Shilha /ˈʃɪlhə/, now more usually known as Tashelhit /ˈtæʃəlhit/, is a Berber language spoken in southwestern Morocco. The endonym is Taclḥiyt Berber pronunciation: [tæʃlħijt],[4] and in recent English publications the name of the language is often rendered Tashelhit, Tashelhiyt or Tashlhiyt. In Moroccan Arabic the language is called Šəlḥa, from which the English name Shilha is derived. When referring to the language, anthropologists and historians prefer the name "Shilha", which is in the Oxford English Dictionary (OED). Linguists writing in English prefer "Tashelhit" (or a variant spelling). In French sources the language is called tachelhit, chelha or chleuh.
Shilha | |
---|---|
Tashelhit; Tasusit | |
Taclḥiyt - ⵜⴰⵛⵍⵃⵉⵜ - تاشلحيت Tasusiyt - ⵜⴰⵙⵓⵙⵉⵜ - تاسوسيت | |
Native to | Morocco |
Region | High Atlas, Anti Atlas, Souss, Draa |
Ethnicity | Shilha people |
Native speakers | 3,000,000–4,760,000[1][2][3] |
Language family | |
Writing system | Arabic, Latin, Tifinagh |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | shi |
Glottolog | tach1250 |
Tashelhit language area | |
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA. |
Person | Aclḥiy (male) Taclḥiyt (female) |
---|---|
People | Iclḥiyn (male) Ticlḥiyin (female) |
Language | Taclḥiyt |
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Shilha is spoken in an area covering c. 100,000 square kilometres, making the language area approximately the size of Iceland, or the US state of Kentucky. The area comprises the western part of the High Atlas mountains and the regions to the south up to the Draa River, including the Anti-Atlas and the alluvial basin of the Souss River. The largest urban centres in the area are the coastal city of Agadir (population over 400,000) and the towns of Guelmim, Taroudant, Oulad Teima, Tiznit and Ouarzazate.[citation needed]
In the north and to the south, Shilha borders Arabic-speaking areas. In the northeast, roughly along the line Demnate-Zagora, there is a dialect continuum with Central Atlas Tamazight. Within the Shilha-speaking area, there are several Arabic-speaking enclaves, notably the town of Taroudant and its surroundings. Substantial Shilha-speaking migrant communities are found in most of the larger towns and cities of northern Morocco and outside Morocco in Belgium, France, Germany, Canada, the United States and Israel.[citation needed]
Shilha possesses a distinct and substantial literary tradition that can be traced back several centuries before the protectorate era. Many texts, written in Arabic script and dating from the late 16th century to the present, are preserved in manuscripts. A modern printed literature in Shilha has developed since the 1970s.[citation needed]
Shilha speakers usually refer to their language as Taclḥiyt.[5] This name is morphologically a feminine noun, derived from masculine Aclḥiy "male speaker of Shilha". Shilha names of other languages are formed in the same way, for example Aɛṛab "an Arab", Taɛṛabt "the Arabic language".[6]
The origin of the names Aclḥiy and Taclḥiyt has recently become a subject of debate (see Shilha people#Naming for various theories). The presence of the consonant ḥ in the name suggests an originally exonymic (Arabic) origin. The first appearance of the name in a western printed source is found in Mármol's Descripcion general de Affrica (1573), which mentions the "indigenous Africans called Xilohes or Berbers" (los antiguos Affricanos llamados Xilohes o Beréberes).[7]
The initial A- in Aclḥiy is a Shilha nominal prefix (see § Inflected nouns). The ending -iy (borrowed from the Arabic suffix -iyy) forms denominal nouns and adjectives. There are also variant forms Aclḥay and Taclḥayt, with -ay instead of -iy under the influence of the preceding consonant ḥ.[8] The plural of Aclḥiy is Iclḥiyn; a single female speaker is a Taclḥiyt (noun homonymous with the name of the language), plural Ticlḥiyin.
In Moroccan colloquial Arabic, a male speaker is called a Šəlḥ, plural Šluḥ, and the language is Šəlḥa,[9] a feminine derivation calqued on Taclḥiyt. The Moroccan Arabic names have been borrowed into English as a Shilh, the Shluh, and Shilha, and into French as un Chleuh, les Chleuhs, and chelha or, more commonly, le chleuh.
The now-usual names Taclḥiyt and Iclḥiyn in their endonymic use seem to have gained the upper hand relatively recently, as they are attested only in those manuscript texts which date from the 19th and 20th centuries. In older texts, the language is still referred to as Tamaziɣt or Tamazixt "Tamazight". For example, the author Awzal (early 18th c.) speaks of nnaḍm n Tmazixt ann ifulkin "a composition in that beautiful Tamazight".[10]
Because Souss is the most heavily populated part of the language area, the name Tasusiyt (lit. "language of Souss") is now often used as a pars pro toto for the entire language.[11] A speaker of Tasusiyt is an Asusiy, plural Isusiyn, feminine Tasusiyt, plural Tisusiyin.
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Completely reliable data on the number of Berberophones in Morocco do not exist. Ethnologue, in its 17th–20th editions (2014–2017, s.v. Tachelhit) cited the numbers yielded by the Moroccan census of 2004, according to which there were around four million speakers of Shilha, accounting for thirteen percent of the total population. In its 21st edition (2018), Ethnologue quotes a number of around seven million speakers for the year 2016 (source not mentioned), or twenty percent of the population. Assuming that Ethnologue’s figure for 2016 is correct, it appears that the 2004 census seriously underreported the number of speakers, as it is highly unlikely that the proportion of Shilha speakers in Morocco has actually risen by seven percentage points between 2004 and 2016.[citation needed]
Some authors mention a much higher number of Shilha speakers. Stroomer (2001a) estimated that there are "some 6 to 8 million" speakers, and he subsequently (2008) raised the number to "some 8 to 9 million".[13] Stroomer does not refer to any published sources supporting his estimates, which are certainly too high.
Although many speakers of Shilha, especially men, are bilingual in Moroccan Arabic, there are as yet no indications that the survival of Shilha as a living language will be seriously threatened in the immediate future. Because of the rapid growth of the Moroccan population over the past decades (from 12 million in 1961 to over 33 million in 2014), it is safe to say that Shilha is now spoken by more people than ever before in history.[citation needed]
Dialect differentiation within Shilha, such as it is, has not been the subject of any targeted research, but several scholars have noted that all varieties of Shilha are mutually intelligible. The first was Stumme, who observed that all speakers can understand each other, "because the individual dialects of their language are not very different."[14] This was later confirmed by Ahmed Boukous, a Moroccan linguist and himself a native speaker of Shilha, who stated: "Shilha is endowed with a profound unity which permits the Shluh to communicate without problem, from the Ihahan in the northwest to the Aït Baamran in the southwest, from the Achtouken in the west to the Iznagen in the east, and from Aqqa in the desert to Tassaout in the plain of Marrakesh."[15]
There exists no sharply defined boundary between Shilha dialects and the dialects of Central Atlas Tamazight (CAT). The dividing line is generally put somewhere along the line Marrakesh-Zagora, with the speech of the Ighoujdamen, Iglioua and Aït Ouaouzguite ethnic groups[16] belonging to Shilha, and that of the neighboring Inoultan, Infedouak and Imeghran ethnic groups counted as CAT.
Shilha has been written with several different alphabets. Historically, the Arabic script has been dominant. Usage of the Latin script emerged in the late 19th century. More recently there has been an initiative to write Shilha in Tifinagh.
Tifinagh (or rather, Neo-Tifinagh) was introduced in the late 1990s and its use is now supported by the Moroccan authorities, in a standardised form promulgated by the Institut Royal de la Culture Amazighe (IRCAM, Rabat). Publications entirely printed in Tifinagh still remain rare, and only a tiny proportion of Shilha speakers, if any, are able to handle the new script with confidence. Its main role is emblematic, that of a cultural icon. As such, Tifinagh has entered the public space, with town signs now showing the name in Tifinagh as well as in Arabic and Latin script[citation needed]
Many Shilha texts from the oral tradition have been published since the 19th century, transcribed in Latin script. Early publications display a wide variety of transcription systems. Stumme (1899) and Destaing (1920, 1940) use an elaborate phonetic transcription, while Justinard (1914) and Laoust (1936) employ a transcription based on French orthographical conventions. A new standard was set by Aspinion (1953), who uses a simple but accurate, largely phonemic transcription with hyphenation.
Most academic publications on Berber languages of recent decades use a version of the Berber Latin alphabet, a transcription orthography in Latin script (as used in this article).[17] The most unusual feature of this orthography is the employment of the symbol ⟨ɛ⟩ (Greek epsilon) to represent /ʢ/ (voiced epiglottal fricative); for example, taɛmamt /taʢmamt/ "turban". Except with ⟨ḥ⟩ (= IPA /ʜ/), the subscript dot indicates pharyngealisation; for example, aḍrḍur /adˤrdˤur/ "deaf person". Geminated and long consonants are transcribed with doubled symbols, for example, tassmi "needle", agg°rn "flour". Word divisions are generally disjunctive, with clitics written as separate words (not hyphenated).
