Nafusi language
Nafusi (also spelt Nefusi; in Nafusi: Ažbali / Maziɣ / Mazoɣ) is a Berber language spoken in the Nafusa Mountains (Drar n infusen), a large area in northwestern Libya. Its primary speakers are the Ibadite communities around Jadu, Nalut (Lalut) and Yafran.
Nafusi | |
---|---|
Ažbali;[1] Mazoɣ / Maziɣ[2] (Nafusi) | |
Native to | Libya |
Native speakers | 140,000 (2006)[3] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | jbn |
Glottolog | nafu1238 |
The dialect of Yefren in the east differs somewhat from that of Nalut and Jadu in the west.[4] A number of Old Nafusi phrases appear in Ibadite manuscripts as early as the 12th century.[5]
The dialect of Jadu is described in some detail in Beguinot (1931).[6] Motylinski (1898) describes the dialect of Jadu and Nalut as spoken by a student from Yefren.[7]
Nafusi shares several innovations with the Zenati languages, but unlike these other Berber varieties it maintains prefix vowels before open syllables. For example, ufəs "hand" < *afus, rather than Zenati fus. It appears especially closely related to Sokni and Siwi to its east.[8]
References
- Provasi, Elio. 1973. Testi berberi di Žâdo (Tripolitania). Annali dell’Istituto Orientale di Napoli 23, p. 503
- Beguinot, F. 1931. Il berbero Nefûsi di Fassâṭo. Grammatica. Testi raccolti dalla viva voce. Vocabolarietti. Roma. p. 220
- E. K. Brown, R. E. Asher & J. M. Y. Simpson, Encyclopedia of language & linguistics, Volume 1, p.155 (Elsevier, 2006, ISBN 9780080442990)
- Beguinot 1931:VIII
- Tadeusz Lewicki, "De quelques textes inédits en vieux berbère provenant d'une chronique ibāḍite anonyme" and André Basset, "Note additionnelle", Revue des études islamiques VIII, 1934, pp. 277, 298
- Francesco Beguinot, Il berbero nefûsi di Fassâṭo: grammatica, testi raccolti dalla viva voce, vocabolarietti. Roma: Istituto per l'Oriente 1931
- p. 1, A. de Calassanti-Motylinski, Le Djebel Nefousa: transcription, traduction française et notes, avec une étude grammaticale, Paris: Ernest Leroux, 1898.
- Maarten Kossmann, 1999, Essai sur la phonologie du proto-berbère, Köln: Rüdiger Köppe, pp. 29-33