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Encyclopedia :
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SO :
SOM :
Somali language |
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Somali language
ClassificationSomali is an Afro-Asiatic language, of the Cushitic branch. It is most related to the Afar language and Oromo language. It is distantly related to the Arabic language and other Semitic languages. Somali has been very influenced by Arabic, as a large number of words have been borrowed from Arabic since the arrival of Islam. Geographic distributionIt is spoken mostly in Somalia, Somaliland, eastern Ethiopia, and Djibouti, but speakers are found all over the world because of the Somali civil war. It has between 15 to 25 million speakers. Somali is also spoken by Somali communities all over the world, including, but not limited to, the Middle East, Europe, North America and Australia. Official statusSomali is an official language in Somalia& Somaliland, . It is also important in Djibouti and eastern Ethiopia. DialectsOf the Somali dialects, the most widely used is Common Somali, a term applied to several sub-dialects, the speakers of which can understand each other easily. Common Somali is spoken in most of Somalia, Somaliland, and in adjacent territories (Somaliland, Ethiopia, Kenya, and Djibouti), and is used by broadcasting stations in Somalia and in Somali-language broadcasts originating outside the country. Coastal Somali is spoken on the Banaadir Coast (from Cadale to south of Baraawe) and its immediate hinterland. Central Somali is spoken in the interriverine area, chiefly by members of the Rahanwayn clan-family. Speakers of Common and Coastal Somali can understand each other after a few weeks of close contact, speakers of Common and Central Somali only after a few months. GrammarThe grammatical categories of Somali are: Somali has some grammatical categories which are not found in many other languages, for example the focus word or the focalization phenomenon which concerns those elements in the formation of the sentence which indicate where the intention or the interest or the The words baa, ayaa, and waxaa put the focus on nouns and noun phrases. Example:
Somali also has the word waa which puts the focus on verbs and verb phrases. Example: John waa baxay Waa is different from other previous one we have just seen, because it Writing systemIt had no written alphabet as late as 1972 (apart from occasional proposals, such as Osmanya), but the government changed that and introduced the Latin alphabet. This sets it apart from the languages near it, which either use the Amharic or the Arabic alphabet. Before the colonial period, educated Somalis and religious fraternities used the Arabic language. It is also evidenced from material discovered in 1940, mainly ancient letters and tomb inscriptions, that the Somali language was written with the Arabic alphabet, just like the Urdu and Persian languages. But it was not certainly "codified" and questions remains about how its use was widespread. Further investigation is required. The Somali latin alphabet is: B, T, J, X, KH, D, R, S, SH, DH, C, G, F, Q, K, L, M, N, W, H, Y. (To be noted the absence of consonants P, V, Z for obvious reasons.) Also, it has short vowels A, E, I, O, U, and long vowels AA, EE, II, OO, UU. The consonants C, DH, KH, Q and X have totally different sounds from the classic Latin one. Therefore it is not a direct interpretation of the Latin alphabet, as is common in its use. ReferenceExternal links
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