Traditional Shilha manuscript texts are written in a conventionalized orthography in Maghribi Arabic script.[18] This orthography has remained virtually unchanged since at least the end of the 16th century, and is still used today in circles of traditional Islamic scholars (ṭṭlba). The main features of the traditional orthography are the use of two extra letters (kāf with three dots for g, and ṣād with three dots for ẓ) and full vocalization (vowels written with fatḥah, kasrah and ḍammah). Clitical elements are written connected to a noun or verb form (conjunctive spelling).[19]
Since the 1970s, a fair number of books in Shilha have been published inside Morocco, written in a newly devised, practical orthography in Arabic script. The main features of this orthography are the representation of vowels a, i, u by the letters alif, yāʼ, wāw, and the non-use of vocalization signs other than shaddah (to indicate gemination of consonants) and ḍammah (to indicate labialization of velar and uvular consonants). The consonant g is written with گ, and ẓ is either written with زٜ (zāy with dot below) or not distinguished from z. Word separations are mostly disjunctive.
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Shilha has an extensive body of oral literature in a wide variety of genres (fairy tales, animal stories, taleb stories, poems, riddles, and tongue-twisters). A large number of oral texts and ethnographic texts on customs and traditions have been recorded and published since the end of the 19th century, mainly by European linguists.[citation needed]
Shilha possesses an old literary tradition. Numerous texts written in Arabic script are preserved in manuscripts dating from the past four centuries. The earliest datable text is a compendium of lectures on the "religious sciences" (lɛulum n ddin) composed in metrical verses by Brahim u Ɛbdllah Aẓnag (Ibrāhīm ibn ʿAbd Allāh al-Ṣanhājī, died 1597). The best known writer in this tradition is Mḥmmd u Ɛli Awzal (Muḥammad ibn ʿAlī al-Hawzālī, died 1749), author of al-Ḥawḍ "The Cistern" (a handbook of Maliki law in verse), Baḥr al-Dumūʿ "The Ocean of Tears" (an adhortation, with a description of Judgment Day, in verse) and other texts.[20]
Since the 1970s, a modern literature in Shilha has been developing.[citation needed]
The first attempt at a grammatical description of Shilha is the work of the German linguist Hans Stumme (1864–1936), who in 1899 published his Handbuch des Schilḥischen von Tazerwalt. Stumme's grammar remained the richest source of grammatical information on Shilha for half a century. A problem with the work is its use of an over-elaborate, phonetic transcription which, while designed to be precise, generally fails to provide a transparent representation of spoken forms. Stumme also published a collection of Shilha fairy tales (1895, re-edited in Stroomer 2002).
The next author to grapple with Shilha is Saïd Cid Kaoui (Saʿīd al-Sidqāwī, 1859-1910), a native speaker of Kabyle from Algeria. Having published a dictionary of Tuareg (1894), he then turned his attention to the Berber languages of Morocco. His Dictionnaire français-tachelh’it et tamazir’t (1907) contains extensive vocabularies in both Shilha and Central Atlas Tamazight, in addition to some 20 pages of useful phrases. The work seems to have been put together in some haste and must be consulted with caution.
On the eve of the First World War there appeared a small, practical booklet composed by Captain (later Colonel) Léopold Justinard (1878–1959), entitled Manuel de berbère marocain (dialecte chleuh). It contains a short grammatical sketch, a collection of stories, poems and songs, and some interesting dialogues, all with translations. The work was written while the author was overseeing military operations in the region of Fès, shortly after the imposition of the French protectorate (1912). Justinard also wrote several works on the history of the Souss.
Emile Laoust (1876–1952), prolific author of books and articles about Berber languages, in 1921 published his Cours de berbère marocain (2nd enlarged edition 1936), a teaching grammar with graded lessons and thematic vocabularies, some good ethnographic texts (without translations) and a wordlist.
Edmond Destaing (1872–1940) greatly advanced knowledge of the Shilha lexicon with his Etude sur la tachelḥît du Soûs. Vocabulaire français-berbère (1920) and his Textes berbères en parler des Chleuhs du Sous (Maroc) (1940, with copious lexical notes). Destaing also planned a grammar which was to complete the trilogy, but this was never published.
Lieutenant-interpreter (later Commander) Robert Aspinion is the author of Apprenons le berbère: initiation aux dialectes chleuhs (1953), an informative though somewhat disorganized teaching grammar. Aspinion's simple but accurate transcriptions did away with earlier phonetic and French-based systems.
The first attempted description in English is Outline of the Structure of Shilha (1958) by American linguist Joseph Applegate (1925–2003). Based on work with native speakers from Ifni, the work is written in a dense, inaccessible style, without a single clearly presented paradigm. Transcriptions, apart from being unconventional, are unreliable throughout.
The only available accessible grammatical sketch written in a modern linguistic frame is "Le Berbère" (1988) by Lionel Galand (1920–2017), a French linguist and berberologist. The sketch is mainly based on the speech of the Ighchan ethnic group of the Anti-Atlas, with comparative notes on Kabyle of Algeria and Tuareg of Niger.
More recent, book-length studies include Jouad (1995, on metrics), Dell & Elmedlaoui (2002 and 2008, on syllables and metrics), El Mountassir (2009, a teaching grammar), Roettger (2017, on stress and intonation) and the many text editions by Stroomer (see also § References and further reading).
Stress and intonation in Shilha are the subject of a monograph by Roettger (2017), who used instrumental testing. He established the fact that Shilha does not have lexical stress (Roettger 2017:59), as noted earlier by Stumme (1899:14) and Galand (1988, 2.16).
Shilha has three phonemic vowels, with length not a distinctive feature.[21] The vowels show a fairly wide range of allophones.[22] The vowel /a/ is most often realized as [a] or [æ], and /u/ is pronounced without any noticeable rounding except when adjacent to w. The presence of a pharyngealized consonant invites a more centralized realization of the vowel, as in kraḍ [krɐdˤ] "three", kkuẓ [kkɤzˤ] "four", sḍis [sdˤɪs] "six" (compare yan [jæn] "one", sin [sin] "two", smmus [smmʊs] "five").
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
Close | i | u | |
Open | a |
Additional phonemic vowels occur sporadically in recent loanwords, for example /o/ as in rristora "restaurant" (from French).
In addition to the three phonemic vowels, there are non-phonemic transitional vowels, often collectively referred to as "schwa". Typically, a transitional vowel is audible following the onset of a vowelless syllable CC or CCC, if either of the flanking consonants, or both, are voiced,[23] for example tigmmi [tiɡĭmmi] "house", amḥḍar [amɐ̆ʜdˤɐr] "schoolboy". In the phonetic transcriptions of Stumme (1899) and Destaing (1920, 1940), many such transitional vowels are indicated.
Later authors such as Aspinion (1953), use the symbol ⟨e⟩ to mark the place where a transitional vowel may be heard, irrespective of its quality, and they also write ⟨e⟩ where in reality no vowel, however short, is heard, for example ⟨akessab⟩ /akssab/ "owner of livestock", ⟨ar icetta⟩ /ar iʃtta/ "he's eating". The symbol ⟨e⟩, often referred to as "schwa", as used by Aspinion and others, thus becomes a purely graphical device employed to indicate that the preceding consonant is a syllable onset: [a.k(e)s.sab], [a.ri.c(e)t.ta].[24] As Galand has observed, the notation of "schwa" in fact results from "habits which are alien to Shilha".[25] And, as conclusively shown by Ridouane (2008), transitional vowels or "intrusive vocoids" cannot even be accorded the status of epenthetic vowels. It is therefore preferable not to write transitional vowels or "schwa", and to transcribe the vowels in a strictly phonemic manner, as in Galand (1988) and all recent text editions.[26]
Hiatus does not occur within a morpheme, i.e. a morpheme never contains a sequence of two vowels without an intervening consonant. If hiatus arises when a morpheme-final vowel and a morpheme-initial vowel come together in context, there are several strategies for dealing with it.[27] The first of the two vowels may be elided or, alternatively, the semivowel y may be inserted to keep the vowels apart:
Less commonly, vowels /i/ and /u/ may change into [j] and [w]: /ddu-at/ "go ye!" (imperative plural masculine) is realized either as dduyat (with inserted y) or as ddwat.
Shilha has thirty-three phonemic consonants. Like other Berber languages and Arabic, it has both pharyngealized ("emphatic") and plain dental consonants. There is also a distinction between labialized and plain dorsal obstruents. Consonant gemination or length is contrastive.
The chart below represents the consonants in IPA, with orthographical representations added between angled brackets when different. Note that the consonants /n t d s z l r/ and their pharyngeal forms are dental, not alveolar.
