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Borrowed status
Borrowed status
My identification of Arabic, European, and recent Swahili and Comorian loanwords, as well as the contexts in which they occur, is largely based on the work of previous scholars such as Dez (1964, 1965, 1967) and Dahl (1988), although I may differ in my analysis of the changes the words in question have undergone. These loanwords escaped the effects of the Bantu contact period and its thorough phonological influence on older vocabulary. They are easier to recognize because their shapes have not changed so much from their lending form and their phonotactics is very different from that of inherited Malagasy words. Moreover, they denote, as a rule, concepts that are adapted from the contexts of experience that their respective lending languages belong to. There are consequently few cases that have a doubtful borrowing status. The treatment of Austronesian and Sanskrit loanwords I present here is based on my own analysis, although most Sanskrit loanwords had already been identified by previous scholars. The description of Bantu loanwords is largely based on Dahl (1988). These older loanwords are much more difficult to spot because they have undergone the changes that took place during the Bantu contact period. Their phonological shapes are thoroughly transformed and they are relatively well-adapted to the inherited Malagasy word structure. Their status as loanwords is therefore more difficult to demonstrate than in the case of Arabic, European, and recent Swahili and Comorian loanwords. There is also no fast rule to determine their status, as it is based on a combination of phonological, semantic, cultural and historical factors, which work out differently in individual cases. In a very general way, I tend to use rating 1 (very little evidence of borrowing) with loanwords from before the Bantu contact period in cases where I disagree with other scholars that a certain word is borrowed. I use rating 2 to 4 if a Malagasy word reflects a phonemic correspondence which is diagnostic for borrowing, and its meaning is similar to – or compatible with - that of the lending form. Such diagnostic correspondences are, for instance, Malagasy s, r, ts, or tr respectively corresponding to s, r, c and (alveolar or retroflex) d in the alleged Austronesian or Sanskrit lending language. These correspondences are irregular and indicate that the word in question could be borrowed. The more such phonemes occur within a given word, the more likely it is to be a loanword, and the higher rating I will be using. In the same way, I use rating 2 to 4 for words containing a b, p, g, or non-root-final k, if these phonemes correspond to b, p, g or k in Malay words with a compatible meaning. Such words may be loanwords borrowed from Malay after Bantu contact period. Finally, I use rating 2 in some cases where a word begins with ki- or tsi- and denotes a noun, as this suggests a Bantu origin. This is the case with kibo ‘stomach’, for which I found corresponding forms in neither other Austronesian languages, nor in Bantu languages. (If I had found a corresponding form with a compatible meaning in Swahili, Comorian or another East African Bantu language, I might have used rating 3 or 4). |
1. clearly borrowed |
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| Source words: | |
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Reference(s)
Reference(s)
Primary references used in compiling the database Information about Malay and Javanese loanwords is based on Adelaar (1989, 1995a, 1995b and 2009). These publications are the first systematic approach to such loanwords. Adelaar (1995a) and Adelaar (2009) also discuss the occurrence of South Sulawesi loanwords. A general source for Malay is Wilkinson (1959) and for Javanese, Gericke and Roorda (1901) and Zoetmulder (1982). The present inventory of Sanskrit loanwords is based on Dahl (1951), Bernard-Thierry (1959) and (in a few cases) my own analysis. It also makes use of Gonda (1973) and Adelaar (1994) to demonstrate the pathway of these loanwords, which must have entered Malagasy via Malay and (in a few cases) Javanese. My main source for Bantu loanwords is Dahl (1988), which is a also critical evaluation and inventory of earlier works on the topic. Additional sources that I used are Nurse and Hinnebusch (1993) for Proto Bantu and for Sabaki vocabulary in general, Sacleux (1939) for Swahili, Ahmed-Chamanga (1992, 1997) for Shingazija, and Lafon (1991) for Shindzuani. For Arabic and European loanwords I made