This thesis is a comparative study of Pai and Swati. The Pai language is spoken in the easten1 parts of the Mpumalanga Province of the Republic of South Africa. The study concentrates on the correspondences and differences of the speech sounds of these two languages and reference is also made to the morphology. The previous comprehensive work on Pai was by Ziervogel (1956) where he classified the Pai language as one of the three dialects of Eastern Sotho. He also considered the Swati elements present in Pai to be merely borrowings. The present investigation into the history of the Pai people indicates that Pai may have had links with languages other than those belonging to the Sotho group and, from the evidence, an Nguni connectio...
We examine the origin of labial-velar stops in Lingombe, a language from the northern Bantu borderla...
Kiswahili, one among the Bantu languages, was formerly called Kingozi, the Waswahili (as they were c...
In this paper, the speech patterns of eleven individuals living in the Eastern half of Rhodesia are ...
This is a phonological study of some aspects of Tekela Nguni dialects, found in Southern Africa. Si...
This paper aims to discuss specific contact-induced features of Kivu Swahili (DR Congo), taking into...
This thesis deals with the lexical and grammatical tone in Abui, a Papuan language of Eastern Indon...
Swahili has generally been perceived as a homogenous entity whose norms are reflected in the variety...
This doctoral dissertation is an overview of the recently arisen Sango language spoken in the Centra...
This research aims at investigating the relationship between Mawasangka language (ML) and Wakatobi l...
This dissertation is a study of the verbal tone patterns Lumarachi and Lunyala---two previously unde...
This paper presents phonological, tonological, and morphological data gathered during a brief survey...
© 2009 Dr. Amos Benjamin TeoPrevious research on Sumi, a Tibeto-Burman language spoken in the extrem...
This paper develops hypotheses about historic and sociolinguistic interrelationships between the dif...
The present paper provides first insights into emblematic language use in Bunia Swahili, a variety o...
This article describes the separating and uniting phonological evidences of Proto Wanokaka-Anakalang...
We examine the origin of labial-velar stops in Lingombe, a language from the northern Bantu borderla...
Kiswahili, one among the Bantu languages, was formerly called Kingozi, the Waswahili (as they were c...
In this paper, the speech patterns of eleven individuals living in the Eastern half of Rhodesia are ...
This is a phonological study of some aspects of Tekela Nguni dialects, found in Southern Africa. Si...
This paper aims to discuss specific contact-induced features of Kivu Swahili (DR Congo), taking into...
This thesis deals with the lexical and grammatical tone in Abui, a Papuan language of Eastern Indon...
Swahili has generally been perceived as a homogenous entity whose norms are reflected in the variety...
This doctoral dissertation is an overview of the recently arisen Sango language spoken in the Centra...
This research aims at investigating the relationship between Mawasangka language (ML) and Wakatobi l...
This dissertation is a study of the verbal tone patterns Lumarachi and Lunyala---two previously unde...
This paper presents phonological, tonological, and morphological data gathered during a brief survey...
© 2009 Dr. Amos Benjamin TeoPrevious research on Sumi, a Tibeto-Burman language spoken in the extrem...
This paper develops hypotheses about historic and sociolinguistic interrelationships between the dif...
The present paper provides first insights into emblematic language use in Bunia Swahili, a variety o...
This article describes the separating and uniting phonological evidences of Proto Wanokaka-Anakalang...
We examine the origin of labial-velar stops in Lingombe, a language from the northern Bantu borderla...
Kiswahili, one among the Bantu languages, was formerly called Kingozi, the Waswahili (as they were c...
In this paper, the speech patterns of eleven individuals living in the Eastern half of Rhodesia are ...