Labial | Dental | Post-alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Uvular | Pharyngeal/ Epiglottal |
Glottal | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
plain | pharyngeal | plain | labialized | plain | labialized | |||||||
Nasal | m | n | ||||||||||
Stop | voiceless | t | tˤ ⟨ṭ⟩ | k | kʷ ⟨k°⟩ | q | qʷ ⟨q°⟩ | |||||
voiced | b | d | dˤ ⟨ḍ⟩ | g | gʷ ⟨g°⟩ | |||||||
Fricative | voiceless | f | s | sˤ ⟨ṣ⟩ | ʃ ⟨c⟩ | χ ⟨x⟩ | χʷ ⟨x°⟩ | ʜ ⟨ḥ⟩ | ||||
voiced | z | zˤ ⟨ẓ⟩ | ʒ ⟨j⟩ | ʁ ⟨ɣ⟩ | ʁʷ ⟨ɣ°⟩ | ʢ ⟨ɛ⟩ | ɦ ⟨h⟩ | |||||
Approximant | l | lˤ ⟨ḷ⟩ | j ⟨y⟩ | w | ||||||||
Trill | r | rˤ ⟨ṛ⟩ |
Conventional transcription |
Phonological value (IPA) |
Description |
---|---|---|
m | m | voiced bilabial nasal |
n | n̪ | voiced dental nasal |
t | t̪ | voiceless dental stop |
ṭ | t̪ˤ | voiceless pharyngealized dental stop |
k | k | voiceless prevelar stop |
k° | kʷ | voiceless labialized prevelar stop |
q | q | voiceless uvular stop |
q° | qʷ | voiceless labialized uvular stop |
b | b | voiced bilabial stop |
d | d̪ | voiced dental stop |
ḍ | d̪ˤ | voiced pharyngealized dental stop |
g | ɡ | voiced prevelar stop |
g° | ɡʷ | voiced labialized prevelar stop |
f | f | voiceless labiodental fricative |
s | s̪ | voiceless dental fricative |
ṣ | s̪ˤ | voiceless pharyngealized dental fricative |
c | ʃ | voiceless postalveolar fricative |
x | χ | voiceless uvular fricative |
x° | χʷ | voiceless labialized uvular fricative |
ḥ | ʜ | voiceless epiglottal fricative |
z | z̪ | voiced dental fricative |
ẓ | z̪ˤ | voiced pharyngealized dental fricative |
j | ʒ | voiced postalveolar fricative |
ɣ | ʁ | voiced uvular fricative |
ɣ° | ʁʷ | voiced labialized uvular fricative |
ɛ | ʢ | voiced epiglottal fricative or approximant |
h | ɦ | voiced glottal fricative or approximant |
l | l̪ | voiced dental lateral approximant |
ḷ | l̪ˤ | voiced pharyngealized dental lateral approximant |
y | j | voiced palatal approximant |
w | w | voiced labial-velar approximant |
r | r̪ | voiced dental trill |
ṛ | r̪ˤ | voiced pharyngealized dental trill |
Additional phonemic consonants occur sporadically in recent loanwords, for example /bʷ/ as in bb°a "(my) father" (from Moroccan Arabic), and /p/ as in laplaj "beach" (from French).
The semivowels /w/ and /j/ have vocalic allophones [u] and [i] between consonants (C_C) and between consonant and pause (C_# and #_C). Similarly, the high vowels /u/ and /i/ can have consonantal allophones [w] and [j] in order to avoid a hiatus. In most dialects,[28] the semivowels are thus in complementary distribution with the high vowels, with the semivowels occurring as onset or coda, and the high vowels as nucleus in a syllable. This surface distribution of the semivowels and the high vowels has tended to obscure their status as four distinct phonemes, with some linguists denying phonemic status to /w/ and /j/.[29]
Positing four distinct phonemes is necessitated by the fact that semivowels and high vowels can occur in sequence, in lexically determined order, for example tazdwit "bee", tahruyt "ewe" (not *tazduyt, *tahrwit). In addition, semivowels /w/ and /j/, like other consonants, occur long, as in afawwu "wrap", tayyu "camel's hump".[30] The assumption of four phonemes also results in a more efficient description of morphology.[31]
In the examples below, w and y are transcribed phonemically in some citation forms, but always phonetically in context, for example ysti- "the sisters of", dars snat istis "he has two sisters".
There is a phonemic contrast between single and non-single (geminated or long) consonants:
Gemination and degemination play a role in the morphology of nouns and verbs:
All consonants can in principle occur geminated or long, although phonemic xx° and ṛṛ do not seem to be attested. The uvular stops only occur geminated or long (qq, qq°).[32]
Four consonants have each two corresponding geminate or long consonants, one phonetically identical and one different:
In the oldest layers of the morphology, ḍ, w, ɣ, ɣ° always have ṭṭ, gg°, qq, qq° as geminated or long counterparts:
Whether a non-single consonant is realized as geminated or as long depends on the syllabic context. A geminated consonant is a sequence of two identical consonants /CC/, metrically counting as two segments, and always separated by syllable division, as in tamdda [ta.md.da.] "sparrowhawk". A long consonant is a consonant followed by a chroneme /C:/, metrically counting as a single segment and belonging to one syllable, as in tugga [tu.g:a.] "testimony". When a morpheme contains a non-single consonant, it can be either geminated or long, depending on the context:
It is also possible for two identical consonants to occur in sequence, both being released separately and constituting the onset and nucleus of a vowelless syllable. Such sequences are transcribed with an intervening apostrophe:
Shilha syllable structure has been the subject of a detailed and highly technical discussion by phoneticians. The issue was whether Shilha does or does not have vowelless syllables. According to John Coleman, syllables which are vowelless on the phonemic level have "schwa" serving as vocalic nucleus on the phonetic level. According to Rachid Ridouane on the other hand, Shilha's apparently vowelless syllables are truly vowelless, with all phonemes, vowels as well as consonants, capable of serving as nucleus. The discussion is summed up in Ridouane (2008, with listing of relevant publications), where he conclusively demonstrates that a perfectly ordinary Shilha phrase such as tkkst stt "you took it away" indeed consists of three vowelless syllables [tk.ks.tst:.], each made up of voiceless consonants only, and with voiceless consonants (not "schwa") serving as nucleus. Many definitions of the syllable that have been put forward do not cover the syllables of Shilha.[33]
The syllable structure of Shilha was first investigated by Dell and Elmedlaoui in a seminal article (1985). They describe how syllable boundaries can be established through what they call "core syllabification". This works by associating a nucleus with an onset, to form a core syllable CV or CC. Segments that are higher on the sonority scale have precedence over those lower on the scale in forming the nucleus in a core syllable, with vowels and semivowels highest on the scale, followed by liquids and nasals, voiced fricatives, voiceless fricatives, voiced stops and voiceless stops. When no more segments are available as onsets, the remaining single consonants are assigned as coda to the preceding core syllable, but if a remaining consonant is identical to the consonant that is the onset of the following syllable, it merges with it to become a long consonant. A morpheme boundary does not necessarily constitute a syllable boundary. Example:
Core syllabification:
Coda assignment:
Comparative diagram of the following:
Example of Phonological Processes in Shilha | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gloss of text | they.went | to | one | EA-orchard | they.enter | into-it | to- | they.eat | EL-figs | with | EA-grapes | |||||||||||||||||
Shilha text | ddan | s | yaw | wurti | kcmn | iss | ad | ccin | tazart | d | waḍil | |||||||||||||||||
Core Syll | d | (da) | (ns) | (ya) | w | (wu) | r | (ti) | k | (cm) | (ni) | s | (sa) | (dc) | (ci) | n | (ta) | (za) | r | (td) | (wa) | (ḍi) | l | |||||
Coda Assgn. | (d:a) | (ns) | (ya) | (w:ur) | (tik) | (cm) | (ni) | (s:a) | (dc) | (cin) | (ta) | (zar) | (td) | (wa) | (ḍil) | |||||||||||||
English trans | "they went to an orchard and entered it to eat figs and grapes" |
Application of core syllabification produces the following Shilha syllable types:
C V | C: V | ||
C V C | C: V C | C V C: | C: V C: |
C C | C: C | C C: | C: C: |
C C C | C: C C | C C C: | C: C C: |
Shilha syllable structure can be represented succinctly by the formula CX(C), in which C is any consonant (single/long), and X is any vowel or consonant (single) and with the restriction that in a syllable CXC the X, if it is a consonant, cannot be higher on the resonance scale than the syllable-final consonant, that is, syllables such as [tsk.] and [wrz.] are possible, but not *[tks.] and *[wzr.].
Exceptional syllables of the types X (vowel or single/long consonant) and V(C) (vowel plus single/long consonant) occur in utterance-initial position:
Another exceptional syllable type, described by Dell and Elmedlaoui (1985), occurs in utterance-final position, when a syllable of the type CC or CC: is "annexed" to a preceding syllable of the type CV or C:V, for example fssamt "be silent!" is [fs.samt.] not *[fs.sa.mt.].
Since any syllable type may precede or follow any other type, and since any consonant can occur in syllable-initial or final position, there are no phonotactical restrictions on consonant sequences. This also means that the concept of the consonant cluster is not applicable in Shilha phonology, as any number of consonants may occur in sequence:
The metrics of traditional Shilha poems, as composed and recited by itinerant bards (inḍḍamn), was first described and analyzed by Hassan Jouad (thesis 1983, book 1995; see also Dell and Elmedlaoui 2008). The traditional metrical system confirms the existence of vowelless syllables in Shilha, and Jouad's data have been used by Dell and Elmedlaoui, and by Ridouane to support their conclusions.
