Jabal al-Lughat

Climbing the Mountain of Languages

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Libyco-Berber (ancient Tifinagh) at MNAMON

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Libyco-Berber is the writing system used in pre-Roman and Roman times to write an apparently Berber language in North Africa – especially in...
3 comments:
Monday, November 28, 2011

Meaningless morphemes from Malta to Matrouh

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A while back, Bulbul pointed out to me that in Maltese (the Arabic-derived language spoken in the EU member state of Malta) the plural of ...
14 comments:
Friday, November 25, 2011

South Arabian languages on YouTube

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In eastern Yemen and western Oman, there are spoken several South Arabian languages - Semitic, but more distantly related to Arabic than Ara...
1 comment:
Sunday, November 13, 2011

Improbable regular cognates

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In Zenaga (the Berber language of Mauritania), the word for "slave" is oʔḅḅäy . In the "Shelha" Berber spoken near Tou...
4 comments:
Wednesday, November 09, 2011

Marzouki's Tunisian language policy proposals: once more against code-switching

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Following up on the previous post, my wife just sent me a link to Moncef Marzouki, the head of the centrist party that came second in the Tu...
8 comments:
Tuesday, November 08, 2011

Ghannouchi vs. French-Arabic code-switching

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A few posts ago, we saw Francophone objections to North African code-switching via Wikileaks . Now a story has come up illustrating Araboph...
3 comments:
Monday, November 07, 2011

Kwarandzyey

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Sorosoro have just put up a webpage by me, giving a general picture of the language of Tabelbala: Korandje . It's also available in Fre...
2 comments:
Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Berber dictionary online

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A link I've been meaning to post for a while: Amawal n Tiddukla Tadelsant Imedyazen . The guy behind it, Omar Mouffok, deserves credit ...
5 comments:
Monday, October 03, 2011

Songhay online

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The Northern Songhay family is of some general interest, both for the study of language contact - all its members are astonishingly strongly...
Saturday, September 10, 2011

Wikileaks and Algeria's "language crisis"

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Among the newly released Wikileaks US diplomatic cables is one from Algiers that presents a fairly uncritical review of Algerians' own w...
12 comments:
Thursday, September 08, 2011

Why German is strange

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Following up on comments to the previous post, some readers may be interested in the following list of the top ten rarest typological featur...
18 comments:
Sunday, September 04, 2011

Forthcoming talk: the history of Kwarandzyey viewed in areal context

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Some readers may be interested in a talk I'll be giving at the end of this month in Paris, at LACITO on 30 September in a colloquium cal...
5 comments:
Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Siwi and Nafusi, mutually comprehensible

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The Libyan conflict which currently appears to be winding down has had some interesting side effects. One of the more linguistically intere...
8 comments:
Sunday, August 21, 2011

Status update

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I am happy to announce (to any readers who may still be checking this) that I am blogging again, and happier to announce that I've gotte...
15 comments:
Wednesday, April 27, 2011

An atom's weight of philology

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One of the oldest motivations for studying the history of language is to better study the fixed texts of holy books or classics. We try to ...
14 comments:
Thursday, April 14, 2011

Why *h1 and *h2 were not valid onsets in late proto-Berber

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I've been working on my hopefully-forthcoming book about Siwi and thinking more about Berber laryngeals (see also Phoenix's recent p...
Saturday, April 02, 2011

In search of the missing radical: a piece of Berber historical morphology

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Berber normally has no glottal stops (ء = ʔ) – in fact, Chafik suggested that this was why North Africa favours the Warsh reading of the Q...
3 comments:
Friday, April 01, 2011

Tunisian Berber and language shift

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It is not that easy to find information on Tunisian Berber, so I was quite happy to come across this PhD thesis free online: Berber ethnicit...
6 comments:
Wednesday, March 09, 2011

Linguistic diversity in Libya

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The Interim Transitional National Council of Libya has a website up now, at which you can watch representatives of various towns declare the...
3 comments:
Wednesday, March 02, 2011

From hatred to singing in two easy steps

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In Kabyle, the word for "sing" is šnu . No other Berber language is known to have a similar word for sing (see Nait-Zerrad, s.v. ...
17 comments:
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