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Tigrigna

Tigrigna Language

 

Merhaba – Welcome

Tigrinya (Tigrinya, Tigray, Tigriññā, ትግርኛ) is a member of the Semitic branch of the Afro-Asiatic language family. It is closely related to Amharic,Tigré and Ge’ez, an extinct language that is still used in religious practice. It is distantly related to Arabic and Hebrew.

 

Status

 

Ethiopia
According to the 2007 census, Tigrigna is spoken by 4.3 million people in Ethiopia, 2.8 million of whom are monolingual speakers of the language. It is the third most commonly spoken language in Ethiopia where it serves as a lingua franca among the country’s different ethnic groups. It is used in the mass media, education, and in government and non-governmental agencies. Population total of all countries is estimated at 6.9 million (Ethnologue).

Eritrea

Tigrigna is spoken by 2.5 million people in Eritrea where it is the de facto national language. It is the most spoken language in the country, and is used in mass media, education, and government (Ethnologue).

Israel
There are 10,000 speakers of Tigrigna in Israel (Ethnologue).

 

Dialects

There is no significant dialectal variation in Tigrigna, but scholars usually divide the language into two mutually intelligible dialects:

 

Structure

Sound system

 

Vowels

Tigrigna has seven vowel phonemes, i.e., sounds that distinguish word meaning. Vowel sequences are not permitted. There is some disagreement among linguists as to whether Tigrinya has long vowels in addition to short ones.

Front Central Back
Close
i
ɨ
u
Mid
e
ə
o
Open
a

 

Consonants

Tigrigna has a rich consonant system. It has preserved the two pharyngeal consonants /ħ/ and /ʕ/ from the ancient Ge’ez language.

 

Palatal Pharyngeal
plain labialized
voiceless plain
p
t
k
ʔ
voiceless emphatic
p’
t’
k’
kʷ’
voiced
b
d
g
voiceless plain
f
s
ʃ
(x)
(xʷ)
ħ
h
voiceless emphatic
s’
(x’)
(xʷ’)
voiced
(v)
z
ʒ
ʕ
Affricates voiceless plain
ts
voiceless emphatic
ts’
tʃ’
voiced
m
n
ɲ
x
l
Flap/trill
r
w
j

Grammar

Tigrigna uses suffixes and prefixes attached to roots for representing grammatical information. As in other Semitic languages, morphology is based on tri-consonant roots, from which nouns, adjectives, and verbs are formed by vowel insertion along with prefixation and suffixation.

 

Nouns and pronouns

 

 

Verbs

Like other Semitic languages, Tigrigna has a very elaborate verb morphology.

 

Word order

The basic word order in Tigrigna is Subject-Object-Verb. Modifiers precede the nouns they modify.

 

Vocabulary

The basic lexicon of Tigrigna is Semitic in origin. Words are based on consonantal roots that can be used in different templates. Roots can have three to five consonants. The templates themselves are consonant-vowel sequences, such as CVCV. Tigrigna has also borrowed heavily from Ge’ez, Italian, and English. Examples of loanwords are mekina ‘car’, beera ‘beer’, farmacha ‘pharmacy’.

Hello Selam
Goodbye Dehaan kun
Welcome Merhaba
Please Bejaka (masculine), bejakee (feminine)
Thank you Yekanyeley
I am sorry Aytehazeley
Excuse me Yikrie-ta
Yes Uwe
No Aykonen

 

Below are Tigrigna numbers 1-10.

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
hadde
kelete
seleste
arbaate
hamushte
shedushte
shewate
shemonte
teshate
aserte

 

 

Writing

Tigrigna is written with an adapted version of the Ge’ez (Ethiopic) script. Originally developed for the Ge’ez language, it first appeared in writing during the 13th century. It is a syllabic script in which each symbol represents a CV (Consonant + Vowel) syllable. The orthography does not mark gemination (doubling of consonants).

Written records include religious texts produced by missionaries. Today, there is a growing number of printed material, including textbooks and literature.

Take a look at Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in Tigrinya in the Ge’ez (Ethiopic) script and in romanization. Note that “::” represents a period.

ዓንቀፅ 1
ብመንፅር ክብርን መሰልን ኩሎም ሰባት እንትውለዱ ነፃን ማዕሪን እዮም፡፡ ምስትውዓልን ሕልናን ዝተዓደሎም ብምዃኖም ንሕድሕዶም ብሕውነታዊ መንፈስ ክተሓላለዩ ኦለዎም፡፡
Bəmäns̤ər kəbrən mäsälen kulom säbat əntəwläṣu näs̤an maʿərän əyom. Məstəwʿalen ḥəlenan zətäʿadälom bəməxʷanom bəḥəwnätawi mänfäs kətäḥalaläyu aläwom.
All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.

 

Difficulty

Language Difficulty

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