Okay. Yes, the sample text should be long enough to figure it out .... so, no, not Southern Bantu.
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Okay. Yes, the sample text should be long enough to figure it out .... so, no, not Southern Bantu.
Um, I was talking about the vernacular orthography there… those languages use tildes to mark vowels, and that seems to be done pretty consistently when written (example).Pabappa wrote: ↑Wed Aug 05, 2020 1:30 pm Remember, as I said in the first post, Im using a vernacular orthography, which is all I could find, because that's how the speakers prefer to write their language. My impression is that Bantu languages dont usually mark tones in everyday writing because they carry a low information density ... kind of like Japanese ... and the languages with more than 5 vowels often write as if there were five for a variety of reasons.
So, no it is not a Great Lakes Bantu language but I would advise against ruling out those others because the linguistic orthography with all the fancy vowel symbols is not what I am using here.
I can’t disagree… it appears that the distinction between Nyamwezi and Sukuma is hard to define exactly.
Yep, I noticed the /tʷ/, hence my initial guess of Botatwe, although I never got as far as noticing that Sukuma has it. But somehow I managed to completely miss the voiceless nasals!I chose Sukuma, and I was hoping that people would notice that the song I chose had both voiceless nasals and the cluster /tʷ/, and guess correctly after finding https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sukuma_language#Phonology on Wikipedia.
Afti paŋ a va gaini sugoi n’a guɗa, gaini evek na seyemni a sisiɗa viya, gaini luwuŋ n’a ali pinzibani kiini kiini, gaini na seyemni a na war alini zi wii dama, a za nθa lai. Afti a diya sugoi na gaini gûɗi, evek na pinzibani kiini kiini viya sisiɗa pini seyemni gaini luwoŋai n’a wa alini gaini seyemni amlai war alini pinzibani kiini kiini lai.