Sinyar language

Central Sudanic language spoken in Chad From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Shemya (tàar ʃàmɲà) is the language of the Sinyar people. It is a Central Sudanic language spoken in Chad and formerly in Darfur, Sudan. It is variously spelled Shamya, Shamyan, Shemya, Sinya, and known as Symiarta, Taar Shamyan, Zimirra.

NativetoChad
EthnicitySinyar
Native speakers
33,000 (2023)[1]
Quick facts Native to, Ethnicity ...
Sinyar
Shemya
Native toChad
EthnicitySinyar
Native speakers
33,000 (2023)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3sys
Glottologsiny1243
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Linguistic map of the non-Arab peoples of Darfur.

The language is spoken in Goz Beïda, Chad and Foro Boranga, Sudan. There are two level tones and downstepped low tones. Word order is SVO.[2][3]

Dimmendaal leaves it as a language isolate, whereas Blench groups it with Formona.[4]

Doornbos records 18 Sinyar clans. The Kijaar clan, located close to the Kujargé, likely intermarried with the Kujargé.[5]

Lexicon

Sinyar numerals from Boyeldieu (2013):[6]

Numerals
1kàllà
2róò
3mùʈʈà
4ùssà
5mòy
6mìccà
7mòorsò
8màartà
9mànɖéy
10ʈìyà

Sinyar appears to have a Bongo–Bagirmi superstratum and a non-Bongo–Bagirmi substratum. Some lexical items in Sinyar have cognates in Bongo–Bagirmi languages (particularly the neighboring Yulu-Gula group), while others do not.[7]

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Pronouns

Sinyar pronouns:[7]

Sinyar pronouns
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GlossSinyar
1Smàalé, (màá)
2Sìllé
3Snàalé, (nàá)
1P.ducìngé
1P.ex?cìyé
1P.incèesá
2P?sìngé; sèesá
3Pnìngé
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References

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