Dictionary:
Kor·do·fan·i·an (kôr'də-făn'ē-ən) ![]() |
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| Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Kordofanian languages |
For more information on Kordofanian languages, visit Britannica.com.
| WordNet: Kordofanian |
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
a group of languages spoken in the relatively small Kordofan area of the south Sudan
| Wikipedia: Kordofanian languages |
| Kordofanian | |
|---|---|
| Geographic distribution: |
Kordofan |
| Genetic classification: |
Niger-Congo Kordofanian |
| Subdivisions: |
Kadu (in Nilo-Saharan)
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| ISO 639-5: | kdo |
The Kordofanian languages are a geographic grouping of three to five language families spoken in the Nuba Mountains of Kordofan Province, Sudan. In 1963 Joseph Greenberg added them to the Niger-Congo family, creating his Niger-Kordofanian proposal. The Kordofanian languages have not been shown to be more distantly related than other branches of Niger-Congo, however, nor have they been shown to constitute a valid group. Today the Kadu family is excluded, and the other four usually included in Niger-Congo proper.
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The Heiban languages, also called Koalib or Koalib-Moro, and the Talodi languages, also called Talodi-Masakin, are closely related.[1]
The number of Rashad languages, also called Tegali-Tagoi, varies among different descriptions, from two (Williamson & Blench 2000), three (Ethnologue), to eight (Blench ms). Tagoi has a noun-class system like the Atlantic Congo languages—apparently borrowed,—while Tegali does not.
Roger Blench notes that the Talodi and Heiban languages have the noun-class systems characteristic of the Atlantic-Congo core of Niger-Congo, but that the two Katla languages have no trace of ever having had such a system, whereas the Kadu languages and some of the Rashad languages appear to have acquired noun classes as part of a Sprachbund rather than having inherited them. He concludes that the Kordofanian languages do not form a genealogical group, but that Talodi and Heiban are core Niger-Congo whereas Katla and Rashad form a peripheral branch along the lines of Mande.
Since Schadeberg 1981c, the "Tumtum" or Kadu branch is now widely seen as Nilo-Saharan. However, the evidence is slight, and a conservative classification would treat it as an independent family.
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| Niger-Kordofanian (language family of sub-Saharan Africa) | |
| Joseph Harold Greenberg (American anthropologist) | |
| African languages (language, Africa) |
| What Bantu language belongs to the niger-kordofanian? | |
| What is the most common Niger-Kordofanian language? |
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![]() | Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Read more | |
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