Kwadi is an extinct "
click language
Click consonants, or clicks, are speech sounds that occur as consonants in many languages of Southern Africa and in three languages of East Africa. Examples familiar to English-speakers are the '' tut-tut'' (British spelling) or '' tsk! tsk!' ...
" once spoken in the southwest corner of
Angola
Angola, officially the Republic of Angola, is a country on the west-Central Africa, central coast of Southern Africa. It is the second-largest Portuguese-speaking world, Portuguese-speaking (Lusophone) country in both total area and List of c ...
. It became
extinct
Extinction is the termination of an organism by the death of its Endling, last member. A taxon may become Functional extinction, functionally extinct before the death of its last member if it loses the capacity to Reproduction, reproduce and ...
around 1960. There were only fifty Kwadi in the 1950s, of whom only 4–5 were competent speakers of the language. Three partial speakers were known in 1965, but in 1981 no speakers could be found. Salvage work was carried out 2014 with two remembers who had acquired the language from an old speaker while they were children.
[Anne-Maria Fehn & Jorge Rocha (2023) Lost in translation: A historical-comparative reconstruction of Proto-Khoe-Kwadi based on archival data. ''Diachronica'' 40:5, p. 609–665.]
Although Kwadi is poorly attested, there is enough data to show that it is a divergent member of the
Khoe family, or perhaps cognate with the Khoe languages in a
Khoe–Kwadi family. It preserved elements of proto-Khoe that were lost in the western Khoe languages under the influence of
Kxʼa languages
The Kxʼa ( ) languages, also called Ju–ǂHoan ( ), is a language family established in 2010 linking the ǂʼAmkoe (ǂHoan) language with the ǃKung (Juu) dialect cluster, a relationship that had been suspected for a decade. Along with the T ...
in Botswana, and other elements that were lost in the eastern Khoe languages.
The Kwadi people, called ''Kwepe'' (''Cuepe'') by the Bantu, appear to have been a remnant population of southwestern African
hunter-gatherer
A hunter-gatherer or forager is a human living in a community, or according to an ancestrally derived Lifestyle, lifestyle, in which most or all food is obtained by foraging, that is, by gathering food from local naturally occurring sources, esp ...
s, otherwise only represented by the
Cimba,
Kwisi, and the
Damara, who adopted the
Khoekhoe language
Khoekhoe or Khoikhoi ( ; , ), also known by the ethnic terms Nama ( ; ''Namagowab''), Damara (''ǂNūkhoegowab''), or Nama/Damara and formerly as Hottentot, is the most widespread of the non- Bantu languages of Southern Africa that make heavy ...
. Like the Kwisi they were fishermen, on the lower reaches of the
Coroca River.
Kwadi was alternatively known by varieties of the words ''Koroka'' (''Ba-koroka, Curoca, Ma-koroko, Mu-coroca'') and ''Cuanhoca''.
''Zorotua'', or ''Vasorontu'', was apparently a dialect.
Phonology
Vowels
Kwadi is tentatively reconstructed as having the seven oral vowels the three nasal vowels . Diphthongs seem to have been and . The status of /ao/ is not certain, and /oa/, /ua/ may have been allophones.
Tones
The tone system is unclear, due to limited data and to the poor quality of recordings. At least two tones (high and low) are necessary to explain that data:
: 'dog', 'fish'
: 'meat', 'man, male'
Consonants
The following consonants are attested. Those is parentheses are doubtful: they are either found in only a single lexeme, or are plausible allophones of another consonant.
Proto-Khoe–Kwadi *ǃ, *ǂ, *ǁ are replaced with non-click consonants such as .
[Fehn, Anne-Maria. (2020). Towards a reconstruction of Proto Khoe-Kwadi: The challenges (and benefits!) of applying the historical-comparative method to archival data. Handout of paper presented at the Zoom meeting of the KBA Network, 15 October 2020.]
In disyllabic words, the second consonant is predominantly /m/, /n/, /l/, /d/, /b/, and it is possible those were the only consonants allowed within morphemes in native words, as would be typical for the area.
Morphology
Pronouns
Kwadi has personal pronouns for first and second person in singular, dual, and plural numbers. Pronouns have subject, object, and possessive cases.
1st person plural may have distinguished
clusivity
In linguistics, clusivity is a grammatical distinction between ''inclusive'' and ''exclusive'' first-person pronouns and verbal morphology, also called ''inclusive " we"'' and ''exclusive "we"''. Inclusive "we" specifically includes the address ...
. Object pronouns are suffixed with ''-le/-de'', except for the first person dual object pronoun, which is just ''mu''. Possessive pronouns are the same as the subject form, except for the first person singular possessive pronoun, which is ''tʃi''. Third person pronouns are simply the demonstratives, which are formed with a demonstrative base ''ha-'' followed by a gender/number suffix.
The known possessive pronouns are ''tʃi'' 'my' and ''ha'' 'his'. From the Khoe languages, it's not expected that all pronouns have distinctive possessive forms.
Nouns
Kwadi nouns distinguished three genders (masculine, feminine, and common), as well as three numbers (singular, dual, and plural).
[Westphal 1971: 395] Some nouns form their plural with
suppletion
In linguistics and etymology, suppletion is traditionally understood as the use of one word as the inflected form of another word when the two words are not cognate. For those learning a language, suppletive forms will be seen as "irregular" or ev ...
. For example: ''tçe'' "woman" vs. ''tala kwaʼe'' "women". The attested paradigm of nominal suffixes for masculine and feminine nouns is given below.
See also
*
Kwisi people
References
External links
Kwadi basic lexicon at the Global Lexicostatistical Database
{{Languages of Angola
Khoe–Kwadi languages
Languages of Angola
Extinct languages of Africa
Languages extinct in the 1950s
Unclassified languages of Africa