extensive use of Dez (1964, 1965, 1967), although in some cases the identification of these loanwords is based on my own analysis, or on information found in Webber (1853), Abinal and Malzac (1970) or Rajaonarimanana (1995). List of references Abdul Jebar Hapip, 2006, Kamus Banjar - Indonesia, Banjarmasin: Grafika Wangi Kalimantan Abinal, A, and V. Malzac, 1970, Dictionnaire malgache-français. Paris: Éditions Maritimes et d’Outre-Mer (First edition 1888, Tananarive) ---------, 1973, Dictionnaire français-malgache. Paris: Éditions Maritimes et d’Outre-Mer Adelaar, Alexander, 1989, Malay influence on Malagasy: linguistic and culture-historical inferences, Oceanic Linguistics 28/1:1-46 ---------, 1992, Proto-Malayic: the reconstruction of its phonology and parts of its morphology and lexicon. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics. ---------, 1995a, Asian roots of the Malagasy: a linguistic perspective, Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde 151/3:325-357. ---------, 1995b, Bentuk pinjaman bahasa Melayu dan Jawa di Malagasi, in Ismail Hussain, A. Aziz Deraman and Abd. Rahman Al Ahmadi (eds), Tamadun Melayu. Jilid Pertama, Kuala Lumpur: Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka; 21-40. ---------, 1997, An exploration of directional terms in West Indonesia and Madagascar, in Referring to space. Studies in Austronesian and Papuan languages (G. Senft ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press; 53-81. ---------, 2004, A la recherche d’affixes perdus dans le malais, in Faites de Langues Vol. 23 (E. Zeitoun ed.). Paris: Ophrys; 43-53. ---------, in press a, Towards an integrated theory about the Indonesian migrations to Madagascar, in: Ancient Human Migrations: integrative approaches to complex processes (I. Peiros, P. Peregrine and M. Feldman eds). Salt Lake City: Utah University Press. ---------, in press b, The amalgamation of Malagasy, in Festschrift for Andrew Pawley. (J. Bowden and N.P. Himmelmann eds). Canberra: Pacific Linguistics. Ahmed-Chamanga, Mohamed, 1992, Lexique comorien (shindzuani) - français. Paris: L’Harmattan. ---------, 1997, Dictionnaire français-comorien (dialecte shindzuani). Paris: L’Harmattan. Beaujard, Philippe, 2003, Les arrivées austronésiennes à Madagscar: vagues oucontinuum? (Partie 1 + 2), Études Océan Indien 35-36:59-147. Bernard-Thierry, Solange, 1959, A propos des emprunts sanskrits en malgache, Journal Asiatique 247(3):311-348. Blust, Robert A., 1970, Proto-Austronesian addenda, Oceanic Linguistics 9:104-162. -------, 1976, Dempwolff’s reduplicated monosyllables, Oceanic Linguistics 15:107-30. -------, 1980, Austronesian etymologies I, Oceanic Linguistics 19:1-181. -------, 1983-84, Austronesian etymologies II, Oceanic Linguistics 22-23:29-149. -------, 1986, Austronesian etymologies III. Oceanic Linguistics 25:1-123. -------, 1988, Austronesian root theory. An essay on the limits of morphology, Studies in Language Companion Series 19, Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins. -------, 1989, Austronesian etymologies IV, Oceanic Linguistics 28:111-180. -------, no date, Austronesian Comparative Dictionary. Unfinished work available online. Dahl, Otto Christian, 1951, Malgache et maanyan. Une comparaison linguistique. Avhandlinger utgitt av Instituttet 3, Oslo: Egede Instituttet. Dahl, Otto Christian, 1988, Bantu substratum in Malagasy, Études Océan Indien 9 (Paris: Institut National des Langues et Cultures Orientales):91-132. Dempwolff, Otto, 1938, Vergleichende Lautlehre des Austronesischen Wortschatzes III: Austronesisches Wörterverzeichnis. Beihefte Zeitschrift für Eingeborenensprachen 19. Berlin: Dietrich Reimer Verlag. Dez, Jacques, 1964, La malgachisation des emprunts aux langues européennes, Annales de l’Université de Madagascar, Série Lettres et Sciences Humaines 3:19-46. Dez, Jacques, 1965, Lexique des mots européens malgachisées, Annales de l’Université de Madagascar, Série Lettres et Sciences Humaines 4:63-86. Dez, Jacques, 1967, De l’influence arabe à Madagascar à l’aide de faits de linguistique, Taloha et Revue de Madagascar No. 34-37: 1-20. Gericke, J.F.C.; T. Roorda, 1901, Javaansch - Nederlandsch handwoordenboek (revised and expanded by A.C. Vreede), Amsterdam: Muller Gonda, Jan, 1973, Sanskrit in Indonesia. New Delhi: International Academy of Indian Culture. Hudson, Alfred B., 1967, The Barito isolects of Borneo, Southeast Asia Program (Dept. of Asian Studies), Data Paper no. 68, Ithaca (NY): Cornell U.P. Lafon, Michel, 1991, Lexique Français-Shingazija. Paris: L’Harmattan. Mahdi, Waruno, 