Serengeti-Dorobo language

Serengeti-Dorobo (a nonce name) is an obscure "Dorobo" language, a few words of which were recorded in the late 19th century by Oscar Baumann. From the little data available, the language is not obviously related to any other, though the numeral system is Nilotic. It is not the only "Dorobo" language formerly spoken in the Serengeti.

"Serengeti-Dorobo"
RegionTanzania
Extinct20th century
Language codes
ISO 639-3None (mis)
Glottologsere1258[1]

Data

A couple paragraphs were recorded by Baumann (1894), but without word-by-word translation. Numerals are as follows. Most resemble those of neighboring Nilotic languages.

1 napu (kinavéta napó 'one cattle') [cf. Maasai fem. nabo]
2 ennya [cf. Datooga iyeny, Omotik ainia]
3 uni [cf. Maasai fem. uni]
4 ongwan [cf. Maasai fem. ongwan, Datooga, Okiek angwan]
5 mot [cf. Datooga mut, Okiek mʊʊt, Omotik moot]
6 lei [cf. Datooga la, Okiek ile, Maasai ilɛ, Omotik lai]
7 oner
8 sissie [cf. Datooga sis]
9 naudó [cf. Okiek naudo, Maasai fem. naaudo]
10 gaget
15 gaget ax mot
20 tegenos [cf. Okiek, Maasai tikitam]
30 tegenos ax gaget

See also

Notes

  1. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Serengeti Dorobo". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
  • Oscar Baumann (1894), Durch Massailand zur Nilquelle: Reisen und Forschungen der Massai-Expedition des deutschen Antisklaverei-Komite in den Jahren 1891–1893


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