Koromfe language explained

Koromfe language should not be confused with Kurumba languages.

Koromfé
States:Burkina Faso, Mali
Date:2001
Ref:e18
Familycolor:Niger-Congo
Fam2:Atlantic–Congo
Fam3:Gur
Fam4:Northern
Iso3:kfz
Glotto:koro1298
Glottorefname:Koromfe
Dia1:Koromba
Dia2:Fulse
Notice:IPA

Koromfé is a Gur language spoken in a U-shaped area around the town of Djibo, in the north of Burkina Faso and southeastern Mali, bordering Dogon Country.

Geographic Distribution

The Koromfé language is spoken in the provinces of Bam and Sanmatenga in the Centre-Nord Region, in the Provinces of Loroum and Yatenga (Titao Subdistrict) in the Nord Region and in the Soum Province of the Sahel Region (DjiboAribinda Subdistrict).

Dialects

Koromfé has two dialects: The western dialect (also known as Koromba or Kurumba) and the eastern dialect (Fulse or Folse). There are two major dialect areas, most conveniently termed East and West. The traditional centre of the Eastern area is Aribinda and of the Western area Pobé-Mengao. The western area is also known as Lorom (with two short close mid vowels), which should not be confused with the recently created province of Loroum centred on Titao. (Titao is ethnically Kurumba.) The grammar of Rennison (1997) describes the Western dialect.

Phonology

LabialAlveolarPalatalVelarGlottal
Nasalpronounced as /ink/pronounced as /ink/pronounced as /ink/
Plosivevoicelesspronounced as /ink/pronounced as /ink/pronounced as /ink/
voicedpronounced as /ink/pronounced as /ink/pronounced as /ink/
Fricativevoicelesspronounced as /ink/pronounced as /ink/pronounced as /ink/
voicedpronounced as /ink/pronounced as /ink/
Approximantpronounced as /ink/pronounced as /ink/pronounced as /ink/
Rhoticpronounced as /ink/

The alveolar flap pronounced as /[ɾ]/ is an allophone of pronounced as //d//, which occurs as pronounced as /[d]/ only word-initially and after nasal consonants.There also exists a spirantised allophone of pronounced as //ɡ//, i.e. pronounced as /[ɣ]/; phonetic pronounced as /[ɡ]/ only occurs word-initially, after a nasal consonant, or between two ATR high vowels.Before nasal vowels the approximants pronounced as //j// and pronounced as //w// are nasalised, and the nasalised pronounced as //j// in slow, careful speech can even harden to pronounced as /[ɲ]/. However, there is no phonemic palatal series of consonants in Koromfe.

The vowel system comprises 5 [-ATR] vowels pronounced as //ɪ ɛ a ɔ ʊ// and their [+ATR] counterparts pronounced as //i e ʌ o u//. All vowels occur both orally and (context-free) nasally, and long and short, giving 40 full vowels. There is also a schwa pronounced as /[ə]/ which alternates with zero and disappears in faster, casual speech.

Koromfe is the only Gur language, and one of only five Niger-Congo languages, listed in the World Atlas of Language Structures that is not tonal.[1]

Writing system

Koromfé has no written form. A 2007 dictionary uses a IPA based orthography with "y" replacing "j".[2]

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: WALS Online - Chapter Tone.
  2. John R. Rennison; Micaïlou Konfé: Dictionnaire Lorom koromfe – anglais / français / allemand. 2007.01.17