Sukuma language
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Sukuma is a
Bantu language The Bantu languages (English: , Proto-Bantu language, Proto-Bantu: *bantʊ̀), or Ntu languages are a language family of about 600 languages of Central Africa, Central, Southern Africa, Southern, East Africa, Eastern and Southeast Africa, South ...
of
Tanzania Tanzania, officially the United Republic of Tanzania, is a country in East Africa within the African Great Lakes region. It is bordered by Uganda to the northwest; Kenya to the northeast; the Indian Ocean to the east; Mozambique and Malawi to t ...
, spoken in an area southeast of
Lake Victoria Lake Victoria is one of the African Great Lakes. With a surface area of approximately , Lake Victoria is Africa's largest lake by area, the world's largest tropics, tropical lake, and the world's second-largest fresh water lake by surface are ...
between
Mwanza Mwanza City, also known as Rock City to the residents, is a port city and capital of Mwanza Region on the southern shore of Lake Victoria in north-western Tanzania. With an urban population of 1,104,521 and a population of 3,699,872 in the region ...
, Shinyanga, and Lake Eyasi.


Dialects

Dialects (''KɪmunaSukuma'' in the west, ''GɪmunaNtuzu/GɪnaNtuzu'' in the northeast, and ''Jìnàkɪ̀ɪ̀yâ/JimunaKɪɪyâ'' in the southeast) are easily mutually intelligible.


Language identity

It is reported that although Sukuma is very similar to Nyamwezi, speakers themselves do not accept that they make up a single language.


Phonology

There are seven vowel qualities, which occur long and short:Rahma Muhdhar, 2006, ''Verb Extensions in Kisukuma, Jinakiiya dialect'', MS dissertation, UDSM , which are written , may be closer to , and may be closer to . Sukuma has gone through Dahl's Law (''ɪdàtʊ́'' 'three', from Proto-Bantu ''-tatʊ'') and has voiceless nasal consonants. It is not clear whether should better be considered as stops or affricates as or whether they are even palatal. Syllables are V or CV. There are four tones on short vowels: high, low, rising, and falling.


Orthography

Its orthography uses Roman script without special letters, which resembles that used for Swahili, and has been used for Bible translations and in religious literature.


Grammar

The following description is based on the JinaKɪɪya dialect. One of the characteristics of that dialect is that the noun-class prefixes subject to Dahl's Law have been levelled to voiced consonants and so they no longer alternate.


Noun concord

Sukuma noun-class prefixes are augmented by pre-prefixes ''a-, ɪ-, ʊ-'', which are dropped in certain constructions. The noun classes and the agreement that they triggerAdjectival concord, possessive suffixes on nouns, subject and object suffixes on verbs, and the agreeing form of ''-mô'' 'one', ''-βɪ̀lɪ́'' 'two', and 'this' are as follows, with attested forms in other dialects being added in parentheses: (For compatibility, is transcribed .) Many kin terms have a reduced form of the nominal prefixes, zero and ''βa-'', called class 1a/2a, as in 'mother', 'mothers'. Concord is identical with other class-1/2 nouns. Singular/plural pairs are 1/2, 5/6, 7/8, 9/10, and 12/13, and locative classes 16, 17, and 18 do not have plurals. Most others use class 6 for their plurals: 11/6, 14/6, 15/6, and also sometimes 7/6 and 12/6. There are also nouns that inflect as 11/4, 11/14, 14/10, and 15/8.


Verbal complex

Infinitive verbs have the form ''gʊ-''object-ext-ROOT-ext-V-locative, where ''ext'' stands for any of various grammatical 'extensions', and -V is the final vowel. For example, with roots in bold and tone omitted, :gũ-n-tĩn-ĩl-a :'To cut for him/her' :gwĩ-tĩn-ĩl-a :'To cut for each other' ''-ĩl'' is the applicative suffix, translated as 'for'. The reciprocal prefix ''ĩ'' has fused into the infinitive ''gũ''. :gũ-fum-a-mo :'To get out there' ''-mo'' is a locative 'inside', as in class 18 nominal concord. Finite verbs have the form subject- TAM-ext-object-ROOT-ext-TAM-V. For example, :βa-lĩ-n-iiš-a :'They are feeding him/her' The root ''iiš'' includes a fused
causative In linguistics, a causative (abbreviated ) is a valency-increasing operationPayne, Thomas E. (1997). Describing morphosyntax: A guide for field linguists'' Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 173–186. that indicates that a subject either ...
suffix. Tense is marked by a prefix. The subject marker ''βa-'' shows that the subject is human plural, per the noun-concord table above. :o-dũ-saang-ile :'He found us' Here tense is marked by a suffix. :βa-gĩ-gunaan-a :'They helped each other/themselves' Here the prefix is fused tense and reciprocal ''ĩ''.


References

{{Authority control Northeast Bantu languages Languages of Tanzania