Tale Language
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Kare (Kãrɛ̃, Kareng; autonym ''nzáà kã́rĩ́'', where ''nzáà'' = "mouth") is a southern
Mbum language Mbum Proper (also Mboum, Buna, Mboumtiba and Wuna) is a Adamawa–Ubangi language of Central Africa. It is spoken by about people in Cameroon and the Central African Republic. History The Mbum language is spoken by the Mbum people who inhabit ...
of the
Central African Republic The Central African Republic (CAR; ; , RCA; , or , ) is a landlocked country in Central Africa. It is bordered by Chad to the north, Sudan to the northeast, South Sudan to the southeast, the DR Congo to the south, the Republic of th ...
, spoken by the
Kare people Kare or KARE may refer to: * Kare (Žitorađa), a village in Serbia * Kare language, several languages with the name * Kare (surname), a surname (including a list of people with the name) * Kare Kauks (born 1961), Estonian singer * Kåre or Kaa ...
in the mountains of the northeasterly
Ouham-Pendé Ouham-Pendé is one of the 16 prefectures of the Central African Republic. Its capital is Bozoum. The region contains several ghost towns such as Goroumo, Beogombo Deux and Paoua due to government forces ransacking them and armed bandits killing ...
prefecture around
Bocaranga Bocaranga is a sub-prefecture in the prefecture of Ouham-Pendé in Central African Republic. The city must not be confused with Bocaranga I, Bocaranga II, Bocaranga III and Bocaranga IV. These are smaller villages along the road from Bocaranga to ...
. It is spoken by around 97,000 people in the country, and another few thousand speakers in
Cameroon Cameroon (; french: Cameroun, ff, Kamerun), officially the Republic of Cameroon (french: République du Cameroun, links=no), is a country in west-central Africa. It is bordered by Nigeria to the west and north; Chad to the northeast; the C ...
. The language's presence on the southeastern edge of the Mbum family is thought to reflect early 19th-century migrations from the
Adamawa Plateau The Adamawa Plateau (french: Massif de l'Adamaoua) is a plateau region in west-central Africa stretching from south-eastern Nigeria through north-central Cameroon ( Adamawa and North Provinces) to the Central African Republic. The part of the pl ...
, fleeing Fulani raids. ''
Ethnologue ''Ethnologue: Languages of the World'' (stylized as ''Ethnoloɠue'') is an annual reference publication in print and online that provides statistics and other information on the living languages of the world. It is the world's most comprehensiv ...
'' 17 reports that Kare is intelligible with
Mbum Mbum Proper (also Mboum, Buna, Mboumtiba and Wuna) is a Adamawa–Ubangi language of Central Africa. It is spoken by about people in Cameroon and the Central African Republic. History The Mbum language is spoken by the Mbum people who inhabit ...
proper. However, languages more closely related to either are not reported to be intelligible. ''Ethnologue'' lists Tale (Tali) as a dialect, but Blench (2004) leaves it unclassified within the Mbum languages. ''Ethnologue'' also lists Kali as a synonym; Blench lists a
Kali language Kali is a presumably moribund Mbum language of northern Cameroon or the Central African Republic. Distribution Kali, or ''Kali-Dek'', is found in scattered areas throughout the eastern part of Vina department ( Belel commune), in the eastern pa ...
in a different branch of the Mbum languages.


Phonology

Kare has the following consonantal phonemes: It has the following vowel phonemes: There is a phonological contrast between high and low tone (eg ''sá'' "say" vs. ''sà'' "laugh"), and a rarer phonetic mid tone whose phonological status is not established. Only monosyllabic words may bear rising or falling tone.


Grammar

The basic word order of Kare is subject-verb-object, eg ''kɛ́ hòrò húrù'' (3SG eat manioc) "he ate manioc". Negation is handled with the sentence-final particle ''yá'' "not"; when negated, the locative copula ''yè'' "be (in a place)" is replaced by ''tí'', and the equative copula ''ɓá'' "be (equivalent to)" by ''tí ɓá''. Verbal nouns are formed by raising the last syllable's tone and adding a suffix ''-Cà'', where C = ''l'' or ''r'' after an oral vowel, ''n'' after a nasal vowel, and is empty after a consonant: ''fà'' "deny" > ''fárà'' "denial", ''sɛ̀l'' "untie" > ''sɛ́là'' "untying".


Pronouns

Kare has no
grammatical gender In linguistics, grammatical gender system is a specific form of noun class system, where nouns are assigned with gender categories that are often not related to their real-world qualities. In languages with grammatical gender, most or all nouns ...
. Its personal pronouns are as follows: To these may be added ''hánà'' "each other, other".


Noun phrases

There is a closed class of morphologically invariant adjectives (eg ''fé'' "new", ''sɛ́ŋɛ́'' "red"), which typically precede the noun but may also follow it to indicate a permanent quality, or may be used as nouns in their own right. Determiners (''hánà'' "other", ''kɛ́'' "the", ''yɛ̀í'' "this", ''yɔ̀ɔ́'' "that", ''nɛ̄'' "that yonder") follow the noun, and are followed by the plural marker ''rì'': ''nzù kɛ́ rí pí'' (person DEF PL also) "the people too". Numerals and quantifiers come at the end, following the (optional) plural marker: ''nzù ndíɓí'' "five people" (person five), ''nzù rì sérè'' "two people" (person PL two). Direct genitives are formed by juxtaposition, eg ''sã̀ũ̀ lìà'' (root story) "the story's basis"; analytic genitives use the particle ''ʔà'', eg ''vùn ʔà bá'' (house GEN father) "the father's house". Relative clauses are formed with a demonstrative followed (not always immediately) by the relative marker ''ɗá'', eg ''nzù yɛ̀í ɗá rí mí léóɗáà'' (person this REL rob me yesterday) "the person who robbed me yesterday".


Prepositions

All adpositions in Kare precede their complement. There are four primary (pure) prepositions: ''kà'' "with (instrumental)", ''té'' "with (comitative)", ''ʔá'' "in", ''báŋ'' "like", eg ''kɛ́ ɡí té bá nɛ̄'' (3SG come with father 3SG.POSS) "he came with his father". Alongside these there are a number of secondary postpositions transparently derived from nouns (often body parts), eg ''tûl'' "head" > ''túl'' "on top of".Lim 1997:200


Bibliography

* François Lim, ''Description linguistique du Kare (phonologie-syntaxe)'', Université de la Sorbonne Nouvelle. Paris, 1997, 368 pp. (thèse).


References

*Roger Blench, 2004
List of Adamawa languages
(ms) {{Languages of Cameroon Languages of the Central African Republic Languages of Cameroon Mbum languages