(Redirected from Maa language)
The 'Maa languages' are a group of closely related
Eastern Nilotic languages (or from a linguistic perspective, dialects, as they appear to be mutually-intelligible) spoken in parts of
Kenya and
Tanzania by more than a million speakers altogether. They are subdivided into North and South Maa. The Maa languages are related to the
Lotuxo languages spoken in Southern
Sudan.
In the past, several peoples have abandoned their language in favor of a Maa language, usually following a period of intensive cultural and economic contact. Among peoples that have assimilated to Maa peoples are the
Aasáx (Asa) and the
Elmolo, former hunter-gatherers who spoke
Cushitic languages, and the
Mukogodo-Maasai (Yaaku), former bee-keepers and hunter-gatherers (
Eastern Cushitic). The
Akiek of northern Tanzania, speakers of a
Southern Nilotic Kalenjin tongue, are under heavy influence from Maasai.
★ Northern Maa
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★
Samburu (spoken by the
Samburu people)
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★
Camus (or il-Chamus, the preferred autonym; sometimes considered a dialect of Samburu)
★ Southern Maa
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Maasai (spoken by the
Maasai people)
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★
Ngasa or Ongamo (extinct or at least
endangered; most speakers have shifted to
Chaga) (Sommer 1992:380).
Another Kenyan Maa variety once existed,
Kore. After being defeated by the Purko Maasai in the 1870s, the Kore fled to north-eastern Kenya where they were taken captive by
Somali people. After functioning for years as clients or slaves in Somali households, they were set free by British imperial forces around the end of the 19th century. They have lost their own language and speak
Somali. Loss of cattle brought them to
Lamu island in the second half of the 20th century, where they live nowadays.
References
★ Heine, Bernd & Vossen, Rainer (1980) 'The Kore of Lamu: A contribution to Maa dialectology', ''Afrika und übersee'', 62, 272–288.
★ Vossen, Rainer (1982) ''The Eastern Nilotes: Linguistic and Historical Reconstructions''. Berlin: Dietrich Reimer Verlag. ISBN 3-496-00698-6.
★ Vossen, Rainer (1988) ''Towards a comparative study of the Maa dialects of Kenya and Tanzania'' (Nilo-Saharan 2.) Hamburg: Helmut Buske Verlag.
★ Sommer, Gabriele {1992) 'A survey on language death in Africa', in Brenzinger, Matthias (ed.) ''Language Death: Factual and Theoretical Explorations with Special Reference to East Africa''. Berlin/New York: Mouton de Gruyter, pp. 301–417.
External links
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Maa languages on the Ethnologue
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The Maa (Maasai) language, a website maintained by Doris L. Payne.