Yekhee
Afenmai
Kukuruku (outdated)
Etsakọ
Native toNigeria
RegionEdo State
EthnicityAfenmai
Native speakers
510,000 (2020)[1]
Niger–Congo?
  • Atlantic–Congo
    • Volta–Niger
      • yeai
        • Edoid
          • North-Central
            • Yekhee–Ghotuo
              • Yekhee
Language codes
ISO 639-3ets
Glottologyekh1238

Afenmai (Afemai), Yekhee, or Iyekhe, is an Edoid language spoken in Edo State, Nigeria by the Afenmai people. Not all speakers recognize the name Yekhee; some use the district name Etsako.

Previously the name used by British colonial administration was Kukuruku, supposedly after a battle cry "ku-ku-ruku",[2] now considered derogatory.[1]

Afenmai is unusual in reportedly having a voiceless tapped fricative as the "tense" equivalent of the "lax" voiced tap /ɾ/ (compare [aɾ̞̊u] 'hat' and [aɾu] 'louse'),[3] though in other descriptions it is described simply as a fricative and analyzed as the "lax" equivalent of the "tense" voiceless stop /t/.[4]

Phonology

edit

Vowels are /i e ɛ a ɔ o u/. Long vowels and the large number of diphthong in the language are derived from sequences of short vowels, often from the optional elision of /l/.

Afenmai has a complex system of morphotonemic alterations based on two phonemic tones, high and low. At the surface level there are five distinctive tones: high, low, falling, rising and mid. Mid tone is the result of downstep of a high tone after a low tone. The contour tones (falling and rising) either occur on long vowels or diphthongs, from a sequence of high+low or low+high, or on short vowels produced from the contraction of such a long vowel or diphthong. Rising tones are rather uncommon, as they tend to be replaced by high, low or mid.[4]

Consonant phonemes of the Ekpheli dialect[4]
Labial Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar Labiovelar
Nasal m, n
Plosive voiced b d ɡː ɡ͡b, ɡ͡bː
voiceless p t(ː) k͡p, k͡pː
Affricate voiced dz
voiceless ts
Fricative voiced v(ː) ɣ
voiceless f θ s x
Approximant ʋ l j w
Tap ɾ

The consonants marked as geminated have been analyzed in various ways, including 'tense' or 'fortis' and paired up with 'lax' or 'lenis' partners, though there is no phonological basis for grouping the supposed 'long' consonants together, or for partnering them with particular 'short' consonants. The clear cases are /k͡pː ɡ͡bː mː/, which are twice as long as /k͡p ɡ͡b m/ but otherwise identical in a spectrogram. /kː ɡː/ are likewise twice as long as /x ɣ/. However, alveolar /t/ is only slightly longer than dental /θ/, and while /v/ is longer than /ʋ/, that's to be expected for a fricative compared to an approximant.[4]

The alveolar consonants have postalveolar allophones before /i/ plus another vowel, where /i/ would otherwise become [j], as in /siɛsiɛ/ > [ʃɛʃɛ] 'to be small'.[4] In addition, /ts/ optionally becomes [tʃ] before a single /i/, as in /itsi/ 'pig' ([itsi] ~ [itʃi]). The other alveolar consonants do not have this variation, unless the triggering environment is provided within a prosodic word: /odzi/ 'crab' ([odzi] in citation form) > /odzi oɣie/ 'the king's crab' ([odʒoɣje]). The sounds transcribed with ⟨ʃ ʒ ɲ⟩ may actually be closer to ʑ nʲ].[citation needed]

Apart from /p ts dz θ/, these consonants appear in all dialects of Afenmai investigated by Elimelech (1976). /p/ is absent from Uzairue dialect, being replaced by /f/, and is quite rare in most other dialects. /ts dz/ are fricativized to /s z/ in Aviele and South Uneme dialects. /θ/ is retracted to /ɹ̝̊/ in most other dialects, as in [aθu ~ aɹ̝̊u] 'hat'.[4]

Orthography

edit
Afenmai Alphabet (Alfabẹti Etsakọ)[5][6][7][better source needed]
A B C CH D E F G GB GH GW I J K KH KP KPH KW L
M MH N NW NY O P R S SH T TH TS U V VH W Y Z

Phrases

edit

Etsako phrases include:

Etsako English
Moo! Well done
Abee!/See! Hello (How is it?)
O somi/O chi It is good. (Response)
Na ẹgbia Good morning
Na ẹlẹ (Response)
Agbelọ Good morning
Agbe (Response)
U vhẹẹ ze? Hope you are fine.
Eli Yes
U lẹ guẹ? Did you sleep well?
A kpẹmi We give thanks
Moo ota / Oviẹna / Togi Good afternoon
Moo ogode / Obugala Good evening
O ki akọ / O kila akhuẹ Good night (until tomorrow)
O ki la Goodbye
O ki idegbe Until later
Lẹ khia / Guẹ khia Go well.
R'ẹlo ku egbe Take care.

Common Etsako phrases showing dialectical variations between Iyekhe and Agbelo:

English Iyekhe Agbelo
I am coming I bade Mi aa balẹ
Where are you? Obo u ya? Obo u la?
Where are you going to? Obo u ye? Obo u aa ye?
What do you want? Eme u kele? Elọ u aa nono?
This is my brother Iyọkpa mẹ ki ọna Inyọguo mẹ kh' ọna
I am hungry Osami ọ gbe mẹ Okiami o aa gbe mẹ

References

edit
  1. ^ a b Yekhee at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022) Closed access icon
  2. ^ Udo, Reuben K. (1970). Geographical Regions of Nigeria. University of California Press. p. 109.
  3. ^ Laver (1994) Principles of Phonetics, p. 263.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Elimelech (1976). "A Tonal Grammar of Etsako". UCLA Working Papers in Phonetics (35).
  5. ^ Improved Afẹmai Orthography (alfabẹti etsakọ) (2018, WordPress)
  6. ^ Etsakọ Orthography (2018, WordPress)
  7. ^ Adelegan, Zibril (2018), A Contrastive Study of Afemai and English Morphological Structures with Learning and Teaching Implications
edit

📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Afemai people

local government areas (LGAs) of Edo State: Etsako West (with headquarters in Auchi), Etsako Central, Etsako East, Owan East, Owan West and Akoko Edo. These

Etsako Central

229 in the 2006 census. The common language of the people in the Etsako central local area is the Afemai language while Islam and Christianity are the

Languages of Nigeria

There are over 520 native languages spoken in Nigeria. The two official languages are English (which was the language of Colonial Nigeria) and French

Weppa Wanno

present-day Etsako East local government area, in the South- South geopolitical zone of Nigeria. It is the homeland of Uwano people in the Etsako East local

Anwain

and Islam. The Anwain people speak Esan (Ishan) language, with a dialect influenced by the Etsakọ language. The Anwain people perform several traditional

Edoid languages

The Edoid languages are a few dozen languages spoken in southern Nigeria. Edoid-speaking ethnic groups are predominantly located in the States of Edo

Etsako West

Etsako West is a Local Government Area of Edo State, Nigeria. Its headquarters are in the town of Auchi. Etsako West is made up of six clans: Uzairue

Imiegba

village in Edo state, precisely Etsako East local government in Nigeria. The Imiegba are a clan within the broader Etsakọ people of Edo State, Nigeria,