Sango language

"Sango" redirects here. For other uses, see Sango (disambiguation).
Sango
yângâ tî sängö
Pronunciation [jáŋɡá tí sāŋɡō]
Native to Central African Republic, Chad, Democratic Republic of the Congo
Native speakers
(450,000 cited 1988)[1]
1.6 million as second language (no date)[2]
Official status
Official language in
 Central African Republic
Regulated by Institute of Applied Linguistics[3]
Language codes
ISO 639-1 sg
ISO 639-2 sag
ISO 639-3 Either:
sag  Sango
snj  Riverain Sango
Glottolog sang1327[4]
Linguasphere 93-ABB-aa

Sango (also spelled: Sangho) is the primary language spoken in the Central African Republic.

Classification

Some linguists, following William J. Samarin, classify it as a Ngbandi-based creole; however, others (like Marcel Diki-Kidiri, Charles H. Morrill) reject that classification and say that changes in Sango structures (both internally and externally) can be explained quite well without a creolization process.

According to the creolization hypothesis, Sango is exceptional in that it is an African- rather than European-based creole.[5] Although French has contributed numerous loanwords, Sango's structure is wholly African.[5]

History

Sango tribe members, 1906

A variety of Sango was used as a lingua franca along the Ubangi River before French colonization, in the late 1800s.[6] The French army recruited Central Africans, causing them to increasingly use Sango as a means of interethnic communication.[6] Throughout the 20th century, missionaries promoted Sango because of its wide usage.[6]

Originally used by river traders, Sango arose as a lingua franca based on the Northern Ngbandi dialect of the Sango tribe, part of the Ngbandi language cluster, with some French influence.

The rapid growth of the city of Bangui since the 1960s has had significant implications for the development of Sango, with the creation, for the first time, of a population of first-language speakers. Whereas rural immigrants to the city spoke many different languages and used Sango only as a lingua franca, their children use Sango as their main (and sometimes only) language. That has led to a rapid expansion of the lexicon, including both formal and slang terms. Also, its new position as the everyday language of the capital city has led to Sango gaining greater status and being used increasingly in fields for which it was previously the norm to use French.

Geographic distribution

Sango is widespread in the Central African Republic, with 350,000 speakers at the 1970 census. It is also spoken as a lingua franca in southern Chad, where it is probably not spoken natively and its use is decreasing, and in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where its use is increasing.

Today, Sango is both a national and official language of the Central African Republic, which makes the Central African Republic one of the few African countries to have an official language not a colonial language, such as English, French, and Portuguese.

Registers

A study by Taber (1964) indicates that some 490 native Sango words account for about 90% of colloquial speech; however, while French loanwords are much more rarely used, they account for the majority of the vocabulary, particularly in the speech of learned people. The situation might be compared to English, in which most of the vocabulary, particularly "learned" words, is derived from Latin, Greek, or French while the basic vocabulary remains strongly Germanic. However, more recent studies suggest that the result is specific to a particular sociolect, the so-called "functionary" variety. Morrill's work, completed in 1997, revealed that there were three sociologically distinct norms emerging in the Sango language: an urban "radio" variety which is ranked by 80% of his interviewees and has a very few French loan words; a so-called "pastor" variety, which is scored 60%; and a "functionary" variety, spoken by learned people, who make the highest use of French loanwords while speaking Sango, which scores 40%.

Orthography

Sango began being written by French missionaries, with Catholic and Protestant conventions differing slightly.[7] The 1966 Bible and 1968 hymnal were highly influential and still used today.[7]

In 1984, President André Kolingba signed 'Décret No 84.025', establishing an official orthography for Sango.[8] The official Sango alphabet consists of 22 letters:

Official 1984 orthography[8]
22-Letter Sango Alphabet
ABDEFGHIKLMNOPRSTUVWYZ

Letters are pronounced as their IPA equivalent except for y, pronounced as [j]. Also, the digraphs kp, gb, mb, mv, nd, ng, ngb, nz are pronounced [k͡p], [ɡ͡b], [ᵐb], [(ᶬv)], [ⁿd], [ᵑɡ], [ᵑ͡ᵐɡ͡b] and [ⁿz], respectively.

’b, ty, and dy may be used in loan words not fully integrated into Sango's phonological system.[8]

The official orthography contains the following consonants: p, b, t, d, k, g, kp, gb, mb, mv, nd, ng, ngb, nz, f, v, s, z, h, l, r, y, w: some add ’b for the implosive /ɓ/. Sango has seven oral vowels, /a e ɛ i o ɔ u/, of which five, /ĩ ã ɛ̃ ɔ̃ ũ/, occur nasalized. In the official orthography, e stands for both /e/ and /ɛ/, and o stands for both /o/ and /ɔ/; nasal vowels are written in, en, an, on, un.

Sango has three tones: low, mid, and high. In standard orthography, low tone is unmarked, e, mid tone is marked with diaeresis, ë, and high tone with circumflex, ê: do-re-mi would be written do-rë-mî.