The metrical system imposes the following restrictions:
Within these restrictions, the poet is free to devise his own metrical form. This can be recorded in a meaningless formula called talalayt which shows the number and the length of the syllables, as well as the place of the obligatory voiced consonant (Jouad lists hundreds of such formulae).
The system is illustrated here with a quatrain ascribed to the semi-legendary Shilha poet Sidi Ḥammu (fl. 18th century) and published by Amarir (1987:64):
a titbirin a tumlilin a timgraḍ
ab bahra wr takkamt i lxla hann lbaz
igan bu tassrwalt ig lxatm ɣ uḍaḍ
ak k°nt yut ukan iɣli d ignwan izug
"O white doves, O pets!
Do not venture into the desert too often, for there is the falcon,
Wearing small trousers; he'll put a ring on [your] finger,
To strike you but once — then he ascends into the sky and is gone!"
Application of Dell and Elmedlaoui's core syllabification reveals a regular mosaic of syllables:
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | ||||
Line 1 | a | t í t | b i | r i | n a | t ú m | l i | l i | n a | t í | m g | r á ḍ | |||
Line 2 | a | b: á h | r a | w r | t a | k: á m | t i | l x | l a | h á | n: l | b á z | |||
Line 3 | i | g á n | b u | t a | s: r | w á l | t i | g l | x a | t ḿ | ɣ u | ḍ á ḍ | |||
Line 4 | a | k°: ń t | y u | t u | k a | n í ɣ | l i | d i | g n | w á | n i | z ú g |
The poem is composed in a metre listed by Jouad (1995:283) and exemplified by the formula a láy, la li la láy, la li la lá, li lád (the d in the last syllable indicates the position of the compulsory voiced consonant).
On the basis of their morphology, three types of Shilha nouns can be distinguished, two indigenous types and one type of external origin:
The relevant morpho-syntactic categories are gender, number and state.[34]
Inflected nouns are by far the most numerous type. These nouns can be easily recognised from their outward shape: they begin with a nominal prefix which has the form (t)V-:
Inflected nouns distinguish two genders, masculine and feminine; two numbers, singular and plural; and two states, conventionally referred to by their French names as état libre ("free state") and état d'annexion ("annexed state")[35] and glossed as EL and EA. Gender and number are all explicitly marked, but historical and synchronic sound changes have in some cases resulted in the neutralization of the difference between EL and EA.
The nominal prefix has no semantic content, i.e. it is not a sort of (in)definite article, although it is probably demonstrative in origin. It is made up of one or both of two elements, a gender prefix and a vocalic prefix. Singular feminine nouns may also have a gender suffix. For example, the noun tazdwit "bee" has the feminine prefix t-, the vocalic prefix a- and the feminine singular suffix -t added to the nominal stem zdwi. While feminine inflected nouns always have the feminine prefix, masculine nouns do not have a gender prefix in the free state (EL); for example abaɣuɣ "fox" has no gender prefix, but only a vocalic prefix a- added to the nominal stem baɣuɣ.
Gender is thus marked unambiguously, albeit asymmetrically. In just a handful of nouns, the morphological gender does not conform to the grammatical gender (and number): ulli "sheep and goats" is morphologically masculine singular, but takes feminine plural agreement; alln "eyes" is morphologically masculine plural, but takes feminine plural agreement; tarwa "(someone's) children, offspring" is morphologically feminine singular, but takes masculine plural agreement.
The annexed state (EA) is regularly formed by reducing the vocalic prefix to zero and, with masculine nouns, adding the masculine gender prefix w-:[36]
With some nouns, the original vocalic prefix has fused with a stem-initial vowel, to produce an inseparable (and irreducible) vowel:
With feminine nouns that have an inseparable vocalic prefix, the difference between EL and EA is thus neutralized.
While most inflected nouns have a vocalic prefix a-, some have i- (in some cases inseparable), and a few have u- (always inseparable). When a masculine noun has the vocalic prefix i- (separable or inseparable), the masculine gender prefix w- changes to y-. The table below presents an overview (all examples are singular; plurals also distinguish EL and EA):
Masculine | Feminine | ||||
EL | EA | EL | EA | ||
"fox" | a-baɣuɣ | w-baɣuɣ | "bee" | t-a-zdwi-t | t-zdwi-t |
"moon" | ayyur | w-ayyur | "sun" | t-afuk-t | t-afuk-t |
"cave" | i-fri | y-fri | "meat" | t-i-fiyi | t-fiyi |
"ash" | iɣd | y-iɣd | "salt" | t-isn-t | t-isn-t |
"moufflon" | udad | w-udad | "light" | t-ufaw-t | t-ufaw-t |
The EA is not predictable from the shape of the noun, compare:
The phonological rules on the realization of /w/ and /j/ apply to the EA as well. For example, the EA of a-mɣar "chief" is /w-mɣar/, realized as wmɣar after a vowel, umɣar after a consonant:
Inflected nouns show a great variety of plural formations, applying one or more of the following processes:
There are also irregular and suppletive plurals. The feminine singular suffix -t is naturally lost in the plural.
Independent from these processes, the separable vocalic prefix a- is always replaced with i-. An inseparable vocalic prefix either remains unchanged, or changes as part of vowel change (but if the vocalic prefix is inseparable in the singular, it may be separable in the plural, as with aduz "dune", and vice versa, as with aydi "dog"; see table below).
Below is a sample of nouns, illustrating various plural formations.
Singular | Plural | Process(es) | |
"mountain" | a-drar | i-drar-n | suffixation |
"dune" | aduz | i-dazz-n | vowel change, gemination, suffixation |
"head" | a-gayyu | i-guyya | vowel change |
"ear" | a-mẓẓuɣ | i-mzga-n | (irregular plural) |
"waterhole" | anu | una | vowel change |
"document" | arra | arra+t-n | stem extension, suffixation |
"day" | ass | ussa-n | vowel change, suffixation |
"dog" | a-ydi | iḍa-n | (irregular plural) |
"forehead" | i-gnzi | i-gnzi+t-n | stem extension, suffixation |
"forearm" | i-ɣil | i-ɣall-n | vowel change, gemination, suffixation |
"scorpion" | iɣirdm | iɣardm+iw-n | vowel change, stem extension, suffixation |
"witness" | i-nigi | i-naga-n | vowel change, suffixation |
"slave" | i-smg | i-smga-n | vowel change, suffixation |
"face" | udm | udm+aw-n | stem extension, suffixation |
"song" | urar | urar-n | suffixation |
"jackal" | uccn | uccan-n | vowel change, suffixation |
"egg" | t-a-glay-t | t-i-glay | (irregular plural) |
"thing" | t-a-ɣawsa | t-i-ɣaws+iw-in | stem extension, suffixation |
"mouse" | t-a-ɣrday-t | t-i-ɣrday-in | suffixation |
"churn" | t-a-gccul-t | t-i-g°cl-in | vowel change, suffixation, degemination |
"fireplace" | t-aka-t | t-aka+t-in | stem extension, suffixation |
"woman" | t-a-mɣar-t | t-u-mɣar-in[37] | suffixation |
"porcupine" | t-aruc-t | t-urac | vowel change |
"key" | t-a-saru-t | t-i-sura | vowel change |
"house" | t-i-gmmi | t-i-g°mma | vowel change |
"ewe" | t-ili | t-att-n | (suppletive plural) |
"meal" | t-irm-t | t-iram | vowel change |
"eye" | t-iṭṭ | all-n | (suppletive plural) |
"mountain pass" | t-izi | t-izza | vowel change, gemination |
"lioness" | t-izm-t | t-izm+aw-in | suffixation, stem extension |
"light" | t-ifaw-t | t-ifaw-in | suffixation |
The plural is generally not predictable from the shape of the singular, compare:
Many nouns have more than one plural, for example a-jnwiy "knife", plural i-jnway (vowel change) or i-jnwiy-n (suffixation).
Many Shilha place-names are morphologically inflected nouns:
The same is the case with Shilha ethnic names:
Among the inflected nouns are found many incorporated loans. Examples include (see also § Loanwords):
This is the least common type, which also includes some loans. Examples:
It is probable that all uninflected nouns were originally masculine. The few that now take feminine agreement contain elements that have been reanalyzed as marking feminine gender, for example ttjdmnni "kind of spider" (initial t seen as feminine prefix), hlima "bat" (not an Arabic loanword, but final a analyzed as the Arabic feminine ending).
Many uninflected nouns are collectives or non-count nouns which do not have a separate plural form. Those that have a plural make it by preposing the pluralizer id, for example id lagar "stations".
The uninflected noun mddn or middn "people, humans" is morphologically masculine singular but takes masculine plural agreement.
Names of people and foreign place-names can be seen as a subtype of uninflected nouns, for example Musa (man's name), Muna (woman's name), Fas "Fès", Brdqqiz "Portugal". Gender is not transparently marked on these names, but those referring to humans take gender agreement according to the natural sex of the referent (male/masculine, female/feminine).
