Everything about Hadza totally explained
Hadza is a
language isolate spoken by fewer than a thousand people along the shores of
Lake Eyasi in
Tanzania. The
Hadza are still partially
hunter-gatherers, though there have been repeated efforts to settle them. Despite the small number of speakers, language use is vigorous, with most children learning it. However, the recent eradication of the
tsetse fly from Hadza lands has cleared the way for cattle herders, charcoal burners, game hunters, and farmers, and the Hadza are losing their water, forest, food, and land to overexploitation.
Classification
Hadza has traditionally been classified as a
Khoisan language, along with its neighbor
Sandawe, primarily because they both have
clicks. However, Hadza has very few proposed
cognates with either Sandawe or the other Khoisan languages, and many of the ones that have been proposed appear doubtful. The links with Sandawe, for example, appear to be Cushitic loan words, while the links with southern Africa are so few and short (usually single
CV syllables) that they could easily be coincidence. There are also a few apparent cognates with the possibly spurious
Oropom language.
Theories about early human language
In 2003 the press widely reported suggestions by Alec Knight and Joanna Mountain of
Stanford University that the original human language may have had clicks. The evidence for this is genetic: the
Juǀʼhoan and the Hadza have the most divergent known
mitochondrial DNA of any human populations, suggesting that they were the first, or at least among the first, surviving peoples to have split off the family tree. In other words, the three primary genetic divisions of humanity are the Hadzabe, the Juǀʼhoansi and relatives, and everyone else. Since two of the three groups speak languages with clicks, perhaps their common ancestral language, which by implication is the ancestral language for all humankind, had clicks as well. However, this conclusion rests on several unsupported assumptions:
- Both groups have kept their languages intact, without language shift, since the origin of humanity;
- Neither borrowed clicks as part of a Sprachbund, as the Xhosa and Sotho did; and
- Neither the ancestors of the Juǀʼhoansi nor those of the Hadzabe developed clicks independently.
Intriguingly, Alec Knight himself suggests a practical advantage to clicks: When hunting, the Juǀʼhoansi report that they don't use regular speech, which might spook their prey, but communicate solely by means of hand gestures and clicks. (The Hadzabe are mostly solitary hunters, at least currently.) If he's right, and clicks do provide an advantage to savanna hunters, then it's untenable to assume that they've not arisen independently, or at least not spread from one group to another, over the last several tens of thousands of years. However, the Hadza have almost no clicks in their specialized hunting vocabulary, such as the hunting names of animals.
Sounds
Tone
It isn't known if Hadza has lexical
tone. It may have a
pitch accent system, but the details have not been worked out.
Vowels
Hadza has five vowels, [ie a o u]. Long vowels may occur when intervocalic [ɦ] is elided. For example, [kʰaɦa] or [kʰaː],
to climb.
Nasal vowels, while uncommon, do occur. Vowels are also nasalized before voiceless nasal clicks.
Consonants
The nasalization of the glottalized nasal clicks is apparent on preceding and sometimes following vowels, but not during the click itself. The labial /ŋʘʔ/ (or /ŋʘ/) is found in a single mimetic word where it alternates with /ŋǀ/.
The labial ejective /pʼ/ is only found in a few words.
If the palatal affricates don't display properly, they can also be written [cʎ̥] etc.
The velar ejective /kxʼ/ varies between a plosive [kʼ], an affricate [kxʼ], a lateral affricate [kʼ], and a fricative [xʼ]. The other ejective affricates may also appear as ejective fricatives.
The lateral approximant /l/ is found as a flap [ɾ] between vowels and occasionally elsewhere.
The epiglottal fricative ʜ is only known from a single word, where it alternates with /kʰ/.
Bibliography
Sands, Bonny E. (1998) 'The Linguistic Relationship between Hadza and Khoisan' In Schladt, Matthias (ed.) Language, Identity, and Conceptualization among the Khoisan (Quellen zur Khoisan-Forschung Vol. 15), Köln: Rüdiger Köppe, 265-283.
Bonny Sands, Ian Maddieson, Peter Ladefoged (1993). 'The Phonetic Structures of Hadza', UCLA Working Papers in Phonetics, No. 84: Fieldwork Studies in Targeted Languages.
A.N. Tucker, M.A. Bryan, and James Woodburn as co-author for Hadza (1977). 'The East African Click Languages: A Phonetic Comparison'. In J.G. Moehlig, Franz Rottland, Bernd Heine, eds, Zur Sprachgeschichte und Ethnohistorie in Afrika. Berlin: Dietrich Diener Verlag.Further Information
Get more info on 'Hadza'.
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