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Hamer language

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Hamer-Banna
Native toEthiopia
RegionSouth Omo Region
EthnicityHamar, Banna, Karo speakers
Native speakers
74,000 (2007 census)[1]
Dialects
Geʽez
Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-3amf
Glottologhame1242
ELPHamer-Bana-Kara

Hamer or Hamer-Banna (Hamer: hámar aapó) is a language within the South Omotic branch of the Afroasiatic language family. It is spoken primarily in southern Ethiopia by the Hamar people, Banna people, and by speakers of Karo.

Pidgin Hamer
Native toEthiopia
Native speakers
None
Hamer-based pidgin
Language codes
ISO 639-3None (mis)
Glottologpidg1260

There is a pidginized variety in local use.[2]

Phonology

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Consonants

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Hamer has six places of articulation for consonants, and eleven manners of articulation, though the system is not entirely orthogonal.

  Bilabial Alveolar Palatal Velar Uvular Glottal
Pulmonic Stop p b t d   k g q ʔ
Ingressive Stop ɓ ɗ   ɠ    
Ejective   tʃʼ      
Fricative   s z ʃ x   h
Affricate   ts tʃ dʒ      
Nasal m n ɲ      
Flap   ɾ        
Lateral   l        
Semivowel w   j      

/p/ may optionally be realized as [ɸ] in any position, except as /pp/ and /mp/, in which cases it is always realized as [p].[3] Several phonemes have special intervocalic or prevocalic realizations:

/VbV/ [β]
/Vka/ [x]
/#qa/ [qʼ]
/#qo/, /#qu/ [ʔ]
/VɓV/ [b], [β]
/VɗV/ [d], [ʔ]
/#tʼa/, /#tʼi/ [ʦʼ]
/VtʃʼV/ [tʃ][4]

/n/ assimilates to a following velar (i.e., as [ŋ]).

Consonant length is distinctive non-initially. Long /ɾ/ is realized as a trilled /r/.

Vowels

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There are five basic vowels:

Front Central Back
Close i       u
Close-mid   e   o  
Open     a    

The vowels are further subdivided into two main categories (with a third being a surface "umlaut" phenomenon (see below)). Category I vowels are shorter, pharyngealized, and have retracted tongue root. Category II vowels are longer, glottalized, and have advanced tongue root.

Vowel Harmony exists in that every root word and every suffix belongs to either category I or II. When the category of a root and its suffix do not agree, a kind of umlauting takes place. An umlauted vowel retains its basic place of articulation, and is pronounced between the corresponding category I and II vowels, i.e. of medium length, and unmarked for pharyngealization, glottalization or tongue root position. Generally, the vowel(s) of the suffix undergo umlauting, but there is a set of "strong" suffixes which retain their category, and cause the vowels of the root to undergo umlauting.

There is a sixth non-phonemic vowel, /ə/, which appears in speech epenthetically to "break up" otherwise invalid consonant clusters. There is no need to consider this a phoneme, and no definitive reason for it to require a grapheme, as it occurs entirely predictably as part of what is essentially an allophonic process.

Syllable and word structure

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Syllable structure is simply (C)V(C), though syllable-final consonants are rare. Strings of at least three vowels are documented. Strings of more than two consonants are not documented. There are a large number of (mostly very simple) rules governing metathesis and epenthesis when consonant clusters appear. In summary, there are three sorts of consonant cluster: "valid", "special", and "invalid". Valid clusters undergo no change between their underlying and surface forms. Special clusters undergo some kind of (generally metathetic) transformation in their surface forms. Invalid clusters insert a non-phonemic /ə/ between the two consonants to create their surface forms.

Orthography

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There is no official writing system for Hamer, though several romanization schemes have been proposed, along with a Gə'əz orthography. As yet, there is no movement for official recognition of any of these systems.

"Lydall" romanization

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This is the romanization used by Jean Lydall. It is perhaps the de facto standard, simply by being the one in which the majority of the existing corpus is presented.

Consonants

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  Bilabial Alveolar Palatal Velar Uvular Glottal
Pulmonic Stops b p d t j c g k   '
Ejective Stop         q'  
Ingressive Stops B D   G    
Fricatives f z s š x   h
Affricate   ts        
Nasals m n ɲ ŋ    
Flap   r        
Lateral   l        
Semivowels w   y      

Category I vowels

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ɪ       ʊ
  ɛ   ɔ  
    ʌ    

Category II vowels

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i       u
  e   o  
    a    

Umlauted vowels

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Vowels which have been umlauted are written using the letter for their original sound, combined with an underline.

No marking of stress occurs.

Gə'əz orthography

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Letters are provided below with their traditional Amharic names. Rows marked in dark red have special meanings that cannot fully be explained in the table: the ʾÄlf row is used for Category II vowels without a preceding consonant, while the ʿÄyn row is used for Category I vowels without a preceding consonant.

