Bongo language
Bongo (Bungu), also known as Dor, is a Central Sudanic language spoken by the Bongo people in sparsely populated areas of Bahr al Ghazal in South Sudan.
Numerals
Bongo has a quinary-vigesimal numeral system.[3]
Number | Bongo word |
1 | kɔ̀tʊ́ |
2 | ŋɡɔ̀r |
3 | mʊ̀tːà |
4 | ʔɛ́w |
5 | múì |
6 | dɔ̀kɔtʊ́ |
7 | dɔ́ŋɡɔr |
8 | dɔ̀mʊ́tːà |
9 | dɔ̀mʔɛ́w |
10 | kɪ̀ː |
11 | kɪː̀ (dɔ̀ː) kɔ̀tʊ́ |
12 | kɪː̀ (dɔ̀ː) ŋɡɔ̀r |
13 | kɪː̀ (dɔ̀ː) mʊ̀tːà |
14 | kɪː̀ (dɔ̀ː) ʔɛ́w |
15 | kɪː̀ (dɔ̀ː) múì |
16 | kɪː̀ (dɔ̀ː) dɔ̀kɔtʊ́ |
17 | kɪː̀ (dɔ̀ː) dɔ́ŋɡɔr |
18 | kɪː̀ (dɔ̀ː) dɔ̀mʊ́tːà |
19 | kɪː̀ (dɔ̀ː) dɔ̀mʔɛ́w |
20 | mbàba kɔ̀tʊ́ |
21 | mbàba kɔ̀tʊ́ dɔ̀ː kɔ̀tʊ́ |
22 | mbàba kɔ̀tʊ́ dɔ̀ː ŋɡɔ̀r |
23 | mbàba kɔ̀tʊ́ dɔ̀ː mʊ̀tːà |
24 | mbàba kɔ̀tʊ́ dɔ̀ː ʔɛ́w |
25 | mbàba kɔ̀tʊ́ dɔ̀ː múì |
26 | mbàba kɔ̀tʊ́ dɔ̀ː dɔ̀kɔtʊ́ |
27 | mbàba kɔ̀tʊ́ dɔ̀ː dɔ́ŋɡɔr |
28 | mbàba kɔ̀tʊ́ dɔ̀ː dɔ̀mʊ́tːà |
29 | mbàba kɔ̀tʊ́ dɔ̀ː dɔ̀mʔɛ́w |
30 | mbàba kɔ̀tʊ́ dɔ̀ː kɪ̀ː |
40 | mbàba ŋɡɔ̀r |
50 | mbàba ŋɡɔ̀r dɔ̀ː kɪ̀ː |
60 | mbàba mʊ̀tːà |
70 | mbàba mʊ̀tːà dɔ̀ː kɪ̀ː |
80 | mbàba ʔɛ́w |
90 | mbàba ʔɛ́w dɔ̀ː kɪ̀ː |
100 | mbàla múì |
200 | mbàba múì dɔ̀ː múì |
1000 | mbuda kɔ̀tʊ́ |
2000 | mbuda ŋɡɔ̀r |
Scholarship
The first ethnologists to work with the Bongo language were John Petherick, who published Bongo word lists in his 1861 work, Egypt, the Soudan, and Central Africa; Theodor von Heuglin, who also published Bongo wordlists in Reise in das Gebiet des Weissen Nil, &c. 1862-1864 in 1869; and Georg August Schweinfurth, who contributed sentences and vocabularies in his Linguistische Ergebnisse, Einer Reise Nach Centralafrika in 1873.[4] E. E. Evans-Pritchard published additional Bongo wordl ists in 1937.[5]
More recent scholarship has been done by Eileen Kilpatrick, who published a phonology of Bongo in 1985.[6]
References
- ↑ Bongo at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
- ↑ Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2013). "Bongo". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
- ↑ Bongo at Numeral Systems of the World's Languages
- ↑ The Bongo. Evans-Pritchard, E. E. Sudan Notes and Records (1929): 1-62.
- ↑ The non-Dinka peoples of the Amadi and Rumbek Districts. Evans-Pritchard, E. E.. Sudan Notes and Records (1937): 156-158
- ↑ Bongo Phonology. Eileen Kilpatrick. Occasional Papers in the Study of Sudanese Languages 4 (1985): 1-62.
Further reading
- A Small Comparative Vocabulary of Bongo Baka Yulu Kara Sodality of St Peter Claver, Rome, 1963.
- A Reconstructed History of the Chari Languages - Bongo - Bagirmi - Sara. Segmental Phonology, with Evidence from Arabic Loanwords. Linda Thayer, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1974. Typewritten thesis 309 pages. Copy held by J.A. Biddulph (Africanist publisher, Joseph Biddulph, Pontypridd, Wales).
External links
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