These are nouns of Arabic origin (including loans from French and Spanish through Arabic) which have largely retained their Arabic morphology. They distinguish two genders (not always unambiguously marked) and two numbers (explicitly marked). A notable feature of these nouns is that they are borrowed with the Arabic definite article, which is semantically neutralized in Shilha:
The Arabic feminine ending -a is often replaced with the Shilha feminine singular suffix -t:
Arabic loans usually retain their gender in Shilha. The exception are Arabic masculine nouns which end in t; these change their gender to feminine in Shilha, with the final t reanalyzed as the Shilha feminine singular suffix -t:
Arabic plurals are usually borrowed with the singulars. If the borrowed plural is not explicitly marked for gender (according to Arabic morphology) it has the same gender as the singular:
Loanwords whose singular is masculine may have a plural which is feminine, and marked as such (according to Arabic morphology), for example lɛlam "flag" (masculine), plural lɛlum-at (feminine).
The annexed state (EA) of an inflected noun is used in a number of clearly defined syntactical contexts:[38]
Outside these contexts, the EL is used. Uninflected nouns and unincorporated loans, which do not distinguish state, remain unchanged in these contexts.
The formation of feminine nouns from masculine nouns is a productive process. A feminine noun is formed by adding both the feminine nominal prefix t- (and, if necessary, a vocalic prefix), and the feminine singular suffix -t to a masculine noun. The semantic value of the feminine derivation is variable.
For many nouns referring to male and female humans or animals (mainly larger mammals), matching masculine and feminine forms exist with the same nominal stem, reflecting the sex of the referent:
In a few cases there are suppletive forms:
Feminine nouns derived from masculine nouns with inanimate reference have diminutive meaning:
Conversely, a masculine noun derived from a feminine noun has augmentative meaning:
Feminine nouns derived from masculine collective nouns have singulative meaning:
Feminine derivations are also used as names of languages, professions and activities:
There is an overlap here with feminine nouns denoting females:
There are three deictic clitics which can follow a noun: proximal a-d "this, these", distal a-nn "that, those" (compare § Verbal deictic clitics) and anaphoric lli "the aforementioned":
There are three basic sets of personal pronouns:
In addition, there are two derived sets which contain the suffixed pronouns (except in 1st singular):
Gender is consistently marked on 2nd singular, and on 2nd and 3rd plural. Gender is not consistently marked on 3rd singular and 1st plural. Gender is never marked on 1st singular.
Independent | Direct object clitics | Suffixes | Indirect object clitics | Possessive complements | ||
1 | sg. | nkki(n) | yyi | V-Ø / C-i | yyi | V nw / C inw |
2 | sg.m. | kyyi(n) | k | -k | a-k | nn-k |
sg.f. | kmmi(n) | km | -m | a-m | nn-m | |
3 | sg.m. | ntta(n) | t | -s | a-s | nn-s |
sg.f. | nttat | tt / stt | ||||
1 | pl.m. | nkk°ni(n) | a(n)ɣ | -nɣ | a-(n)ɣ | nnɣ |
pl.f. | nkk°nti(n) | |||||
2 | pl.m. | k°nni(n) | k°n | V-wn / C-un | a-wn | nn-un |
pl.f. | k°nnimti(n) | k°nt | V-wnt / C-unt | a-wnt | nn-unt | |
3 | pl.m. | nttni(n) | tn | -sn | a-sn | nn-sn |
pl.f. | nttnti(n) | tnt | -snt | a-snt | nn-snt | |
∅ = zero morpheme |
The independent ("overt") pronouns are used to topicalize the subject or the object.
They are also used with certain pseudo-prepositions such as zund "like", abla "except":
The direct object clitics are used with transitive verbs:
The 3rd singular feminine variant stt is used after a dental stop, compare:
The direct object clitics are also used to indicate the subject with pseudo-verbs,[39] and with the presentative particle ha "here is, voici":
The pronominal suffixes are used with prepositions to indicate the object (see § Prepositions), and with a closed set of necessarily possessed kinship terms to indicate possession (see § Possessed nouns). The plural forms add an infix -t- before the suffix with kinship terms, for example baba-t-nɣ "our father" (never *baba-nɣ); this infix also occurs with some prepositions as a free or dialectal variant of the form without the -t-:
The indirect object clitics convey both benefactive and detrimental meaning:
The possessive complements follow the noun (see § Possession).
Prepositions can have up to three different forms, depending on the context in which they are used:
The form before nouns and demonstrative pronouns and the independent form are identical for most prepositions, the exception being the dative preposition i (independent mi, mu).
Before noun or demonstrative pronoun | Independent | With pronominal suffix | Translation equivalents |
ar | — | — | terminative: "until, as far as" |
d | d | id-, did- | comitative: "with, in the company of; and" |
dar | dar | dar- | "at the place of, chez" |
ddu | … | ddaw-, ddawa- | "beneath, under" |
f | f | flla- | "on; because of" |
gr | … | gra- | "between" |
(i)ngr | … | (i)ngra- | "among" |
ɣ | ɣ | gi(g)- | locative: "in, at" |
i | mi, mu | (indirect object clitics) | dative: "for, to" |
n | — | (possessive complements) | possessive: "of" |
nnig | … | nniga- | "above" |
s | s | is- | instrumental: "with, by means of" |
s | s | sr- | allative: "to, toward" |
zɣ | zɣ | zgi(g)- | ablative: "from" |
— inexistent … unattested, probably inexistent |
Most prepositions require a following inflected noun to be in the annexed state (EA) (see § Use of the annexed state). Exceptions are ar "until", s "toward" (in some modern dialects, and in premodern texts) and prepositions borrowed from Arabic (not in the table) such as bɛd "after" and qbl "before".
The instrumental and allative prepositions s "by means of" (with EA) and s "toward" (with EL) were still consistently kept apart in premodern manuscript texts. In most modern dialects they have been amalgamated, with both now requiring the EA, and with the pre-pronominal forms each occurring with both meanings: sr-s "toward it" (now also "with it"), is-s "with it" (now also "toward it").
The use of the different forms is illustrated here with the preposition ɣ "in":
Two prepositions can be combined:
Spatial relations are also expressed with phrases of the type "on top of":
The preposition gi(g)- "in" with pronominal suffixes, with all its free and dialectal variants,[40] is presented below. The other prepositions display a much smaller variety of forms.
gig- | gi- | with -t- | irregular | |
1 sg. | gig-i | gi-Ø | gi-t-i | |
2 sg.m. | gik-k | gi-k | ||
2 sg.f. | gig-m | gi-m | ||
3 sg. | gi-s | giz, gid, git | ||
1 pl. | gig-nɣ | gi-(n)ɣ | gi-t-nɣ | |
2 pl.m. | gig-un | gi-wn | gi-t-un | |
2 pl.f. | gig-unt | gi-wnt | gi-t-unt | |
3 pl.m. | gi-sn | gi-t-sn | gizn, gidsn | |
3 pl.f. | gi-snt | gi-t-snt | giznt, gidsnt |
The inherited cardinal numeral system consists of ten numerals (still in active use) and three numeral nouns (now obsolete) for "a tensome", "a hundred" and "a thousand". There is also an indefinite numeral meaning "several, many" or "how many?" which morphologically and syntactically patterns with the numerals 1 to 10. For numbers of 20 and over, Arabic numerals are commonly used.
These are listed below.[41] The formation of feminine "one" and "two" is irregular.
Masculine | Feminine | |
"one" | ya-n | ya-t |
"two" | sin | sna-t |
"three" | kraḍ | kraṭ-ṭ |
"four" | kkuẓ | kkuẓ-t |
"five" | smmus | smmus-t |
"six" | sḍis | sḍis-t |
"seven" | sa | sa-t |
"eight" | tam | tam-t |
"nine" | tẓa | tẓa-t |
"ten" | mraw | mraw-t |
indefinite | mnnaw | mnnaw-t |
The numerals 1 to 10 are constructed with nouns (inflected nouns in the EA), the gender of the numeral agreeing with that of the noun:
The same obtains with the indefinite numeral:
Numerals yan, yat "one" also serve as indefinite article, for example yan urumiy "one Westerner, a Westerner", and they are used independently with the meaning "anyone" (yan), "anything" (yat):
The final n of masculine yan "one" and sin "two" is often assimilated or fused to a following w, y or l:
The teens are made by connecting the numerals 1 to 9 to the numeral 10 with the preposition d "with". In the premodern language, both numerals took the gender of the counted noun, with the following noun in the plural (EA):
In the modern language, fused forms have developed in which the first numeral is always masculine,[43] while the following noun is in the singular, and connected with the preposition n "of":[44]
There are three inherited nouns to denote "a tensome", "a hundred" and "a thousand". These now seem to be obsolete, but they are well attested in the premodern manuscripts.[45] Morphologically, they are ordinary inflected nouns.
Singular | Plural | |||
EL | EA | EL | EA | |
"a tensome" | t-a-mraw-t | t-mraw-t | t-i-mraw-in | t-mraw-in |
"a hundred" | t-i-miḍi | t-miḍi | t-i-maḍ | t-maḍ |
"a thousand" | ifḍ | y-ifḍ | afḍa-n | w-afḍa-n |
The tens, hundreds and thousand were formed by combining the numerals 1 to 10 with the numeral nouns:
The numeral nouns are connected with the preposition n "of" to a noun, which is most often in the singular:
In the modern language the Arabic tens are used, which have developed a separate feminine form:
The numerals between the tens are most frequently made with the Arabic numerals 1 to 10:
The Arabic hundreds and thousands are used in the modern language, taking the places of the original numeral nouns while the original syntax is maintained:
There is also a vigesimal system built on the Arabic numeral ɛcrin "twenty, score",[46] for example sin id ɛcrint n tfunast (two PL score of EA-cow) "forty cows".
