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Asa language

The Asa (Aasá) language, commonly rendered Aasax (also rendered as Aasá, Aasáx, Aramanik, Asak, Asax, Assa, Asá[2]), is an extinct Afroasiatic language formerly spoken by the Asa people of Tanzania. The language is extinct; ethnic Assa in northern Tanzania remember only a few words they overheard their elders use, and none ever used it themselves. Little is known of the language; what is recorded was probably Aasa lexical words used in a register of Maasai, similar to the mixed language Mbugu.[3]

Classification

Asa is usually classified as Cushitic, most closely related to Kw'adza. However, it might have retained a non-Cushitic layer from an earlier language shift.

The Aramanik (Laramanik) people once spoke Asa, but shifted to Nandi (as opposed to Maasai).

Vocabulary

Asa is known from three primary sources: two vocabulary lists from 1904 and 1928, and a collection by W. C. Winter from 1974.[4]

The following are some example words of Asa, together with probable cognates identified in Kw'adza and Iraqw:[5]

Some loanwords in Asa from other languages are known:[6]

Notes

  1. ^ Winter 1979.
  2. ^ "Aasáx". Ethnologue. Retrieved 2019-07-17.
  3. ^ Petrollino & Mous 2010, p. 212.
  4. ^ Ehret 1980, p. 14.
  5. ^ Ehret 1980, pp. 386–388.
  6. ^ Ehret 1980, p. 385.

Literature

External links