  ä
[ə]
u i a e ə
[ɨ]
o wa
[jə]
Hoy h  
Läwe l  
Ḥäwt x  
May m
Śäwt ʃ  
Rəʾs ɾ
Sat s  
Ḳaf q'  
Bet b  
  ɓ በ፟ ቡ፟ ቢ፟ ባ፟ ቤ፟ ብ፟ ቦ፟ ቧ፟  
Täwe t  
  c  
Nähas n  
ʾÄlf [ʾ] Error: {{Transliteration}}: transliteration text not Latin script (pos 1) (help)  
Kaf k  
Wäwe w  
ʿÄyn [ʿ] Error: {{Transliteration}}: transliteration text not Latin script (pos 1) (help)  
Zäy z  
Yämän y  
Dänt d  
  ɟ  
  ɗ ደ፟ ዱ፟ ዲ፟ ዳ፟ ዴ፟ ድ፟ ዶ፟ ዷ፟  
Gäml g  
  ɠ ገ፟ ጉ፟ ጊ፟ ጋ፟ ጌ፟ ግ፟ ጎ፟ ጓ፟  
Ṣädäy t͡s  
Äf f
Psa p  

Morphology

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Nouns

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Nouns do not have inherent gender or number, but may be inflected masculine, feminine, and plural, all three of which are contrastive (that is, a noun cannot be inflected for both a gender and for plurality). While these inflections are not obligatory, they trigger agreement on adjectives and verbs. The inflection markers are:

Masculine Feminine Plural
-â, -tâ -no, -tóno -na

The forms beginning with "t" may only be attached directly to the root, and are usually used with animate nouns. The other forms may be attached to the root or to the stem.[5]

For inanimate nouns, marked masculinity is usually diminutive, while marked femininity is augmentative. E.g., a clay pot is dáa. Daatâ (masculine) signifies a small clay pot, while dáano (feminine) is a large clay pot. Cross-linguistically, the use of masculine as diminutive is unusual, as is free gender inflection.[6]

Verbs

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Aspect and tense are primarily conveyed through grammatical structures, such as multi-word expressions, repetition of verb stems, auxiliary verbs, and the combination of verb bases with specific markers. Aspect is not indicated in negative forms or in questions asking for specific information, which instead differentiate only between past and non-past. The language uses two aspect markers: the perfective marker -de, which represents a complete event with clear time limits, and the imperfective marker -da, which describes events without defined temporal boundaries.[7]

Imperative: The verb root combines with to address a single individual. The verb root combines with to address multiple individuals. For example: gi-á! (say, IMP.2SG), gi-é! (say-IMP.2PL).

Adverbs

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In the Hamer-Banna language, as with many other languages, adverbs are used to modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs to provide more detailed information about actions, qualities, or other circumstances. Below are examples of locational, temporal, and manner adverbs using different words in the context of the Hamer-Banna language.[8]

temporal adverbs: iní (earlier, before), táaki (now), beré (later)

manner adverbs: sun (just, simply), bish (only)

locational adverbs: óo (there), cóo (down)

Adjectives

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Hamar has two categories of adjectives: those derived from nouns (adjectival nouns) and those formed from verbs (de-verbal adjectives). Adjectives in Hamar can serve as either the main element (head) or as a descriptive element (modifier) in a phrase. Most adjectives are noun-like in nature: they typically end in a consonant or the vowels -a, -e, -i, or -o and are marked for masculine, feminine, and plural through noun-like inflection patterns.

Nouns Verbs
qáji 'cold' qajá 'become/be cold'
dúrpi 'fat' durpá 'become fat'

Postpositions

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Body part terms act as locative noun phrases within a genitive construction, forming postpositional phrases to convey spatial relationships like 'inside,' 'back,' 'behind,' 'on top of,' 'through,' and similar expressions. For example, the postposition íinte ʻinsideʼ contains the body part noun ii ʻstomachʼ followed by the locative case -te, and it can be analysed as follows:

íi (stomach) - n (F.OBL) - te (LOC): in the stomach > inside[9]

Numerals

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The Hamar language employs a base-ten numeral system for numbers from one to nineteen and a base-twenty system for numbers greater than nineteen. The concept of 'zero' is represented by the noun gur. The act of counting is described by the verb paidá. Alongside the traditional numeral system, Hamar also uses a quicker system incorporating borrowed numbers from Amharic. Interestingly, there is no native word in Hamar for 'number,' so younger speakers often adopt the Amharic term qutʼər.[10]

Notes

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  1. ^ Hamer-Banna at Ethnologue (27th ed., 2024) Closed access icon
  2. ^ Petrollino (2016), pp. 2–4, Language variation and patterns of language use.
  3. ^ Petrollino (2016), p. 11
  4. ^ Petrollino (2016), p. 10–22
  5. ^ Petrollino (2016), p. 72–73
  6. ^ Petrollino (2016), p. 78
  7. ^ Petrollino (2016), p. 210.
  8. ^ Petrollino (2016), p. 113–126.
  9. ^ Petrollino (2016), p. 120-121.
  10. ^ Petrollino (2016), p. 128.

References

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  • Lydall, Jean (1976): "Hamer" in: Bender, M. Lionel (ed.): The Non-Semitic Languages of Ethiopia. East Lansing: African Studies Center, Michigan State University. pp. 393–438.
  • Lydall, Jean (1988): Gender, Number and Size in Hamar. in: Bechhaus-Gerst, Marianne and Fritz Serzisko (eds.): Cushitic-Omotic: Papers from the International Symposium on Cushitic and Omotic Languages, Cologne, January 6–7, 1986. Hamburg. pp 77–90.
  • Lydall, Jean (2005): Hamär dialect cluster. in: Uhlig, Siegbert (ed.): Encyclopaedia Aethiopica, Vol. 2. Wiesbaden. pp 981–982.
  • Petrollino, Sara (2016). A grammar of Hamar: a South Omotic Language of Ethiopia (Doctoral thesis). Köln: Rüdiger Köppe Verlag. hdl:1887/44090.
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