµÇ€áµ¡] [áµÇ€áµ¡] [ᶢáµÇ€áµ¡Ê¼] [áµÇ€áµ¡Ê¼] [ᶢǃ] [áµÇƒ] [ᶢáµÇƒÊ°] [áµÇƒÊ°] [ᵑǃˀ] [ᵑ̊ǃʰ] [ᵑǃ] [ᵑǃʱ] [ᶢáµÇƒáµ¡] [áµÇƒáµ¡] [ᶢáµÇƒáµ¡Ê¼] [áµÇƒáµ¡Ê¼]
1994–present gǀ ǀ gǀh ǀh ǀʼ ǀʼh nǀ nǀh gǀx ǀx gǀk ǀk gǃ ǃ gǃh ǃh ǃʼ ǃʼh nǃ nǃh gǃx ǃx gǃk ǃk
1975–1987 nǀʼh gǀxʼ ǀxʼ nǃʼh gǃxʼ ǃxʼ
1987–1994 gc c dch ch cʼ cʼh nc nch dcg cg dcgʼ cgʼ gq q dqh qh qʼ qʼh nq nqh dqg qg dqgʼ qgʼ
Palatal clicks Lateral clicks
IPA [ᶢǂ] [áµÇ‚] [ᶢáµÇ‚Ê°] [áµÇ‚Ê°] [ᵑǂˀ] [ᵑ̊ǂʰ] [ᵑǂ] [ᵑǂʱ] [ᶢáµÇ‚ᵡ] [áµÇ‚ᵡ] [ᶢáµÇ‚ᵡʼ] [áµÇ‚ᵡʼ] [ᶢÇ] [áµÇ] [ᶢáµÇÊ°] [áµÇÊ°] [ᵑÇË€] [ᵑ̊ÇÊ°] [ᵑÇ] [ᵑÇʱ] [ᶢáµÇᵡ] [áµÇᵡ] [ᶢáµÇᵡʼ] [áµÇᵡʼ]
1994–present gÇ‚ Ç‚ gÇ‚h Ç‚h ǂʼ ǂʼh nÇ‚ nÇ‚h gÇ‚x Ç‚x gÇ‚k Ç‚k Ç gÇh Çh Çʼ Çʼh nÇh gÇx Çx gÇk Çk
1975–1987 nǂʼh gÇ‚xʼ Ç‚xʼ nÇʼh gÇxʼ Çxʼ
1987–1994 gç ç dçh çh çʼ çʼh nç nçh dçg çg dçgʼ çgʼ gx x dxh xh xʼ xʼh nx nxh dxg xg dxgʼ xgʼ
Plain vowels Pressed
vowels
Nasal vowels Pressed
Nasal vowels
IPA [i] [e] [a, ə] [o] [u] [aˤ] [oˤ] [ĩ] [ã] [õ] [ũ] [ãˤ] [õˤ]
1994–present i e a o u aq oq in an on un aqn oqn
1975–1987 a̭ o̭ ĩ ã õ ũ ã̭ õ̭
1987–1994 a, e a̦ o̦ î â ô û â̦ ô̦

The modern (1994) orthography also has ih, eh, ah, oh, uh for breathy (murmured) vowels, and ihn, ahn, ohn, uhn for breathy nasal vowels. However, Snyman maintains that these are positional variants of low-tone vowels, and not needed in an orthography (at least, not if tone were marked). Glottalized vowels are written with an apostrophe in all three orthographies.

Grammar

Source: Dickens (2009).

Juǀ'hoan is basically isolating, being a zero-marking language in both clauses and noun phrases. The word order is SVO.

Nouns and pronouns

Nouns are grouped into noun classes based on animacy and species, with each class having a pronoun-set. The plural is formed by the suffixing of -si or -sín or by no change, -Ø. Many nouns have irregular plurals, such as jù (person, plural jú).

For example, the noun gǂhòà, "dog", belongs to class 2, and may be referred to with the pronoun ha, whereas gǀúí, "forest", belongs to class 5, which has ká as its corresponding pronoun.

The noun classes and their pronoun-sets are as follows:

Class General Possessed Deictic Example
1 ha (sg); sá (dual); hì, sì (pl) mà (sg); hìsì (pl) Çʼàhaà (sg); Çʼàsà (dual); Çʼàsìsà, Çʼàhìsà (pl) jù "person"
2 ha (sg); hì (pl) mà (sg); hìsì (pl) Çʼàhaà (sg); Çʼàhìsà (pl) gÇ‚hòà "dog"
3 ha (sg & pl) mà (sg); màsì (pl) Çʼàhaà (sg & pl) Çxòè "meteor"
4 hì (sg & pl) hì (sg); hìsì (pl) Çʼàhìà (sg); Çʼàhìsà (pl) gÇùú, "meteor"
5 ká (sg & pl) gá (sg); gásì (pl) Çʼàkáà (sg); Çʼàkásà (pl) gǀúí "forest"

Pronouns

Personal and demonstrative pronouns are:

