Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Lowland East Cushitic [1] is a group of roughly two dozen diverse languages of the Cushitic branch of the Afro-Asiatic family. Its largest representatives are Oromo and Somali . Classification. Lowland East Cushitic classification from Tosco (2020:297): [2] Saho–Afar. Southern. Nuclear. Omo–Tana. Oromoid. Peripheral (?) Dullay. Yaaku.

  2. East Cushitic Afar–Saho; Highland East Cushitic; Lowland East Cushitic ('core' East Cushitic) Dullay; SAOK Eastern Omo–Tana ; Western Omo–Tana ; Oromoid (Oromo–Konsoid)

  3. Speakers of Lowland East Cushitic languages. Speakers of Highland East Cushitic languages. Speakers of West Rift Southern Cushitic languages. References. Cushitic-speaking peoples are the ethnolinguistic groups who speak Cushitic languages natively.

  4. The Lowland East Cushitic languages are a branch of Cushitic languages spoken on the Horn of Africa. There are around 25 languages in the branch still spoken. The most spoken are the Oromo and Somali languages .

  5. The chapter proposes a classification based upon shared innovations and successive binary splits. The soundness of the old and elusive concept of “Lowland East Cushitic” is discussed. In the end, an overarching opposition between a Lowland and Highland branch is proposed, with the latter being the result of specific innovations.

  6. The Afar language (Afar: Qafaraf) (also known as ’Afar Af, Afaraf, Qafar af) is a lowland East Cushitic language spoken by the Afar people in Ethiopia, Eritrea and Djibouti. It is thought to have 1.5 million speakers. Its most similar language is the Saho language. References

  7. Cushitic languages are often described as tonal, meaning that they incorporate two (high and low) or sometimes three (high, middle, and low) pitches to distinguish among words that are otherwise identical; contrast this to the use of intonation (as in English), in which meaning is provided by pitch changes (rising, falling) that occur across the...