Ghulfan language explained

Ghulfan
Also Known As:Uncunwee
States:Sudan
Region:Nuba Mountains
Ethnicity:Ghulfan
Speakers:40,000
Date:2022
Ref:e27
Familycolor:Nilo-Saharan
Fam2:Eastern Sudanic
Fam3:Northern Eastern
Fam4:Nubian
Fam5:Central
Fam6:Hill
Fam7:Kadaru–Ghulfan
Iso3:ghl
Glotto:ghul1238
Glottorefname:Uncunwee

Ghulfan (also Gulfan, Uncu, Uncunwee, Wunci, Wuncimbe) is a Hill Nubian language spoken in the central Nuba Mountains in the south of Sudan. It is spoken by around 40,000 people in the Ghulfan Kurgul and Ghulfan Morung hills, south of Dilling. The villages in which the language is spoken are Dabri, Karkandi, Katang, Kurgul, Namang, Ninya, Moring, Ota, Shigda, and Tarda. It is closely related to Kadaru, with which it forms the Kadaru-Ghulfan subgroup of Hill Nubian.[1]

Ethnologue reports that the use of Ghulfan is decreasing as younger speakers switch to Sudanese Arabic with only adults speaking the language now and that there are no monolingual speakers of the language.

Phonology

Consonants

LabialAlveolarRetroflexPost-alv./
Palatal
Velar
Nasalpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Plosive/
Affricate
voicelesspronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
voicedpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Fricativepronounced as /link/
Lateralpronounced as /link/
Rhoticpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Approximantpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/

Vowels

FrontCentralBack
Closepronounced as /link/ pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/ pronounced as /link/
Near-closepronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Close-midpronounced as /link/ pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/ pronounced as /link/
Open-midpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Openpronounced as /link/ pronounced as /link/
[2]

Notes and References

  1. News: Ghulfan. Ethnologue. 2017-06-25.
  2. Book: Williams, Robert S. . Ghulfan Grammar Sketch . Comfort . Jade . n.d..