Bolgo language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bolgo
Bólɡònî
Native toChad
Native speakers
(1,800 cited 1993 census)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3bvo
Glottologbolg1251
Personbólɡò
Languagebólɡònî

The Bolgo language is a member of the Bua languages spoken in south-central Chad, in the villages of Koya, Boli, Gagne, and Bedi southeast of Melfi, by about 1,800 people (SIL 1993). Speakers also make up the majority of the population of Sorki canton in Chinguil sub-prefecture.[2]

Dialects[]

According to de Rendinger, it has two principal dialects, Bolgo Werel around and Bolgo Mengo around , as well as a dialect called Bolgo Bormo; according to the Ethnologue, its principal dialects are called Bolgo Dugag and Bolgo Kubar ("small" and "great" Bolgo.) Great Bolgo is spoken to the north, bordering Mogum and Saba; Little Bolgo is spoken to the south, bordering the closely related language Koke as well as Chadian Arabic.

Bolgo groups and names listed by Kastenholz (2017:4):[3]

Group Autonym Glossonym
Bolgo Dugag (Southern) tērēù tērēùnī
Bolgo Kubar (NW) bólɡò and jàlkín (two subgroups) bólɡònî
Bolgo Kubar (NE) bòrmó bòrmónì

Grammar[]

Its typical word order is subject–verb–object, noun–adjective, aspect–verb, possessor–possessed. There is no true plural, but -gi serves as a collective marker. The verb is negated with ta, placed at the end of the sentence.

Example sentences:

  • in-nāṇ rīm nāṇ n'ini (give-me water I drink), "give me water to drink"
  • ibéri koko ao léti (man marry woman two), "the man married two women".

Bibliography[]

References[]

  1. ^ Bolgo at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. ^ Oxfam and Office National de Développement Rural (ONDR). 2016. Atlas de la vulnérabilité dans le Guera. Première partie: synthèse regional. 2nd edition (updated from 2013 edition). PASISAT (Projet d’Appui à l’Amélioration du Système d’Information sur la Sécurité Alimentaire au Tchad).
  3. ^ Kastenholz, Raimund. 2017. La langue bolgo du Guéra (Tchad) : notes de recherche et matériel lexical. (Working Papers of the Department of Anthropology and African Studies of the Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz, 172).


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