Western Plains Dogon
Dialect group
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Dogon dialects of the western plains below the Bandiagara Escarpment in Mali are mutually intelligible. They are sometimes called the Kan Dogon because they use the word kan (also spelled kã) for varieties of speech. The dialects are:
- Tomo kã
- Teŋu kã
- Togo kã
RegionMali, Burkina Faso
Native speakers
(260,000 cited 1998)[1]Niger–Congo?
-
Dogon
- Plains
- Western Plains Dogon
- Plains
Dialects
- Tomo Kan
- Tengu Kan
- Togo Kan
| Western Plains Dogon | |
|---|---|
| Kan Dogon | |
| Region | Mali, Burkina Faso |
Native speakers | (260,000 cited 1998)[1] |
Niger–Congo?
| |
| Dialects |
|
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | Either:dtm – Tomo Kandtk – Tene Kan |
| Glottolog | west2508 |
The latter two are traditionally subsumed under the name Tene kã (Tene Kan, Tene Tingi), but Hochstetler separates them because the three varieties are about equidistant.
There are a quarter million speakers of these dialects, about evenly split between Tomo Kan and Tene Kan, making this the most populous of the Dogon languages. There are a few Tomo-speaking villages just across the border in Burkina Faso.
Phonology
Consonants
- Consonant germination also occurs frequently among sounds [kː lː nː tː].
- /z/ can only occur among loanwords.
- /ɸ/ is interchangeable with /h/.
- Consonant sound /t͡ʃ/ only rarely occurs and in almost absent.
- Consonant sounds [z ʃ ʒ] are absent, except in loanwords.
- /ɡ/ can be realized as a fricative [ɣ] between vowel sounds /a ɔ/.
- Sounds [f h] only occur from loanwords, and are interchangeable.
- Glottal sound [ʔ] can only occur as an element in some reduplicated forms of vowel-initial words, or between vowels within a word.