Ikwerre language
Ikwerre language spoken in Nigeria From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ikwerre (Iwhuruohna)[4] is an Ikwerre language spoken primarily by the Ikwerre people,[5] who inhabit certain areas of Rivers State, Nigeria.
Ikwerre | |
---|---|
Pronunciation | [ìkʷéré] |
Native to | Rivers state, Nigeria |
Ethnicity | |
Native speakers | 4,000,000 (2019)[1] |
Niger–Congo?
| |
Dialects | Apara, Ndele, Ọgbakiri, Ọbịọ, Akpor Alụụ, Ịbaa, Elele[2] [3] |
Latin script | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | ikw |
Glottolog | ikwe1242 |
Classification
The Ikwerre language is a member of the Volta-Niger branch of Niger-Congo family of languages. Based on lexicostatistical analysis, Kay Williamson first asserted that the Ikwerre, Ekpeye, and Ogba, languages belonged to the same language cluster, and were not dialects.[6] After subsequent studies and more research by both Williamson and Roger Blench, it was concluded that lexical similar languages like Ikwerre, Ogba, Igbo and Ekpeye form a "language cluster" and that they are somewhat mutually intelligible.[7]
Phonology
Summarize
Perspective
Vowels
Ikwerre distinguishes vowels by quality (frontedness and height), the presence or absence of nasalization, and the presence or absence of advanced tongue root.
There is also a vowel */ə̃/ which is posited to explain syllabic nasal consonants in accounts of the language which state that Ikwerre has no nasal stops. This sound is realized as [ɨ̃] or a syllabic nasal which is homorganic to the following consonant.
Vowel harmony
Ikwerre exhibits two kinds of vowel harmony:
- Every vowel in an Ikwerre word, with a few exceptions, agrees with the other vowels in the word as to the presence or absence of advanced tongue root.
- Vowels of the same height in adjacent syllables must all be either front or back, i.e. the pairs /i/ & /u/, /ɪ/ & /ʊ/, /e/ & /o/, and /ɛ/ & /ɔ/ cannot occur in adjacent syllables. Vowels of different heights, however, need not match for frontness/backness either. This doesn't apply to the first vowel in nouns beginning with a vowel or with /ɾ/, and doesn't apply to onomatopoeic words.
Consonants
The oral consonants [ḅ ʼḅ l ɾ j ɰ w h hʷ] occur before oral vowels, and their nasal allophones [m ʼm n ɾ̃ ȷ̃ ɰ̃ w̃ h̃ h̃ʷ] before nasal vowels. The "non-explosive stops" [ḅ ʼḅ] are not plosives (not pulmonic) and are equivalent to implosives in other varieties of Igbo.
The tap /ɾ/ may sometimes be realized as an approximant [ɹ].
Tone
![]() | This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (May 2008) |
Ikwerre is a tonal language with seven tones: high, mid, low, high-low falling, high-mid falling, mid-low falling and rising. Ikwerre also has a tonal downdrift. For example: rínya᷆ (high, mid-low falling) means "weight, heaviness", rìnyâ (low, high-low falling) means "female, wife", mụ̌ (rising) means "to learn", mụ̂ (high-low falling) means "to give birth", etc.
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.