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Hausa–Gwandara languages - Wikipedia

Hausa–Gwandara languages

The Hausa–Gwandara languages (also known as the A.1 West Chadic languages) of the Afro-Asiatic family are spoken principally in Niger and Nigeria. They include Gwandara and Hausa, the most populous Chadic language and a major language of West Africa.

Hausa–Gwandara
A.1 West Chadic
Geographic
distribution
Nigeria and Niger
Linguistic classificationAfro-Asiatic
Language codes
Glottologwest2718
West Chadic per Newman (1977)

Languages

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The two Hausa–Gwandara languages are:

Classification within West Chadic

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Based on nominal morphology and other grammatical patterns, Blench (2021) considers the Hausa–Gwandara branch to have been the first West Chadic branch to have split off from Proto-West Chadic.[1]

Non-Chadic influences

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The Hausa–Gwandara languages have many words that are not found in other Chadic languages[2] because they are loans from Adamawa, Plateau, Kainji, Nupoid, and other Benue-Congo languages acquired during its expansion across the Nigerian Middle Belt. While those languages became assimilated, many of their words had changed the lexicon of Hausa. Some likely influence from vanished Nilo-Saharan languages on Hausa has been proposed.[2]

List of Hausa words of likely Benue-Congo origin:[2]

English Hausa
nine tárà
mother/woman uwaa
to wash (body) wankèè
bed gado
red, bright red jaa
year shekara
porcupine beguwa
agama lizard ƙadangare
water ruwaa
sun, day rana
egg ƙwǎy
lion záákii
leopard dààmísàà
month, moon wátàà
hare zóómóó
scorpion kunāma
want/need/like/love/wish soo
gourd (sphincter) kondo, ƙunduu
doctor bokaa
hunger yúnwàà
shoe tākalmi
spear grass tofa
kind, sort iri
dance ráwáá
stream rafi
ram rago
baboon goggo, gwaggo
war yāƙi
axe gātari
good, right dede, daidai
bulrush millet maiwa
iburu iburu
half raabi
village/settlement tungaa
female breast mààmáá
flat rock fā, pā
shelter bukka
chew tauna, tamna
meat náamàa
oil mai
pumpkin kàbééwàà

References

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