A Grammatical Sketch of the Lusaamia Verb (E.34/J.34)
Author: Robert Botne. In collaboration with: Hannington Ochwada, Michael R. Marlo. Series edited by: Wilhelm J.G. Möhlig †, Bernd Heine.
Series: GA Grammatical Analyses of African Languages Volume 30
200610 pp. Roman, 186 pp.
1 map, 3 tables, numerous charts and graphs, Lusaamia verb stem lexicon (Lusaamia–English and English–Lusaamia), index
Text language(s): English
Format: 160 x 240 mm
410 g
Paperback
€ 39.80
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The Bantu language under consideration is classified as E.34 Guthrie’s zone classification, and J.34 in the Tervuren revision of Guthrie. Lusaamia – Ólusaamya in the language itself – is spoken along the eastern shores of Lake Victoria in western Kenya and eastern Uganda. There are approximately 50,000 speakers in Kenya and 175,000 speakers in Uganda. It is considered to be one of seventeen dialects constituting the Luluyia language cluster. Lusaamia is an agglutinating language – like nearly all Bantu languages – with a basic SVO word order.
This sketch represents the language as spoken in Busia, Western Province, Kenya. The Saamia people live in close proximity to the (Nilotic speaking) Luo people. Because of the dominant size of the Luo population and culture, Lusaamia has a significant number of lexical borrowings from Dholuo. The data described here differ in certain respects from some of the descriptions found in Angogo Kanyoro (1983) and Chagas (1876).
The present work analyses the composition and forms of the verbal word. Besides all typical verbal categories like tense, aspect (Aktionsart), mood, the author also provides detailed descriptions of clitics, the occuring extensions in form of suffixal elements, reduplication phenomena as well as phonological and syllable characteristics of the verb forms of this language. It also contains some proverbs, sayings, and texts followed by a Lusaamia verb stem lexicon (Lusaamia–English and English–Lusaamia).
Review by Ursula Drolc in Afrikanistik-Ägyptologie online 2007
Under these links you will find publications by the author, an analysis of the cultural vocabulary of the Great Lakes Bantu languages (Rwanda / Tanzania / Uganda) and a couple of grammatical descriptions, dictionaries and text collections of these languages:
Accompanying material:
- A Modern Runyoro-Rutooro Grammar (J.10)
(ISBN 978-3-89645-023-4 ) - Igikuria Phonology and Morphology (E.40)
(ISBN 978-3-89645-029-6 ) - Kinyamwezi
(ISBN 978-3-927620-40-7 ) - Legenden, Märchen und Fabeln aus Ruanda
(ISBN 978-3-89645-743-1 ) - Phonology and Morphology of Ekegusii (E.42)
(ISBN 978-3-89645-026-5 ) - Relative Clauses in Luganda (E.15/J.10)
(ISBN 978-3-89645-020-3 ) - SUGIA Sprache und Geschichte in Afrika
(ISBN 978-3-89645-090-6 ) - Tales, Fables and Narratives of Rwanda
(ISBN 978-3-89645-745-5 ) - The Ha Language of Tanzania
(ISBN 978-3-89645-027-2 ) - The Historical Reconstruction of Great Lakes Bantu Cultural Vocabulary
(ISBN 978-3-89645-095-1 ) - Wörterbuch Kinyarwanda–Deutsch
(ISBN 978-3-89645-588-8 )
Cross-reference:
- A Learner’s Chichewa and English Dictionary (N.30)
(ISBN 978-3-927620-10-0 ) - A Lega and English Dictionary (D.25)
(ISBN 978-3-927620-39-1 ) - A Saafi-Saafi (Sébikotane Variety) and English // French Dictionary
(ISBN 978-3-89645-509-3 ) - Domains and Regions in Bantu Tense and Aspect
(ISBN 978-3-89645-772-1 ) - Mpoto Fables and Folktales (N.14, Tanzania)
(ISBN 978-3-89645-738-7 )
Reviews
Because so little work on the grammatical structure of this language has been published this first more comprehensive overview is highly welcome and appreciated. [...] The sketch provides a solid data base of the Lusaamia verb structure containing many examples with brief functional descriptions. This grammatical overview is very useful for typologists and everybody else who is interested in Bantu verb structure.
Uschi Drolc in Afrikanistik-Ägyptologie.online, www.afrikanistik-aegyptologie-online.de/archiv/2007/1040/, 1-2
Maarten Mous in Journal of African Languages and Linguistics, 29/2, 2008, 246-249
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