Sango has little written material apart from religious literature, but some basic literacy material has been developed.[9]

Phonology

Vowels

Sango has seven oral and five nasal vowels.[10] Vowel quality and number of nasalized vowels may be affected by the mother tongue of non-native speakers of Sango.[10]

Sango vowels[10]
  Oral vowels Nasal vowels
Front Back Front Back
Close i u ĩ i
Close-mid e o    
Open-mid ɛ ɔ ɛ̃ ɔ̃
Open a ã

Consonants

Sango consonants[5][10]
  Bilabial Labio-
dental
Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar Labial-
velar
Glottal
Plosive p  b  (ɓ)   t  d     k  ɡ k͡p  ɡ͡b
Prenasalized ᵐb (ᶬv) ⁿd ⁿz nj ᵑɡ ᵑ͡ᵐɡ͡b
Nasal m   n      
Fricative   f  v s  z       h
Approximant       l  r j w

Palatal affricates occur in loan words and certain dialects.[10] Some dialects have alternations between [ᶬv] and [m], [ᵐb] and [ᵑ͡ᵐg͡b], [ᵐb] and [b], word-medial [l] and [r], and word-initial [h] and [ʔ].[10] [ᶬv] is quite rare.[10]

Syllable structure

Syllable structure is generally CV.[10] Consecutive vowels are rare but do occur.[10] Consonants may be palatalized or labialized, orthographically Ci and Cu, respectively.[10]

Words are generally monosyllabic or bisyllabic but less commonly are trisyllabic.[10] Four-syllable words are created via reduplication and compounding, and may also be written as two words (kêtêkêtê or kêtê kêtê 'tiny bit', walikundû or wa likundû 'sorcerer').[10]

Tone

Sango has three basic tones (high, mid, and low), with contour tones also occurring, generally in French loanwords.[10] Tones have a low functional load, but minimal pairs exist: 'give birth' versus 'hole'.

Monosyllabic loan words from French usually have the tone pattern high-low falling (bâan 'bench' from French banc). In multisyllabic words all syllables carry low tone except the final syllable, which is lengthened and takes a descending tone. The final tone is generally mid-low falling for nouns ('ananäa' pineapple from French ananas) and high-low falling for verbs ('aretêe' 'to stop' from French arrêter).

In isolation, tones have ideolectal variation, and they may also be affected by the mother language of non-native speakers.[10]

Grammar

Sango is an isolating language with subject–verb–object word order, as in English.[11] Noun phrases are of the form determiner-adjective-noun:[11]

   mbênïkêtêmôlengê
indef.smallchild
"a small child"

Plurals are marked with the proclitic â-, which precedes noun phrases:[11]

   âmbênïkêtêmôlengê
PL-indef.smallchild
"some small children"

â- may be attached to multiple items in the noun phrase by some speakers, but this is less common:[11]

   âkötä(â)zo
PL-bigperson
"important people/dignitaries"

The derivational suffix -ngö nominalizes verbs. It also changes all tones in the verb to mid:[11]

   kono to grow, be big kîri to return, repeat
   könöngö size kïrïngö return

Genitives are normally formed with the preposition 'of':[11]

   ngû
holeofwater
"water hole, well"

However, compounding is becoming increasingly common: dûngü 'well' (note the change in tone).[11] Such compounds are sometimes written as two separate words.[11]

The verbal prefix a- is used when the subject is a noun or noun phrase but not when the subject is either a pronoun or implicit (as in imperatives):[11]

   âmôlengêloagä
PL-childof3SSM-come
"his children came"
   adülo
SM-give.birth3S
"he was born" (lit. "someone bore him")
   löndömo
rise3Scome
"get up and come (here)"

The prefix is sometimes written as a separate word.[11]

The pronouns are mbï "I", mo "you (singular)", lo "he, she, it", ë "we", ï "you (plural)", âla "you (plural)", âla "they".[12] Verbs take a prefix a- if not preceded by a pronoun: mo yeke "you are" but Bêafrîka ayeke "Central Africa is". Particularly useful verbs include yeke "be", bara "greet" (> bara o "hi!"), hînga "know". Possessives and appositives are formed with the word "of": ködörö tî mbï "my country", yângâ tî sängö "Sango language". Another common preposition is na, covering a variety of locative, dative, and instrumental functions.

Learning

Sango is considered unusually easy to learn; according to Samarin, "with application a student ought to be able to speak the language in about three months." However, reaching true fluency takes much longer, as with any other language.

For English-speakers there are two main difficulties. One must remember not to split double consonants: Bambari, for example, must be pronounced ba-mba-ri, not bam-ba-ri. Also, as with any other tonal language, one must learn not to vary the tone according to the context. For example, if one pronounces a question with a rising tone as in English, one may inadvertently be saying an entirely different and inappropriate Sango word at the end of the sentence.

References

  1. Sango at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
    Riverain Sango at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  2. Sango language at Ethnologue (15th ed., 2005)
  3. (French) Le Sango
  4. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin; Bank, Sebastian, eds. (2016). "Sangoic". Glottolog 2.7. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
  5. 1 2 3 Walker & Samarin (1997)
  6. 1 2 3 Karan (2006, 12.1 Sango: language of wider communication and of the churches)
  7. 1 2 Karan (2006, 12.9 The Sango orthography before 1984)
  8. 1 2 3 Karan (2006, 12.9 The 1984 orthography decree)
  9. Karan (2006, 12.7 Sango literature)
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Karan (2006, 12.5 The phonology of Sango)
  11. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Karan (2006, 12.4 Sango grammatical structure)
  12. Wikibooks:Sango/Pronouns

Bibliography

Sango edition of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Look up Sango in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/21/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.