Defaka language explained

Defaka
Also Known As:Afakani
Nativename:Défàkà
States:Nigeria
Region:Rivers State, Opobo–Nkoro
Ethnicity:Defaka
Speakers:200
Date:2001
Ref:e18
Familycolor:Niger-Congo
Fam2:Ijoid?
Iso3:afn
Notice:IPA
Glotto:defa1248
Glottorefname:Defaka

Defaka is an endangered and divergent Nigerian language of uncertain classification. It is spoken in the Opobo–Nkoro LGA of Rivers State, in the Defaka or Afakani ward of Nkọrọ town and Ịwọma Nkọrọ.[1] The low number of Defaka speakers, coupled with the fact that other languages dominate the region where Defaka is spoken, edges the language near extinction on a year-to-year basis. It is generally classified in an Ijoid branch of the Niger–Congo family.[2] However, the Ijoid proposal is problematic. Blench (2012) notes that "Defaka has numerous external cognates and might be an isolate or independent branch of Niger–Congo which has come under Ịjọ influence."[3]

People

Ethnically, the Defaka people are distinct from the Nkoroo, but they have assimilated to Nkoroo culture to such a degree that their language seems to be the only sign of a distinct Defaka identity. Use of the Defaka language however is quickly receding in favour of the language of the Nkoroo, an Ijaw language. Nowadays, most Defaka speakers are elderly people, and even among these, Defaka is rarely spoken - the total number of Defaka speakers is at most 200 nowadays (SIL/Ethnologue 15th ed.).[4] The decrease in use of Defaka is stronger in Nkoroo town than in the Iwoma area. Since the language communities between Defaka and Nkoroo are so intertwined, it is hard to determine which language influences the other. All children grow up speaking Nkoroo (an Ijo language) as a first language. The next most used language among the Defaka is Igbo, owing to the political influence of the Opobo since the days of the Oil Rivers Trade. Igbo has been a language of instruction in many schools in the region and still functions as a regional trade language.

Classification

The Defaka language shows many lexical similarities with Ijọ, some shared regular sound correspondences and some typological similarities with proto-Ịjọ. For example, both languages have a subject–object–verb basic word order, which is otherwise extremely rare in the Niger–Congo language family, being found only in the Mande and Dogon branches.

Also, Defaka has a sex-gender system distinguishing between masculine, feminine, and neuter 3rd-person singular pronouns; this is once again a rarity among south-central Niger–Congo languages other than Ịjoid and Defaka.

While some of the lexical and maybe typological similarities can be attributed to borrowing (as Defaka has been in close contact with Ijọ for more than 300 years), the sound correspondences point to a (somewhat distant) genealogical relationship.

Phonology

Nearly all Defaka are bilingual in Nkọrọọ, and the phonology appears to be the same as that language.

Tone

Defaka has two tones, and . On long vowels and diphthongs, as well as disyllabic words, and contours occur. In addition, there is a downstep that may appear between high tones, and which is the remnant of an elided low tone. However, Shryock et al. were not able to measure significant differences in the pitch traces of,, and –downstep–, all of which have a falling pitch, suggesting that there may be fewer distinctive word tones than the combinations of syllable tones would suggest. However, these all clearly contrast with level-pitched and rising-pitched .

Vowels

The Ijoid vowel harmony has collapsed in Defaka, as it has in Nkọrọọ. There are seven oral vowels, pronounced as //i ɪ e a ɔ o u//, though pronounced as //e// and pronounced as //ɔ// are uncommon. There are five nasal vowels, pronounced as //ĩ ẽ ã õ ũ//. All may occur long. Long vowels are at least twice as long as short vowels.

Consonants

Labial Alveolar Postalveolar
~ palatal
Velar Labial
velar
Nasalm n (ŋ) (ŋ͡m)
Implosiveɓ
Plosivep b t d k ɡ k͡p ɡ͡b
Affricate d͡ʒ ~ z
Fricativef v s ~ ʃ
Lateral
approximant
l
Tap ~ central
approximant
ɾ ~ ɹ j w

Most voiceless obstruents are tenuis. However, pronounced as //k͡p// has a slightly negative voice onset time. That is, voicing commences somewhat before the consonant is released, as in English "voiced" stops such as b. This is typical of labial-velar stops. pronounced as //ɡ͡b//, on the other hand, is fully voiced, as are the other voiced obstruents. Shryock et al. analyse the prenasalised stops pronounced as /[mb nd ŋɡ ŋɡ͡b]/ as consonant clusters with pronounced as //m//. pronounced as /[d͡ʒ]/ varies with pronounced as /[z]/, with some speakers using one, some the other, and some either, depending on the word.

pronounced as //j// and pronounced as //w// may be nasalised before nasal vowels.

The velar plosives pronounced as //k// & pronounced as //ɡ// may be lenited to pronounced as //x// or pronounced as //ɣ// between vowels.

The tap pronounced as //ɾ// is pronounced as an approximant, pronounced as /[ɹ]/, by some speakers. It only occurs between vowels and at the ends of words.

See also

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Blench, Roger. An Atlas of Nigerian Languages. Kay Williamson Educational Foundation. 2019. 4th. Cambridge.
  2. Web site: Did you know Defaka is severely endangered?. Endangered Languages. en. 2017-02-10.
  3. Roger Blench, Niger-Congo: an alternative view
  4. Web site: Documenting Defaka & Nkoroo. defaka.rutgers.edu. 2017-02-10. https://web.archive.org/web/20160314075020/http://defaka.rutgers.edu/people.html. 2016-03-14. dead.