Singular Dual Plural
1st person exclusive mí ètsá è, èǃá
inclusive mtsá m, mǃá
2nd person à; há (hort.) ìtsá ì, ìǃá
3rd person ha (n1-3), hì (n4), ká (n5) sá (n1) hì (n1-2), sì (n1)

Common words and phrases

  • ján ǀàm – Good day
  • Ç‚xáí – Good morning
  • Çáú tzà – Good evening
  • gÇàán - Good afternoon
  • à ján – How are you?
  • Çáú gè – Goodbye
  • jù – person
  • jú – people
  • gǃú, dohmsoan – water
  • nǃaisi u – Bon voyage

Sample texts

Following are some sample texts in the Juǀʼhoan language. [7] [8]

ex:

E

we

nÇurì

try

tè

and

kxóní

fix

ǀʼùrì

bicycle

ǃóm

wheel

E nÇurì tè kxóní ǀʼùrì ǃóm

we try and fix bicycle wheel

'We tried to fix the bicycle wheel.'

ex:

Uto

car

dchuun-a

hit- TRANS

Ç€Kaece

Ç€Kaece

ko

LK

nǃama

road

nǃang

in

Uto dchuun-a ǀKaece ko nǃama nǃang

car hit-TRANS ǀKaece LK road in

'A car hit ǀKaece in the road'

ex:

Besa

Besa

komm

EMPH

Çʼama-ǀʼan

buy-give

Oba

Oba

ko

LK

tcisi

things

Besa komm Çʼama-ǀʼan Oba ko tcisi

Besa EMPH buy-give Oba LK things

'Besa bought Oba some things'

ex:

dshau

woman

nǂai

cause

ʻm-a

eat- TRANS

ha

her

daʼabi

child

ko

LK

dshau nǂai ʻm-a ha daʼabi ko mari

woman cause eat-TRANS her child LK mielie-meal

'The woman fed her child mealie meal.' (Dickens 2005:84)

ex:

mi

my

ba

father

Çohm-a

chop- TRANS

ǃaihn

tree

ko

LK

ǀʼai

axe

mi ba Çohm-a ǃaihn ko ǀʼai

my father chop-TRANS tree LK axe

'My father chopped the tree with an axe.'

Films

Bibliography

  • Dickens, Patrick J. (2005). A Concise Grammar of Juǀʼhoan With a Juǀʼhoan–English Glossary and a Subject Index. Köln: Rüdiger Köppe Verlag. ISBN  978-3-89645-145-3.
  • Miller-Ockhuizen, Amanda (2003). The phonetics and phonology of gutturals: case study from Juǀʼhoansi (PDF). Routledge. ISBN  0-203-50640-5. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 January 2024.
  • Snyman, Jan W. (1983). "Zuǀʼhõasi, a Khoisan Dialect of South West Africa/Namibia". In Dihoff, Ivan R. (ed.). Current Approaches to African Linguistics. Vol. 1. pp. 115–125. doi: 10.1515/9783112420065-007. ISBN  9783112420058.
  • Snyman, Jan W. (1997). "A preliminary classification of the ǃXÅ©Å© and Zuǀʼhõasi Dialects". In Haacke, W. H. G.; Elderkin, E. D. (eds.). Namibian Languages: Reports and Papers. Namibian African Studies. Vol. 4. Köln: Rüdiger Köppe. pp. 21–106. ISBN  978-3-89645-080-7.
  • Snyman, Jan W. An Official Orthography for Žuǀʼhõasi Kokxʼoi. Pretoria.

References

  1. ^ Güldemann, Tom (2003). "Khoisan Languages". International Encyclopedia of Linguistics. Vol. 1: AAVE-Esperanto. Oxford University Press. p. 362. ISBN  9780195139778.
  2. ^ Wade, Nicholas (18 March 2003). "In Click Languages, an Echo of the Tongues of the Ancients". New York Times. Archived from the original on 15 August 2009.
  3. ^ Feinberg, Jody (7 October 2018). "A SIMPLE EXISTENCE In photos, a recollection of life among the Bushmen". The Patriot Ledger. Quincy, MA. Archived from the original on 11 November 2022.
  4. ^ Dickens, Patrick (2009) [1992]. English-JuÇ€'hoan/JuÇ€'hoan-English Dictionary. Quellen zur Khoisan-Forschung. Vol. 8. Köln: Rüdiger Köppe Verlag. pp. 15–16. ISBN  978-3-89645-868-1.
  5. ^ Ladefoged, Peter; Maddieson, Ian (1996). The Sounds of the World's Languages. Oxford: Blackwell. pp. 63, 80–81. ISBN  0-631-19815-6.
  6. ^ Snyman, Jan W. (1975). Zuǀʼhõasi Fonologie en Woordeboek. Cape Town: AA Balkema.
  7. ^ Pratas, Fernanda; Pereira, Sandra; Pinto, Clara, eds. (2016). Coordination and Subordination: Form and Meaning—Selected Papers from CSI Lisbon 2014. ISBN  978-1-4438-8950-6.
  8. ^ Kandybowicz, Jason; Torrence, Harold, eds. (2017). Africa's Endangered Languages: Documentary and Theoretical Approaches. doi: 10.1093/oso/9780190256340.001.0001. ISBN  9780190256340.

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