First and last are usually expressed with relative forms of the verbs izwur "to be first" and ggru "to be last":
There are also agent nouns derived from these verbs which are apposed to a noun or used independently:
The other ordinals are formed by prefixing masc. wis-, fem. tis- to a cardinal numeral,[47] which is then constructed with a plural noun in the usual manner:
The ordinal prefixes is also used with Arabic numerals and with the indefinite numeral:
Because four of the numerals 1 to 10 begin with s, the geminated ss that results from the prefixation of wis-, tis- (as in wissin, wissmmus, etc.) is often generalized to the other numerals: wissin, wisskraḍ, wisskkuẓ, etc.
A Shilha verb form is basically a combination of a person-number-gender (PNG) affix and a mood-aspect-negation (MAN) stem.
The workings of this system are illustrated here with the full conjugation of the verb fk "to give". The perfective negative goes with the negation wr "not". The imperfective goes with the preverbal particle ar (except usually the imperative, and the relative forms).
Aorist | Perfective | Perfective negative | Imperfective | |
MAN stem→ | fk(i) | fki/a | fki | akka |
1 sg. | fk-ɣ | fki-ɣ | ur fki-ɣ | ar akka-ɣ |
2 sg. | t-fk-t | t-fki-t | ur t-fki-t | ar t-akka-t |
3 sg.m. | i-fk | i-fka | ur i-fki | ar y-akka |
3 sg.f. | t-fk | t-fka | ur t-fki | ar t-akka |
1 pl. | n-fk | n-fka | ur n-fki | ar n-akka |
2 pl.m. | t-fki-m | t-fka-m | ur t-fki-m | ar t-akka-m |
2 pl.f. | t-fki-mt | t-fka-mt | ur t-fki-mt | ar t-akka-mt |
3 pl.m. | fki-n | fka-n | ur fki-n | ar akka-n |
3 pl.f. | fki-nt | fka-nt | ur fki-nt | ar akka-nt |
Imperative | ||||
2 sg. | fk | akka | ||
2 pl.m. | fk-at | akka-y-at | ||
2 pl.f. | fk-amt | akka-y-amt | ||
Relative | ||||
sg. | i-fka-n | ur i-fki-n | y-akka-n | |
pl. | fka-n-in | ur fki-n-in | akka-n-in |
The verb fk "give" has the full complement of four different MAN stems:
There are two basic sets of PNG affixes, one set marking the subject of ordinary verb forms, and another set marking the subject of imperatives.
Two suffixes (singular -n, plural -in) are added to the 3rd singular and masculine 3rd plural masculine verb forms respectively to make relative forms (also known as "participles"), as in i-fka-n "who gives", fka-n-in "who give".[48]
1 sg | … | -ɣ | |
2 sg. | t- | … | -t |
3 sg.m. | y- | … | |
3 sg.f. | t- | … | |
1 pl. | n- | … | |
2 pl.m. | t- | … | -m |
2 pl.f. | t- | … | -mt |
3 pl.m. | … | -n | |
3 pl.f. | … | -nt | |
Imperative | |||
2 sg. | … | -Ø | |
2 pl.m. | … | -at | |
2 pl.f. | … | -amt | |
Relative | |||
3 sg. | y- | … | -n |
3 pl. | … | -n-in |
A few verbs have just one MAN stem. The majority of verbs have two, three or four different MAN stems.[49] The Aorist stem serves as the citation form of a verb. The list below offers an overview of MAN stem paradigms. Around 15 paradigms of non-derived verbs can be recognized, based on the formation of the Perfective and the Perfective negative. Further subdivisions could be made on the basis of the formations of the Imperfective. All sections in the list contain a selection of verbs, except sections 12, 14, and 15, which contain a full listing.
Aorist | Perfective | Perfective negative | Imperfective | ||
1 | "laugh" | ḍssa | ḍssa | ḍssa | ḍssa |
"bark" | ttaɣ | ttaɣ | ttaɣ | ttaɣ | |
2 | "accompany" | mun | mun | mun | tt-mun |
"sit" | skkiws | skkiws | skkiws | skkiwis, tt-skiwis | |
"be crazy" | nufl | nufl | nufl | tt-nuful | |
3 | "enter" | kcm | kcm | kcim | kccm |
"graze" | frd | frd | frid | ffrd | |
"mention" | bdr | bdr | bdir | addr, tt-bdar | |
"ascend, climb" | ɣly | ɣly | ɣliy | aqqlay | |
"open, be open" | rẓm | rẓm | rẓim | tt-nurẓum | |
4 | "fall" | ḍr | ḍr | ḍir | ṭṭar |
"hit" | wt | wt | wit | kkat | |
5 | "break, be broken" | rẓ(i) | rẓi/a | rẓi | rẓẓa |
"eat" | cc(i) | cci/a | cci | ctta | |
"give" | fk(i) | fki/a | fki | akka | |
"show, explain" | ml(i) | mli/a | mli | mmal | |
"drink" | sw(i) | swi/a | swi | ssa | |
"call" | ɣr(i) | ɣri/a | ɣri | aqqra | |
"be; put" | g(i) | gi/a | gi | tt-gga | |
6 | "sew" | gnu | gni/a | gni | gnna, gnnu, tt-gnu |
"go" | ftu | fti/a | fti | fttu, tt-ftu | |
"go" | ddu | ddi/a | ddi | tt-dda, tt-ddu, tt-udu | |
"divide" | bḍu | bḍi/a | bḍi | aṭṭa | |
7 | "be better" | af | uf | uf | tt-afa |
"fly" | ayll | uyll | uyll | tt-aylal | |
"give back" | rar | rur | rur | tt-rara | |
"inherit" | kkas | kkus | kkus | tt-kasa | |
8 | "take" | amẓ | umẓ | umiẓ | tt-amẓ |
"steal" | ak°r | ukr | ukir | tt-ak°r | |
"help" | aws | iws | iwis | tt-aws | |
"run" | azzl | uzzl | uzzil | tt-azzal | |
9 | "find" | af(i) | ufi/a | ufi | tt-afa |
"come" | ack(i) | ucki/a | ucki | tt-acka | |
10 | "flay" | azu | uzi/a | uzi | tt-azu |
"contain" | amu | umi/a | umi | tt-amu | |
11 | "hold, possess" | ṭṭf, ṭṭaf | ṭṭf, ṭṭaf | ṭṭif | tt-ṭṭf, tt-ṭṭaf |
"take away" | kks, kkis | kks, kkis | kkis | tt-kks, tt-kkis | |
"go out" | ffɣ, ffuɣ | ffɣ, ffuɣ | ffiɣ | tt-ffɣ, tt-ffuɣ | |
12 | "die" | mmt | mmut | mmut | tt-mttat |
13 | "be afraid" | iksuḍ, ksuḍ | ksaḍ | ksaḍ | tt-iksuḍ, tt-ksuḍ |
"be first, precede" | izwur, zwur | zwar | zwar | tt-izwur, zgg°ur | |
14 | "possess" | ili | li/a | li | tt-ili |
"want" | iri | ri/a | ri | tt-iri | |
15 | "exist" | ili | lli/a | lli | tt-ili |
"say" | ini | nni/a | nni | tt-ini |
The table below is adapted from Kossmann (2012:40, table 2.12 Uses of MAN stems in Figuig Berber).
MAN stem | Main context in which MAN stem is used | Examples | Translation |
Aorist | imperative consecutive | amẓ y-amẓ | "take!" "(and then) he took" |
ad + Aorist | non-realized | ay y-amẓ | "that he take" |
rad + Aorist | future | ray y-amẓ | "he will take" |
ur + Aorist | negated consecutive | ur y-amẓ | "(and then) he didn't take" |
ad + ur + Aorist | negated imperative | ad ur t-amẓ-t | "don't take!" |
ur + rad + Aorist | negated future | ur ray y-amẓ | "he will not take" |
Perfective | past action state (including resultant state) | y-umẓ i-rɣa | "he took" "it was hot, it is hot" |
ur + Perfective Negative | negated past action negated state | ur y-umiẓ ur i-rɣi | "he did not take" "it was not hot, it is not hot" |
Imperfective | habitual/iterative imperative | tt-amẓ | "always take!" |
ad + Imperfective | habitual/iterative imperative | at tt-amẓ-t[50] | "you must always take" |
ad + ur + Imperfective | negated habitual/iterative imperative | ad ur tt-amẓ-t | "you should never take" |
ar + Imperfective | simultaneous action (progressive) habitual, iterative, durative | ar i-tt-amẓ | "he is taking, he always takes" |
ur + ar + Imperfective | negated simultaneous action negated habitual, iterative, durative | ur a y-tt-amẓ, ur aɣ i-tt-amẓ[51] | "he is not taking, he never takes" |
Shilha has around twenty stative verbs which are still recognizable as a separate type of verb on the basis of their MAN stem paradigms. In earlier stages of the language, these verbs had their own separate set of PNG markers, which are sporadically found in premodern manuscripts:[52]
In the modern language, these verbs take the regular PNG markers. Only the original singular relative form without prefix y- may still be encountered, for example adrar mqqur-n or adrar i-mqqur-n (mountain which.is.big) "big mountain". Stative verbs do not have a separate Perfective negative form. The table shows a selection of stative verbs.
