Dogon | |
Region: | Dogon country, Mali (mainly Bandiagara Region) |
Ethnicity: | Dogon people |
Familycolor: | Niger-Congo |
Fam1: | Niger-Congo? |
Child1: | Plains Dogon |
Child2: | Escarpment |
Child3: | West Dogon (Budu) |
Child4: | North Plateau |
Child5: | Naŋa–Walo (Yanda) |
Child6: | Tebul Dogon |
Child7: | ? Ana Dogon |
Glotto: | dogo1299 |
Glottorefname: | Dogon |
Map: | Map of the Dogon languages.svg |
Mapcaption: | Map of the Dogon languages |
The Dogon languages are a small closely related language family that is spoken by the Dogon people of Mali and may belong to the proposed Niger–Congo family. There are about 600,000 speakers of its dozen languages. They are tonal languages, and most, like Dogul, have two tones, but some, like Donno So, have three. Their basic word order is subject–object–verb.
The evidence linking Dogon to the Niger–Congo family is mainly a few numerals and some common core vocabulary. Various theories have been proposed, placing them with Gur, Mande, or as an independent branch, the last now being the preferred approach. The Dogon languages show very few remnants of the noun class system characteristic of much of Niger–Congo, leading linguists to conclude that they likely diverged from Niger–Congo very early.
Roger Blench comments,[1]
and:[2]
The Bamana and Fula languages have exerted significant influence on Dogon, due to their close cultural and geographical ties.
Blench (2015) speculates that Bangime and Dogon languages may have a substratum from a "missing" branch of Nilo-Saharan that had split off relatively early from Proto-Nilo-Saharan, and tentatively calls that branch "Plateau".[3]
The Dogon consider themselves a single ethnic group, but recognise that their languages are different. In Dogon cosmology, Dogon constitutes six of the twelve languages of the world (the others being Fulfulde, Mooré, Bambara, Bozo and Tamasheq).[4] Jamsay is thought to be the original Dogon language, but the Dogon "recognise a myriad of tiny distinctions even between parts of villages and sometimes individuals, and strive to preserve these" (Hochstetler 2004:18).
The best-studied Dogon language is the escarpment language Toro So (Tɔrɔ sɔɔ) of Sanga, due to Marcel Griaule's studies there and because Toro So was selected as one of thirteen national languages of Mali. It is mutually intelligible with other escarpment varieties. However, the plains languages—Tene Ka, Tomo Ka, and Jamsay, which are not intelligible with Toro so—have more speakers.
Bangime language (Baŋgɛri mɛ), is considered a divergent branch of Dogon by some and a possible language isolate by others (Blench 2005b).
Calame-Griaule appears to have been the first to work out the various varieties of Dogon. Calame-Griaule (1956) classified the languages as follows, with accommodation given for languages which have since been discovered (new Dogon languages were reported as late as 2005), or have since been shown to be mutually intelligible (as Hochstetler confirmed for the escarpment dialects). The two standard languages are asterisked.
Douyon and Blench (2005) report an additional variety, which is as yet unclassified:
Blench noted that the plural suffix on nouns suggests that Budu is closest to Mombo, so it has been tentatively included as West Dogon above. He also notes that Walo–Kumbe is lexically similar to Naŋa; Hochstetler suspects it may be Naŋa. The similarities between these languages may be shared with Yanda. These are all extremely poorly known.
Glottolog 4.3[5] synthesises classifications from Moran & Prokić (2013) and Hochstetler (2004). Moran & Prokić (2013) argue for a binary east-west split within Dogon, with Yanda Dom Dogon, Tebul Ure Dogon, and Najamba-Kindige as originally western Dogon languages that have become increasingly more similar to eastern Dogon languages due to intensive contact.
