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Cushitic Branch

Cushitic Branch

Cushitic languages form a branch of the Afro-Asiatic language family. They are spoken in Ethiopia, Eritrea, Somalia, Kenya, and Djibouti — countries located in the Horn of Africa.

The dominant Cushitic languages, both in terms of number of speakers and geographical extension are Oromo, with about 24 million speakers in Ethiopia and Kenya; Somali, with 12.6 million speakers in Somalia, Ethiopia, and Djibouti; Sidamo with 1.9 million speakers in Ethiopia; Afar with about 1.4 million speakers in Eritrea; and Bedawi with about 1.2 million speakers in Sudan.

The table below lists Cushitic languages with more than 500,000 speakers. The remaining languages have significantly smaller populations, and some of them are small enough to be endangered or on the brink of extinction.

Cushitic (47 languages)
Somali
12.6 million

Somalia

Oromo West Central 8.9 million Ethiopia
Oromo Eastern 4.5 million Ethiopia
Oromo, Borana-Arsi-Guji 3.8 million Ethiopia
1.9 million
Ethiopia
Afar
1.4 million
Ethiopia
Bedawi (Beja) 1.2 million Sudan
Hadiyya 924,000 Ethiopia
Gedeo 639,000 Ethiopia
Kambaata 606,000 Ethiopia
Maay 595,000 Somalia

 

Because West Cushitic languages have few vocabulary items in common with the other Cushitic tongues, some scholars consider them to form a separate branch of the Afro-Asiatic language family, called Omotic. The table below lists the most populous Omotic (West Cushitic Languages).

West Cushitic (Omotic) (28 languages)
Gamo-Gofa-Dawro
1.2 million
Ethiopia
1.2 million
Ethiopia
569,626
Ethiopia
Bench
174,000
Ethiopia
158,857
Ethiopia
Koorete 104,000 Ethiopia

 

Status

 

Dialects

Most Cushitic languages have several dialects. For instance, Oromo and Somali have three major dialects each, while Afar and Bedawi each have four. In most cases, the dialects are mutually intelligible.

 

Structure

Sound system

Most syllables in Cushitic languages end in a vowel or a single consonant. Consonant clusters do not occur at the beginning or at the end of words.

 

Vowels

Most Cushitic languages have five vowel phonemes, i.e., sounds that make a difference in word meaning. They can be short or long. The length of the vowel makes a difference in word meaning e.g., in Oromo, laga ‘river’ and laagaa ‘roof of the mouth.’ In the table below, long vowels are marked by a macron over the vowel. In writing, long vowels are usually represented by a double letter.

Close
i, ī
xx
u, ū
Mid
e, ē
xx
o, ō
Open
a, ā
xx

 

Consonants

Most Cushitic languages have 22-25 consonants. Some of the distinguishing characteristics of their consonant systems are listed below.

 

Tones and stress

Cushitic languages are usually described as being tonal. Tone in these language is usually closely associated with stress, e.g., in Somali high tone has strong stress, falling tone has weaker stress, and low tone has no stress.. Some linguists feel that the Cushitic system is could be more accurately described as having pitch-accent rather than tone. The tonal system of Cushitic languages operates at the grammatical, rather than at the lexical level, as it does in languages such as Chinese. For instance, the masculine-feminine distinction is represented by tone in words such as in Somali ínan ‘boy’ and inán ‘girl.’

 

Grammar

The grammatical systems of Cushitic languages are quite complex. Although there is considerable variation among the languages with respect to their grammatical structure, most of them share certain features, such as for instance, all Cushitic languages are inflected and tend to use postpositions more than prepositions.

 

Nouns, adjectives

Nouns and adjectives in Cushitic languages may have some or all of the following features:

 

Pronouns

Cushitic pronouns have the following features:

 

Verbs

Cushitic Verbal systems are complex and vary considerably from language to language.

 

Word order

The typical word order in Oromo sentences is Subject – Object – Verb. However, other orders are possible in order to mark the focus (new or prominent information ) in the sentence. Modifiers, articles, pronouns, and case markers follow the nouns they modify.

 

Vocabulary

Cushitic languages include many loanwords from Amharic, Arabic, Portuguese, French, English, and Nilo-Saharan languages. The most productive ways of word derivation in Cushitic languages are reduplication and compounding.

Below are the numerals 1-10 in six Cushitic languages.

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Oromo
tokko
lama
sadii
afur
shan
ja’a
torba
saddeet
sagal
kudha
Somali
kow, hal
labo
saddex
afar
shan
lix
toddoba
siddeed
sagaal
toban
inik-i
nammay-a
sidox-u
firey-i
konoy-u
lixey-i
malxiin-i
baxaar-a
sagaal-a
taban-a
iniik
lammaa
adoh
afaar
koon
leeh
maleheen
bahaar
sagaal
tammon
ngaal
mhaloo’b
mhay
fad’ig
?ay
asagwir
asaramaa
samhay
as’s’ad’ig
tamin
mitte
lame
sase
shoole
onte
leye
lamala
sette
honse
tonne

 

Writing

Cushitic languages have been written in several scripts.

Oromo Until the 1970s, Afaan Oromo was written with either the Ge’ez script (also known as Ethiopic script) or the Latin alphabet. Between 1974 and 1991 under the military regime, the writing of Afaan Oromo in any script was forbidden. The Latin alphabet (Qubee) was adopted after the overthrow of the military regime in 1991. This has led to a greatly increased production of texts.
Somali Somali was not written until the Osmanya alphabet was developed in 1920 in an attempt to forestall the implementation of an Arabic-based alphabet. The Latin alphabet was adopted in 1972. There is no standardized orthography so variations occur.
Bedawi Arabic-based script
Afar Either the Latin alphabet or Ge’ez script
Sidamo Adapted version of the Latin alphabet

 

Difficulty

Language Difficulty

How difficult is it to learn Cushitic languages?
There is no data on the difficulty level of Cushitic languages for speakers of English.