1988, Morphophonologische Besonderheiten und historische Phonologie des Malagasy, Veröffentlichungen des Seminars für Indonesische und Südseesprachen der Universität Hamburg, Band 20. Berlin-Hamburg: Dietrich Reimer Verlag. Mills, Roger F., 1975, Proto-South-Sulawesi and Proto-Austronesian phonology (2 volumes), Ph.D. dissertation, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor (University Microfilms International 1978). Nurse, Derek, Hinnebusch, Thomas J. (edited by Th. J. Hinnebusch with a special addendum by Gérard Philippson), 1993, Swahili and Sabaki. A linguistic history. University of California Publications in Linguistics Vol. 121. Berkeley: University of California Press. Porée-Maspero, Éveline, 1986, Jonques et po, sampou et sampan, Archipel 32:65-85. Rajaonarimanana, Narivelo, 1995, Dictionnaire du malgache contemporain. Paris: Karthala. Rajemisa-Raolison, R., 1963 [1985], Rakibolana. Librairie Ambozontany: Fianarantsoa. Ratsimandresy, Lucette, 2003, L’emprunt du malgache à l’anglais: cas des emprunts “intégrés” dans le malgache contemporain, Études Océan Indien 35-36:309-330. Sacleux, Ch., 1939, Dictionnaire swahili – français. Travaux et Mémoires de l’Institut d’Ethnologie 36 et 37. Paris: Musée de l’Homme. Sims, J., and J.C. Kingzett, 1969, Dictionnaire français – malgache. Tananarive: Trano Printy Loterana. Webber, J., 1853, Dictionnaire malgache – français. Île Bourbon: Établissement Malgache de Notre-Dame de la Ressource. ---------, 1855, Dictionnaire français-malgache. Île Bourbon: Établissement Malgache de Notre- Dame de la Ressource. Wehr, Hans, 1994, A Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic (Arabic-English) (4th edition, edited by J.M. Cowan), Ithaca (NY): Spoken Language Services, Inc. Wilkinson, R.J, 1959 A Malay - English dictionary, London: Macmillan. Zoetmulder, P.J., (with the collaboration of S.O. Robson), 1982, Old-Javanese – English dictionary. ‘s-Gravenhage: Martinus Nijhoff. |
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| Effect: | Replacement |
| Integration: | 1. Highly integrated |
| Salience: | Present in pre-contact environment |
| Other comments: | mbe is Shinzuani Comorian; however, Dahl is not sure about the exact Bantu donor language |
| Contact situation: |
Bantu contact stage
Bantu contact stage
Bantu loanwords stem from the Bantu contact stage or later. They are particularly well represented in the domains of animal names and terms for domesticated plants, and they can often be traced to Swahili or Comorian languages (which all belong to the Sabaki subgroup of Bantu), although there may also have been other sources. It is often impossible to identify the exact source of Sabaki loanwords due to the similarity between Swahili and Comorian languages in general, and among the Comorian languages in particular as well as to the fact that Swahili loanwords themselves may also be of Comorian provenance, as Swahili was a court language in the Comoros in the 19th century. There is strong evidence that the early Austronesian migrants to Madagascar stayed on the African mainland before they finally settled in Madagascar itself, which had no Bantu population prior to their arrival. Therefore, Bantu influence on Malagasy in general must essentially be due to contact in mainland East Africa, although various Malagasy regions underwent additional Bantu lexical influence (from predominantly Swahili and Comorian) after the settlement of Madagascar. |
òmby
a word from Vocabulary Malagasy
| Word form: | òmby |
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| LWT meaning(s): | |
| Word meaning: | cow, bull, bovine |
| Analyzability: | unanalyzable |
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Age
Age
Developmental stages preceding modern Malagasy: Proto Austronesian 6000 BC Proto Malayo-Polynesian 4000-3000 BC Proto (West) Malayo-Polynesian 2000 BC ? Proto East Barito 100-300 AD ? Proto South East Barito 500-600 AD ? pre-migration before 700 AD Bantu or Post-Bantu period 800 AD or later ? pre-Malagasy (before dialect divergence) 900 AD or later ? Periods of borrowing: Sumatra Malay, Banjar Malay, Javanese, South Sulawesi, Sanskrit before 8th century AD First Bantu influence 8th century (?) Sumatra Malay between 8th and 16th centuries (very few loanwords) Swahili, Comorian languages 12th to 20th century?; ongoing in regional areas? Arabic 12th (?) to 19th century; ongoing in regional areas? English mostly in 19th century but probably ongoing French since late 19th century, ongoing |
12th century CE or later (1101–2007) |
| Register: | General |
