Final Records of the Sambe Language of Central Nigeria: Phonology, noun morphology, and wordlist

Date
2015-09
Authors
Blench, Roger
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University of Hawaii Press
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192
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228
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Abstract
This paper presents all the available data on the Sambe language [xab], formerly spoken in a remote area of Central Nigeria. Two field trips were made, in 2001 and 2005, and a substantial wordlist was collected. By 2005, the two remaining informants were very old and it is presumed Sambe is no longer spoken. The speakers still retain their ethnic identity but today speak a dialect of Ninzo. Sambe is part of the little-known Alumic group of languages and its closest relative is Hasha. Alumic in turn is one subgroup of Plateau, itself a branch of Benue-Congo and thus part of Niger-Congo. Sambe has an extremely rich phonological inventory. Fossil prefixes show that it had a system of nominal affixing until recently, but this had become unproductive by the time the language was recorded.
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Niger-Congo, Plateau, Sambe, nominal morphology, phonology, endangered languages
Citation
Blench, Roger. 2015. Final Records of the Sambe Language of Central Nigeria: Phonology, noun morphology, and wordlist. Language Documentation & Conservation 9. 192-228
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37
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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International
Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 United States
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