Aorist | Perfective | Imperfective | |
"be few" | idrus | drus | tt-idrus |
"be many" | igut | ggut | tt-igut |
"be small, young" | imẓiy | mẓẓiy | tt-imẓiy |
"be big, old" | imɣur | mqqur | tt-imɣur |
"be yellow" | iwriɣ | wraɣ | tt-iwriɣ |
"be red" | izwiɣ | zgg°aɣ | tt-izwiɣ |
There are two deictic clitics which are used with verbs to indicate movement toward or away from the point of reference: centripetal d "hither" and centrifugal nn "thither":
The use of these clitics is compulsory (idiomatic) with certain verbs. For example, the verb ack "come" almost always goes with the centripetal particle, and af "find" with the centrifugal clitic:
When the verbal deictic clitics occur after an object pronoun, they change to id and inn:
A possessive construction within a noun phrase is most frequently expressed as Possessee n Possessor. The preposition n "of" requires a following inflected noun to be in the annexed state. This kind of possessive construction covers a wide range of relationships, including both alienable and inalienable possession, and most of them not involving actual ownership:
Many such possessive constructions are compounds, whose meaning cannot be deduced from the ordinary meaning of the nouns:
The possessor can itself be a possessee in a following possessive construction:
As a rule, the preposition n assimilates to, or fuses with, a following w, y, l or m:[54]
The possessor can also be expressed with a pronominal possessive complement. This consists of a pronominal suffix added to the preposition, which then takes the shape nn- (see § Pronouns). The form of the 1st singular possessive complement is anomalous: nw after a vowel, and inw after a consonant (or, in some dialects, niw):
There are two ways to express possession within a clause. The most common way is to use the "exist with" construction:
The verb ili "exist" (perfective lli/a) is usually omitted, leaving a verbless clause:
Alternatively, the verb ṭṭf, ṭṭaf "hold, possess" can be used:
In addition, there is the verb ili "possess" (perfective li/a), whose use is restricted to (inalienable) part-whole relationships and kinship relationships:
In al its usages ili can be replaced with ṭṭaf or the "exist with" construction, but not the other way around:
These are a subtype of uninflected nouns. As with proper names, gender is not transparently marked on possessed nouns, which take gender agreement according to the natural sex of the referent. Plurals are either suppletive or made with the preposed pluralizer id. Most possessed nouns are consanguinal kinship terms which require a possessive suffix (the table contains a selection).
Singular | Plural | Remarks | |
"the mother(s) of" | ma- | id ma- | |
"the father(s) of" | baba- | id baba- | |
"the daughter(s) of" | ylli- | ysti- | |
"the son(s) of" | yiw-, yu-, ywi- | (t-arwa) | the plural is a pl.m. inflected noun "sons, offspring" |
"the sister(s) of" | wlt-ma- | yst-ma- | compound, lit. "the daughter(s) of the mother of" |
"the brother(s) of" | g°-ma- | ayt-ma- | compound, lit. "the son(s) of the mother of" |
"grandmother: the mother of the mother of" | jdda- | Arabic loan | |
"grandfather: the father of the mother of" | ti-ma- | compound | |
"grandmother: the mother of the father of" | tabt-ti- | compound | |
"grandfather: the father of the father of" | jddi- | Arabic loan |
These kinship terms cannot occur without pronominal suffix. Example:
ultma-Ø | "my sister" |
ultma-k | "your (sg.m.) sister" |
ultma-m | "your (sg.f.) sister" |
ultma-s | "her sister, his sister" |
istma-t-nɣ | "our sisters" |
istma-t-un | "your (pl.m.) sisters" |
istma-t-unt | "your (pl.f.) sisters" |
istma-t-sn | "their (m.) sisters" |
istma-t-snt | "their (f.) sisters" |
If these nouns are part of an NP-internal possessive construction, possession must be indicated twice:
The suffix must also be added when possession is expressed in a clause:
Some kinship terms are not possessed nouns but inflected nouns which take possessive complements (see examples above).
Another group of possessed nouns require a following noun phrase, occurring only in an NP-internal possessive phrase. A following inflected noun must be in the EA.
Singular | Plural | |
"the son(s) of, native(s) of" | w | ayt |
"the female native(s) of" | wlt | yst |
These four possessed nouns occur as first element in compound kinship terms (see above; w then becomes g° in g°-ma- "the brother of"). They also serve to indicate descent, origin and ethnicity:
When w is followed by another (phonemic) w the result is gg°:
Ayt occurs in many Shilha ethnonyms:
The proprietive elements masc. bu "he with, he of" and fem. mm "she with, she of" are borrowed from Arabic (original meaning "father of", "mother of"). They are used as formative elements and require a following inflected noun to be in the annexed state. The plural is formed with the pluralizer id:
In many cases, bu fuses with a following nominal prefix:
The feminine mm is encountered less frequently:
The privative elements masc. war "he without" and fem. tar "she without" are made up of a gender prefix (masculine w-, feminine t-) and an element ar which is probably related to the negation wr "not". They do not require the annexed state, and should probably be translated as "who does not have", with the following noun phrase as object:
Shilha retains a large native (non-borrowed) lexicon, supplemented by borrowings from the languages with which its speakers came into contact.
The main available lexicographical sources for the modern language are: Stumme 1899 (contains Shilha–German wordlist, pp. 155–246) ; Destaing 1920 (French–Shilha); Cid Kaoui 1907 (French-Shilha, not entirely reliable); Jordan 1934 (Shilha–French, extracted from Laoust 1921); Destaing 1940 (a collection of texts with copious lexicographical notes and a Shilha index); Ibáñez 1954 (Spanish–Shilha); Boumalk and Bounfour 2001 (Shilha-French). An indigenous source for the premodern language is in van den Boogert (1998). These sources will be made accessible, with much additional data, in Stroomer's Dictionnaire tachelhit–français (forthcoming). No reliable wordlist in Shilha and English is available in print.[56]
Below is the Leipzig-Jakarta list for Shilha, extracted from Destaing (1920, dialects of the central Anti-Atlas). As far as can be determined, there are only five borrowed items in the list, all loans from Arabic. Note that the first item in the list, the most stable (least borrowed) item among the world's languages, is actually a loan in Shilha.
1 | fire | lɛafi-t < Arabic[57] |
2 | nose | t-i-nxar (plurale tantum, lit. "nostrils"), other dialects also t-i-nzar |
3 | to go | ddu, ftu |
4 | water | ama-n (plurale tantum) |
5 | mouth | i-mi |
6 | tongue | ils |
7 | blood | i-damm-n (plurale tantum) |
8 | bone | i-xss |
9 | 2sg pronoun | kyy, kyyi, kyyin (masc.), kmm, kmmi, kmmin (fem.) |
10 | root | a-ẓur "root, tendon, vein" |
11 | to come | ack-d |
12 | breast | t-i-bbi-t, t-a-bubba-t "breast, boob"; admr "breast, chest" |
13 | rain | a-nẓar |
14 | 1sg pronoun | nkk, nkki, nkkin |
15 | name | ism [58] |
16 | louse | t-ilki-t |
17 | wing | i-fr (cf. 64 leaf) |
18 | flesh/meat | t-i-fiyi; aksum (children's language) |
19 | arm/hand | a-fus "hand, arm", iɣil "forearm" |
20 | fly | izi |
21 | night | iḍ |
22 | ear | a-mẓẓuɣ |
23 | neck | a-mggrḍ |
24 | far | aggug "to be far" |
25 | to do/make | skr |
26 | house | t-i-gmmi |
27 | stone/rock | a-ẓru |
28 | bitter | irẓig "to be bitter" |
29 | to say | ini |
30 | tooth | ax°s |
31 | hair | azzar "head hair" |
32 | big | imɣur "to be big; to be old (human)" |
33 | one | ya-n (masc.), ya-t (fem.) |
34 | who? | ma "who? what?" |
35 | 3sg pronoun | ntta, nttan (masc.), ntta-t (fem.) |
36 | to beat/hit | wt |
37 | leg/foot | a-ḍar |
38 | horn | isk |
39 | this | -ad |
40 | fish | a-slm |
41 | yesterday | iḍgam, ndiwass |
42 | to drink | sw |
43 | black | isgin, isṭif "to be black" |
44 | navel | abuḍ |
45 | to stand | bdd "to be standing", nkr "to stand up" |
46 | to bite | bby "to cut, bite, sting" |
47 | back | t-adaw-t ; i-k°rma-n (plurale tantum) |
48 | wind | aḍu "wind, odour" |
49 | smoke | agg°u |
50 | what? | ma "who? what?" |
51 | child (kin term) | ywi- "son", ylli- "daughter"; t-arwa "someone's children, offspring" (m.pl., originally a f.sg. noun meaning "fruit") |
52 | egg | t-a-glay-t |
53 | to give | fk ~ kf |
54 | new | ljdid < Arabic |
55 | to burn (intr.) | kmḍ |
56 | not | wr |
57 | good | ɛdl "to be good, nice" < Arabic |
58 | to know | ssn |
59 | knee | afud |
60 | sand | a-mlal |
61 | to laugh | ḍssa |
62 | to hear | slla |
63 | soil | akal "soil, earth" |
64 | leaf | t-i-fr-t (cf. 17 wing) |
65 | red | izwiɣ "to be red" |
66 | liver | t-asa |
67 | to hide | rgs (intr.), ss-rgs (tr.) |
68 | skin/hide | ilm |
69 | to suck | ssumm |
70 | to carry | asy |
71 | ant | t-uḍfi-t |
72 | heavy | izḍiy "to be heavy, slow" |
73 | to take | amẓ "to take, seize, receive", kks "to take away, remove" |
74 | old | imɣur "to be old (human); to be big"; iwsir "to be elderly"; a-qdim "old (thing)" < Arabic |
75 | to eat | cc |
76 | thigh | t-aɣma |
77 | thick | izur "to be thick" |
78 | long | iɣzif "to be long" |
79 | to blow | suḍ "to blow (a fire, with the mouth)" |
80 | wood | a-sɣar "(piece of) wood", a-kccuḍ "id." |
81 | to run | azzl |
82 | to fall | ḍr |
83 | eye | t-iṭṭ |
84 | ash | iɣd |
85 | tail | t-i-mɣil-t |
86 | dog | a-ydi |
87 | to cry/weep | alla |
88 | to tie | qqn |
89 | to see | ẓr |
90 | sweet | imim "to be sweet, taste good" |
91 | rope | i-zikr |
92 | shade/shadow | a-sklu |
93 | bird | a-gḍiḍ "(small) bird", aylal "flying animal" |
94 | salt | t-isn-t |
95 | small | imẓiy "to be small; to be young" |
96 | wide | wsɛu < Arabic |
97 | star | itri |
98 | in | ɣ, gi(g)- |
99 | hard | iɣur "to be hard, dried out" |
100 | to crush/grind | bbk "to crush (in a mortar)", ẓd "to grind (in a mill)" |
The earliest identifiable loanword in Shilha is tiyni "dates" (cf. Tamasheq tehäyne, Ghadamès aβēna), from Egyptian-Coptic (cf. Coptic bnne, beni, benni "date palm-tree; dates"[59]).