Bondum Dom, Kindige, Najamba
Ibi So, Ireli, Sangha So, Yorno So, Youga So
Bama, Domno, Gono, Guru, Perge Tegu
Gimri Kan, Tengu Kan, Tenu Kan, Togo Kan, Woru Kan
Comparison of basic vocabulary words of the Dogon languages,[6] along with Bangime:[7]
Language | Location | eye | ear | nose | tooth | tongue | mouth | blood | bone | tree | water | eat | name | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
gìrǐː | súgùrù | kín | ɛ̌n | nɛ́nɛ́, nɛ̀nɛ̌ː | kɛ̀nɛ́, áŋá | ìllîː | kǐː | náː | dǐː | káː | bôy | |||
Tabi | jìró, gìró | súgúrú | cìrⁿò-ká | jìrⁿó | lèlá | ká | néŋ | cìrá | náː, X nà | ní | lí ~ lɛ́ | ìsǒŋ | ||
Beni | jìré | súːrⁿù | círⁿì | ìrⁿú, ìrⁿí | lɛ̀mdɛ̂ː | mǒː, m̀bǒː | gòŋgòró | cìrⁿéy | náː, nàː-dûm | nîː | ñɛ́ | ìnìrⁿîː | ||
Yanda | gìd-íyè, gìdè | sún | kìnzà | ìn | nɛ̀mdà | cɛ́nɛ́, m̀bò | jènjù | kìrⁿà | tìmè, tìmɛ̀, nìː | ínjú | ʔə́ñɛ́ ~ ʔə́ñá-lì | ín | ||
jìré | sûn | círⁿé | ìrⁿé | nɛ̀nɛ́ | káː | nɛ̂yⁿ | cìrⁿé | náː | níː | ñɛ́ː | bón | |||
Pergué | gìré | súŋúrⁿù | kírⁿé | ìrⁿé | lɛ̀lɛ́ | káː | nɛ̂m | kìrⁿé | náː | níː | ñɛ́ː | sórⁿú | ||
Kiri | gìré | súŋùn | kírⁿé | ìrⁿé | nɛ̀nɛ́ | káː | nɛ̂yⁿ | kìrⁿé | ̀̌ | níː | ñɛ́ː | bón | ||
Anda | gìré | súŋúrⁿì | kírⁿê | ǹnɛ́, ìnɛ́, ìrⁿɛ́ | nɛ́ndɛ̀ | nɔ̌ː | gòndùgó | kìrⁿá | déː, nàː dûː | nîː | kɔ́ː | ǹnèrⁿî, ìnèrⁿî | ||
Walo | gìré | sûn | círⁿè | ŋìrⁿɛ́, ñìrⁿɛ́ | lɛ̀mbìrɛ̂ | mbǔː | gòŋgòró | kìrⁿěy | nàː-dûm | nîː | ñɛ́ | ŋìnnîː, ñìnnîː | ||
Kubewel-Adia | gìró ~ gìré | súnùː ~ súnìː | kìnjâː ~ kìnjɛ̂ː | ìnɔ̌ː ~ ìnɛ̌ː | nɛ̌ndɔ̀ː ~ nɛ̌ndɛ̀ː | ìbí-ŋgé ~ ìbí | gěn-gé ~ gěn | kìná-ŋgó ~ kìná | nǐː ~ nìː-mbó | íŋgé ~ íŋgé, ínjé ~ ínjé | kwɛ́ | ínèn ~ ínèn | ||
gìré | súgúlú | kínú | ìnú | nííndɛ́ | kɛ̀nnɛ́, áŋá | ìlìyé | kìyé | tímɛ́ | díí | ńyɛ́ | bóy | |||
Koporo-pen | gìré | súgúrú | kírⁿí | ìrⁿí | nɛ́nɛ́ | káⁿ | nɛ́ | kìrⁿí | náː | díː | ñíː ~ ñíː | bɔ́ⁿ | ||
