Zenaga language

Zenaga
Tuḍḍungiyya
Native to Senegal, Mauritania
Region Mederdra
Native speakers
200–300 in Mauritania (1998)[1]
1,900 immigrants in Senegal (no date)[2]
Language codes
ISO 639-2 zen
ISO 639-3 zen
Glottolog zena1248[3]

Zenaga (autonym Tuḍḍungiyya) is a Berber language spoken between Mederdra and the Atlantic coast in southwestern Mauritania and in Senegal. The language shares its basic structure with other Berber languages, but specific details are quite different; in fact, it is probably the most divergent surviving Berber language, with a significantly different sound system made even more distant by sound changes such as /l/ > /dj/ and /x/ > /k/, as well as a difficult-to-explain profusion of glottal stops. The name 'Zenaga' comes from that of a much larger ancient Berber tribe (Iznagen), known in Arabic as the Senhaja.

Adrian Room's African Placenames [4] gives Zenaga derivations for some place-names in Mauritania.

Demographics

Zenaga was once spoken throughout much of Mauritania, but fell into decline when its speakers were defeated by the Maqil Arabs in the Char Bouba war of the seventeenth century. After this war, they were forbidden to bear arms, and variously became either specialists in Islamic religious scholarship or servants to more powerful tribes. It was among the former, more prestigious group that Zenaga survived longest.

In 1940 (Dubié 1940), Zenaga was spoken by about 13,000 people belonging to four nomadic tribes distributed in an area roughly bounded by St. Louis, Podor, Boutilimit, and Nouakchott (but including none of these cities):

(Zenaga names from Nicolas (1953:102.)

These tribes, according to Dubié, traditionally specialised in Islamic religious scholarship, and led a nomadic lifestyle, specialising in sheep and cows. (Camel-herding branches of the same tribes had already switched to Arabic.) Even then, many speakers were shifting to Hassaniya Arabic, the main language of Mauritania, and all were bilingual. Zenaga was used only within the tribe, and it was considered impolite to speak it when non-speakers were present; some speakers deliberately avoided using Zenaga with their children, hoping to give them a head start in Hassaniya. However, many speakers regarded Zenaga as a symbol of their independence and their religious fervor; Dubie cites a Hassaniya proverb: "A Moor who speaks Zenaga is certainly not a Zenagui (a member of a servant tribe.)"

Half a century later, the number of speakers is reportedly 2000. While Zenaga appears to be nearing extinction, Hassaniya, the dominant spoken Arabic dialect of Mauritania, contains a substantial number of Zenaga loanwords (more than 10% of the vocabulary[5]).

Dialects

There are significant dialect differences within Zenaga, notably between the Id-ab-lahsen and Tendgha dialects.

See also

References

  1. Zenaga at Ethnologue (15th ed., 2005)
  2. Senegal at Ethnologue 16, 2009
  3. Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2013). "Zenaga". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
  4. Room, Adrian, African Placenames, McFarland & Co. Jefferson, North Carolina. 1994.
  5. UNICE foundation: La "longue marche" de l'arabisation en mauritanie (French)
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, December 22, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.