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The Agaw or Central Cushitic languages are Afro-Asiatic languages spoken by several groups in Ethiopia and, in one case, Eritrea. They form the main substratum influence on Amharic and other Ethiopian Semitic languages.[1]

Agaw
Central Cushitic
EthnicityAgaw
Geographic
distribution
Ethiopia and central Eritrea
Linguistic classificationAfro-Asiatic
Subdivisions
Glottologcent2193

Classification


The Central Cushitic languages are classified as follows (after Appleyard):

(Kunfal, spoken west of Lake Tana, is poorly recorded but most likely a dialect of Awngi)[2]
  • Bilen–Xamtanga:
  • Bilen (North) spoken (70,000 speakers) in Eritrea around the town of Keren and eastern Sudan around the town of Kassala
  • Xamtanga (Central Agaw; also called Khamir, Khamta) 143,000 speakers in the North Amhara Region
  • Qimant (Western Agaw) nearly extinct, spoken by the Qemant in Semien Gondar Zone
(dialects Qwara – nearly extinct, spoken by Beta Israel formerly living in Qwara, now in Israel; Kayla – extinct, formerly spoken by some Beta Israel, transitional between Qimant and Xamtanga)

There is a literature in Agaw but it is widely dispersed: from medieval texts containing passages in the Qimant language, now mostly in Israeli museums, to the modern Bilen language with its own newspaper, based in Keren, Eritrea. Historical material is also available in the Xamtanga language, and there is a deep tradition of folklore in the Awngi language.


Phonology


Central Cushitic languages are characterised by the presence of /ŋ/, /ɣ/, /z/, and central vowels, while they lack ejectives, implosives, pharyngeals, consonant gemination, vowel length, and the consonant /ɲ/.[3]


See also



Bibliography



References


  1. Hetzron (1976, p. 5)
  2. Joswig/Mohammed (2011)
  3. Zelealem, [Mollaligne] Leyew. 2020. Central Cushitic. In: Rainer Vossen and Gerrit J. Dimmendaal (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of African Languages. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

На других языках


- [en] Agaw languages

[ru] Агавские языки

Агавские языки, также языки агау или центральнокушитские языки, — одна из ветвей кушитской семьи языков. Распространены среди народов агау в северо-восточной Эфиопии и Эритрее, являются основным субстратом для большинства эфиосемитских языков.



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