Songho | gírè | súgúlí kìjìkìjì | kínjà | ínnì | nèːndé | dónì | gèːŋgé | gàːwⁿěː | tíníŋgɔ̀ | mîː | ɲɛ́ː | íní | ||
ɡìré | tàŋà | súmbí-rì | n nóɔ́ n síìⁿ | nóɔ́ n ʒɛ̀rí | nɔ́ɔ̀ | ʒíì | nnòɔ̀rɛ̀ | dʷàà, dʷàɛ̀ | ɥíè | dì-á | (màá) níì |
Comparison of numerals in individual languages:[8]
Language | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dogulu Dom (1) | tɔ̀mɔ̀ | nééɡè | táándù | kɛ́ɛ́sɔ̀ | ǹó | kúlè | sɔ́ɔ́wɛ̀ | sèèlé | tùùwɔ́ | pɛ́ɛ̀l | |
Dogul Dom Dogon (2) | tomo | nɛiɡe | taandu | kɛɛso | n'nɔ | kuloi | sɔɔi | seele | tuwɔ | pɛɛl | |
tíí (túmɔ́ as a modifier) | néé | tààndú | nǎy | ǹnɔ́ | kúlóy | sɔ́y | ɡáɡìrà | túwwɔ́ | pɛ́l | ||
tí (for counting), túru | lɛ̀y | tàːnu | này | nùmoro / nnɔ | kúlóy / kulei | sɔ̀y | ɡàɡara | tùo / tuɡɔ | pɛ́lu | ||
túrú | lɛ̌y / lɛ̀y | tǎːn / tàːn | nǎyⁿ / nàyⁿ * | nǔːyⁿ / nùːyⁿ | kúróy | sûyⁿ | ɡáːrà | láːrúwà / láːrwà | pɛ́rú | ||
Toro So Dogon (1) | tíì (for counting), túrú | lɛ́j | tàánú | nàjí | nùmɔ́r̃ɔ́ | kúlòj | sɔ́j | ɡáárà | túwɔ́ | pɛ́rú | |
Toro So Dogon (2) | tíírú (for counting), túrú | léí | táánú | náí | númɔ́rɔ́n | kúlóí | sɔ́í | ɡáɡárá | túwɔ́ | pɛ́lú | |
túrú | lɛ̌y | tǎːlí | nǎyⁿ * | nǔːyⁿ | kúréy | sóyⁿ | ɡáːrà | láːrà | pɛ́ró | ||
tùmá | jǒj | tàːní | nìŋŋějⁿ | nùmmǔjⁿ | kúròj | síjⁿɔ̀jⁿ | ɡáːràj | tèːsúm | pɛ́ːrú | ||
tùmɔ́: | yěy | tàːnú | nǐːyⁿ | nùmǔyⁿ | kúròy | súyⁿɔ̀yⁿ | ɡáːrày | tèːsǐm | pɛ́rú | ||
yɛ̀ːtáːŋɡù / tíːtà (in counting) | nɛ́ːŋɡá | táːndì | kɛ́ːjɔ́ | núːmù | kúléyⁿ | sɔ́ːlì | séːlè | tóːwà | pɛ́ːlù | ||
kúndé | nôːj | tàːndîː | kɛ́ːdʒɛ̀j | nùmîː | kúlèj | swɛ̂j | sáːɡìː | twâj | píjɛ́lì | ||
tùmâ | wǒj | tàːndǐː | nɔ̌jⁿ | nìmǐː | kúrê | sújɛ̂ | ɡáːrɛ̀ | tèːsǐː | pɛ́ːrú | ||
Togo Kan Dogon (1) | tí | lɔ́y | tàán, tàánú | nǎyⁿ | núnɛ́ɛ́ⁿ | kúréé | sɔ́ɔ̀ | sìláà | túwáà | pɛ́rú | |
Togo Kan Dogon (2) | tí | lɔ́yì | tánn | náɲì | númɛ̀ | kúlèn | sɔ́ | sílà | túwà | pɛ́lì | |
tùmá: | nɔ́ː / nó | táːndù | cɛ́zɔ̀ | nûm | kúlé | swɛ́ː | sáːɡè | twâː | píyél |