Saho language

{{Short description|Cushitic language spoken in Eritrea and Ethiopia}}

{{Distinguish|text=the Sahu language}}

{{Infobox language

| name = Saho

| altname = Saho

| states = Eritrea, Ethiopia

| region = Southern, Northern and Southern Red Sea regions in Eritrea, Tigray in Ethiopia

| ethnicity = Saho

| speakers = {{sigfig|178,800|2}}

| date = 2007–2022

| ref = e27

| familycolor = Afro-Asiatic

| fam2 = Cushitic

| fam3 = East

| fam4 = Lowland

| fam5 = Saho–Afar

| minority={{ERI}}

| iso3 = ssy

| glotto = saho1246

| glottorefname = Saho

| script = Geʽez script (Used in Ethiopia)
Latin alphabet (Used in Eritrea)

}}

The Saho language (Tigrinya: {{lang|ti|ሳሆ/ቋንቋ ሳሆ}}) is an Afro-Asiatic language spoken in Eritrea and Ethiopia. It belongs to the family's Cushitic branch.

Overview

Saho is spoken natively by the Saho people. Traditionally, they inhabit the territory in Eritrea bounded by the bay of Erafayle (ዓራፋሊ) in the east, the Laacasi Gade (ላዐሲ ጋደ) valleys in the south, and the Eritrean highlands to the west (the Shimejana district on the eastern flank of the South- or Debub region in what was formerly known as Akele Guzai province).

This speech area is bordered by other Afro-Asiatic-speaking communities, with Tigre speakers on the west and Afar speakers on the east. In Ethiopia, Saho is primarily spoken in the Tigray Region. It has about 250,000 speakers in total and four main dialects:{{clarify|date=February 2024}} Northern dialect, mainly spoken by Casawurta (ዓሳኣዉርታ), Tharuuca (ጣሩዓ), Casabat Care (ዓሳባት ካረ), etc.; Central dialect is mainly spoken by Faqhat Xarak (ፋቃት ሓራክ) of Minifere (ሚኒ ፊረ); Southern dialect mainly spoken by Minifire (ሚኒ ፊረ), Xazo (ሓዞ/ዶ), Dabrti-meela ዳብሪ መላ), Irob (ኢሮብ), Sancafe (ሳንዓፈ).{{ethnologue25|ssy}}

The Saho also use the Arabic (special now Latin letters){{clarify|date=February 2024}} to document their history and render information.

The Saho language in former Italian Eritrea has received a strong influence of italian loanwords.{{cite web |url=https://www.academia.edu/5529047 |title=Italian loanwords in saho |language=it |last1=Banti |first1=Giorgio }}

Also recently the language is being used on the cyberspace as a tool of communication. And there is one website completely designed with saho language.{{cite web |url=http://www.makaado.net/ |title=Makaado.net - the Saho on line Community |access-date=2013-11-22 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131203011134/http://www.makaado.net/ |archive-date=2013-12-03 }}

Saho is so closely related to the Cushitic Afar language, spoken as a mother tongue by the Afar people, that some linguists regard the two tongues as dialects of a single "Saho–Afar language". Regardless, it has been shown that at least in their basic lexicon the two can be cleanly separated.{{cite conference|first1=Giorgio|last1=Banti|first2=Moreno|last2=Vergari|title=Aspects of Saho dialectology|year=2017|book-title=Afroasiatica Romana. Proceedings of the 15th meeting of Afroasiatic linguistics|pages=65–81|publisher=Sapienza Università de Roma}}

Phonology

= Consonants =

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

! colspan="2" |

!Labial

!Dental/
Alveolar

!Retroflex

!Dorsal

!Pharyngeal/
Epiglottal

!Glottal

rowspan="3" |Plosive

!{{Small|voiceless}}

|

|{{IPAlink|t̪}}

|

|{{IPAlink|k}}

|{{IPA link|ʡ}}

|({{IPAlink|ʔ}})

{{Small|voiced}}

|{{IPAlink|b}}

|{{IPAlink|d̪}}

|{{IPA link|ɖ}}

|{{IPAlink|g}}

|

|

{{Small|ejective}}

|

|({{IPAlink|t̪ʼ}})

|

|({{IPAlink|kʼ}})

|

|

rowspan="3" |Fricative

!{{Small|voiceless}}

|{{IPAlink|f}}

|{{IPAlink|s}}

|

|

|{{IPA link|ħ}}

|{{IPAlink|h}}

{{Small|voiced}}

|

|({{IPAlink|z}})

|

|

|({{IPA link|ʕ}})

|

{{Small|ejective}}

|

|({{IPA link|sʼ}})

|

|

|

|

colspan="2" |Nasal

|{{IPAlink|m}}

|{{IPAlink|n}}

|

|

|

|

colspan="2" |Rhotic

|

|{{IPAlink|ɾ}}

|

|

|

|

colspan="2" |Approximant

|{{IPAlink|w}}

|{{IPAlink|l}}

|

|{{IPAlink|j}}

|

|

  • Sounds /t̪ʼ, sʼ, z, kʼ, ʔ/ are heard from loanwords.
  • /b/ can be heard as [β] when in intervocalic positions or when preceding a fricative consonant.
  • /t̪, d̪/ can be heard as laminal [t̻, d̻] when before or after /a/.
  • /ɾ/ can be heard as a trill [r] in free variation.
  • /ɖ/ can be heard as a flap [ɽ] in intervocalic positions.
  • /l/ can be heard as apical [l̺] or alveolar [l] when before vowels /i, u/, and as laminal [l̻] when before vowels /a, e, o/.
  • /n/ when preceding sounds /b, f, ɖ, k, ɡ/ can be heard as [m, ɱ, ɳ, ŋ].
  • /ʡ/ can also be heard as a fricative [ʕ] in free variation or in intervocalic position.
  • Stops /b, t̪, d̪, ɖ/ are heard as unreleased [b̚, t̪̚, d̪̚, ɖ̚] when in word-final position.{{Cite book |last=Tajebe |first=Esayas |title=Descriptive Grammar of Saaho |publisher=Addis Ababa University |year=2015}}

= Vowels =

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

!

!Front

!Central

!Back

Close

|{{IPA link|i}} {{IPA link|iː}}

|

|{{IPA link|u}} {{IPA link|uː}}

Mid

|{{IPA link|ɛ}} {{IPA link|ɛː}}

|

|{{IPA link|ɔ}} {{IPA link|ɔː}}

Open

|

|{{IPA link|a}} {{IPA link|aː}}

|

  • /ɛ/ can be heard as either [ɛ] or [e], and may occur as [ə] when in unstressed positions.
  • /ɔ/ may be pronounced as either [ɔ] or [o] among speakers across dialects.

Writing systems

Saho has three written versions: a version in the Latin alphabet, official in Eritrea; a version in the Ge'ez script, official in Ethiopia; and a version in the Ajami script with no official recognition.

Notes

{{Reflist}}

Further reading

  • {{cite journal |first=William E. |last=Welmers |year=1952 |title=Notes on the structure of Saaho |journal=Word |volume=8 |issue=2 |pages=145–162|doi=10.1080/00437956.1952.11659429 }}

{{Languages of Eritrea}}

{{Languages of Ethiopia}}

{{Cushitic languages}}

{{Authority control}}

Category:East Cushitic languages

Category:Languages of Eritrea

Category:Languages of Ethiopia

{{Eritrea-stub}}

{{AfroAsiatic-lang-stub}}

{{Ethiopia-stub}}