Bala language explained

Bala
Nativename:Lobala
States:Democratic Republic of the Congo
Speakers: Lobala
Date:2000
Ref:e25
Speakers2:21,000 Boko (no date)
Familycolor:Niger-Congo
Fam2:Atlantic–Congo
Fam3:Benue–Congo
Fam4:Bantoid
Fam5:Bantu (Zone C.10)
Fam6:Ngondi–Ngiri
Lc1:loq
Ld1:Lobala
Lc2:bkp
Ld2:Iboko
Guthrie:C16
Glotto:loba1239
Glottoname:Lobala
Glotto2:boko1263
Glottoname2:Boko
Glottorefname2:Boko (Democratic Republic of Congo)

Bala (Lobala) is a Bantu language of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. According to Maho (2009), it includes Boko (Iboko).

Distribution and status

Bala is spoken in the northwest corner of the Democratic Republic of the Congo west of the Congo River by about 60,000 people. Most of these are not monolingual, but the language is being passed on to the next generation, especially in more remote areas. Ethnologue classifies the language as "vigorous", meaning that it is sustainable.[1]

There are four dialects of Bala: Likoka, Poko (Iboko), South Lobala, and Tanda.[1]

Negation

Like many languages in the Benue-Congo group, Bala forms negatives by adding an affix to the verbal phrase. However, Bala is unusual in that it adds two affixes to form negatives. These are added as a prefix and a suffix to the subject affix. For example,

ba-tub-aka

They sang

te-ba-ik-aka tuba

They did not singHere the te and the ik elements are the double affixes indicating negation, attached to the ba affix indicating third party plural. The tub element is the verb "to sing" and the aka affix indicates the past tense.[2]

moto me t-a-iká mo-phé ná baphalnágà ná ntóma

The man didn't give him money or foodIn a similar way the t and iká negation elements are affixed to the verbal affix element a (indicating third person singular).[3]

Notes and References

  1. Lobala at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  2. Bernd Heine, Derek Nurse, African Languages: An Introduction, p. 206, Cambridge University Press, 2000 .
  3. Lindsay J. Whaley, Introduction to Typology: The Unity and Diversity of Language, p. 4, SAGE Publications, 1996 .