Phoenician-Punic, a Northwest-Semitic language, was spoken in parts of North Africa, especially in what is now Tunisia, up to the 5th century CE. Punic loans are found in several Berber languages, among them Shilha. Examples (etymons are cited from Hebrew, another Northwest-Semitic language which is closely related to Phoenician-Punic, but much better attested):
The verb lmd "to learn" is probably also a Punic loan (cf. Hebrew lāmad).
The noun uday "Jew" probably came to the Berber languages from the Aramaic language spoken by early Jewish immigrants in North Africa (cf. Aramaic-Syriac yūdāy-ā vs. Hebrew yehûdî, Arabic yahūdī; the Aramaic noun is also the source of Greek ἰουδαῖος, Latin iūdaeus).
It has been noted[60] that the numerals 5 to 9 seem to be Semitic loans. The corresponding numerals in Phoenician-Punic and in Arabic, the historically most likely origin, do not seem to be the source. A comparison:
Shilha | Tigrinya | Phoenician | Arabic | |
"five" | smmus | ḥammuš- | ḥmš | xams- |
"six" | sḍis | šɨdɨš- | šš | sitt- (ordinal sādis) |
"seven" | sa | šobʕat- | šbʕ | sabʕ- |
"eight" | tam, ttam | šommon- | šmn | θamān- |
"nine" | tẓa, ttẓa | tɨšʕat- | tšʕ | tisʕ- |
A variety of Latin/Romance was spoken in parts of northern Morocco right up to the advent of Islam. Loans from Latin and early Romance include:
Later Romance loans can be distinguished by the fact that original s becomes c /ʃ/ instead of s as in the earlier loans. Presumably, the later loans originated from Ibero-Romance, with which Berber speakers came into contact in al-Andalus (Islamic Spain). Examples include:
Another probable loan from a Romance language is tabaɣa "tobacco".[61]
Also borrowed from Romance are the names of the months of the Julian calendar:[62]
Shilha | Catalan | Spanish | Portuguese |
ynnayr | gener | enero | janeiro |
brayr | febrer | febrero | fevereiro |
marṣ | març | marzo | março |
ibril, ibrir | abril | abril | abril |
mayyu(h) | maig | mayo | maio |
yunyu(h) | juny | junio | junho |
yulyu(z) | juliol | julio | julho |
ɣuct | agost | agosto | agosto |
cutambir | setembre | setiembre | septembro |
ktubṛ | octubre | octubre | outubro |
nuwambir | novembre | noviembre | novembro |
dujambir | dezembre | diciembre | dezembro |
Most Spanish and French loanwords in Shilha came via Arabic, as shown by the presence of the Arabic definite article:
There are sporadic loans from other languages, such as atay [atæj] "tea" from Dutch thee [tej],[63] ganga "drum", from an unidentified Sub-Saharan African language, and aḍbjiy "artilleryman", from Ottoman Turkish طوپچى topçı.
By far the most numerous group of loans is from Arabic. As with most languages spoken in the Islamic cultural sphere, Shilha has adopted many hundreds of words from Arabic, which now permeat the entire lexicon (except body parts and other basic vocabulary). Loans include verbs and nouns as well as numerals, prepositions, conjunctions and adverbs. Borrowed verbs are completely absorbed into the Shilha verbal system. Many of the borrowed nouns were not incorporated into the nominal morphological system, thus constituting a subgroup of their own (see above, § Unincorporated loans).
Although some nouns denoting typically Islamic concepts such as timzgida "mosque", taẓallit "ritual prayer", uẓum "fasting", which certainly belong to the very oldest layer of Arabic loans,[64] are fully incorporated into Shilha morphology, many equally central Islamic concepts are expressed with unincorporated nouns, for example lislam "Islam", lḥajj "pilgrimage to Mecca", zzka "alms tax". It is possible that during the early stages of islamization such concepts were expressed with native vocabulary or with earlier, non-Arabic loans. One such term which has survived into the modern era is tafaska "ewe for slaughter on the (Islamic) Feast of Immolation",[65] from pascha,[66] the Latinized name of the Jewish festival of Passover (Pesaḥ) or, more specifically, of the paschal lamb (qorbān Pesaḥ) which is sacrificed during the festival. Another example is ibkkaḍan "sins", obsolete in the modern language, but attested in a premodern manuscript text,[67] whose singular abkkaḍu is borrowed from Romance (cf. Spanish pecado, Latin peccātum; modern Shilha uses ddnub "sins", from Arabic).
Destaing[68] mentions a secret language (argot) called inman or tadubirt which is spoken by "some people of Souss, in particular the descendants of Sidi Ḥmad u Musa." He quotes an example: is kn tusat inman? "do you speak the secret language?"
Two secret languages used by Shilha women are described by Lahrouchi and Ségéral (2009). They are called tagnawt (cf. Shilha agnaw "deaf-mute person") and taɛjmiyt or taqqjmiyt. They employ various processes, such as reduplication, to disguise the ordinary language.
(1) Lqqiṣt n yan urgaz lli yzznzan tammnt ɣ ssuqq.
(2) Yan urgaz iɛmmr mnnaw yilmawn n tammnt ɣ ssuqq.
(3) Yack nn dars yan urgaz, ira ad dars isɣ tammnt.
(4) Inna y as: "Mnck at tzznzt tammnt ann?"
(5) Inna y as: "Mḍi tt, iɣ ak tɛjb ar gis tsawalt."
(6) Yasy urgaz ann yan yilm, ifsi t, imḍi tammnt, ifk t i bab nns.
(7) Inna y as: "Amẓ, ar kiɣ gussɣ wayyaḍ."
(8) Yamẓ t s ufus nns, yasi daɣ umsaɣ lli wayyaḍ, ifsi t, imḍi tammnt, ifk t daɣ i bab nns.
(9) Yamẓ t s ufus nns yaḍnin, yasy umsaɣ yan yilm n tammnt, irur.
(10) Iggammi bu tammnt mad a yskar i yilmawn lli yumẓ.
(11) Ar yaqqra y mddn at t fukkun.
(1) The story of the man who sold honey in the souk. (2) A man had filled several leather bags of honey in the souk. (3) There came another man to him, who wanted to buy honey. (4) He said: "At how much do you sell that honey?" (5) He (the seller) said to him: "Just taste it, and if it pleases you, you can make a bid." (6) He (the man) took a bag, poured out some, tasted the honey and gave it back to its owner. (7) He said: "Hold it, until I have tried another one". (8) He (the seller) held it in his hand, while the buyer took another bag, poured out some, tasted the honey and gave it back to its owner. (9) He held it in his other hand; then the buyer took one bag of honey and ran away. (10) He (the seller) could not do anything because of the bags he held. (11) He started calling out to people to liberate him.
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