< Reconstruction:Proto-Berber
Reconstruction:Proto-Berber/a-lɣəm
Proto-Berber
Etymology
Widely considered to be a metathesis of an early borrowing ultimately from Semitic language, with the form *gamal; compare Arabic جَمَل (jamal). The intermediate is unknown, and Kossmann (2005) raises several formal problems, beyond just metathesis, with the common suggestions of Latin camēlus and Coptic ϭⲁⲙⲟⲩⲗ (camoul).
Reconstruction notes
Kossmann (2005) suggests that the labialization may point to an original *a-lɣŭm. Kossmann (2013) also suggests *a-ləɣəm as an alternate solution to the consonant cluster.
Descendants
- Descendants of the form *a-ḷəm
- Tuareg: (including feminine forms, as the masculine is often rare or lost altogether)
- Tawellemmet: aləṃ, alǎṃ, taləṃt f, taḷǎmt f
- Tayert: alǎṃ (rare), taḷǎmt f
- Tamahaq: aḷəm (rare), taḷəmt f, təḷəmt f
- Ghat: ṭaləmt f
- Adagh Tamasheq: taḷəmt f
- Sedentary dialects: (likely borrowed from Tuareg)
- → Ghadames: aḷǎm
- → Northern Saharan Berber: aḷəm (Mzab, Gourara, Wargla)
- Descendants of the form *a-l(ə)ɣ(ʷ)əm
- Awjila: alóɣom, alöɣóm
- Fogaha: alɣûm, alɣúm
- Sokna: lǎɣóm
- Nefusa: álɣåm, alɣóm
- Siwi: alɣəm
- Zuwara: alɣóm
- Tashelhit: ⴰⵍⵖⵯⵎ (alɣʷm), ⴰⵕⵄⵎ (aṛɛm), ⴰⵕⴰⵎ (aṛam)
- Central Atlas Tamazight: ⴰⵍⵖⵎ (alɣm), ⴰⵍⵖⵯⵎ (alɣʷm)
- Kabyle: alɣwem, alɣem
- Tachawit: alɣəm
- Northern Saharan Berber: alɣəm (Figuig)
- Tarifit: ařɣem, alɣem (Iznasen)
- Zenaga: aǧiʔm, ayiʔm (via regular metathesis)
- Descendants that may belong to either of the above forms
- Tetserret: aylim
- Descendants of the form *a-ɣlam
- Tamasheq: aɣlam (“young adult camel”) (in the dialects of Niger and Burkina Faso)
- Borrowings that may be direct from Berber
- Borrowings that are likely indirectly from Berber, through uncertain intermediates (with multiple levels of borrowing in the case of nativized forms that now refer to the horse)
- → Karekare: dlúkùmó
- → Bole: dlukumo
- → Ngamo: ndìkmò
- → Kanakuru: dlə́ŋŋó, dlə́ŋók
- → Lamang: dlə̀gwàamà, ɬugwama (latter form from the Zələdvə dialect)
- → Uldeme: ázlə̀wèmè
- → Mbuko: zlùgwèmè
- → Wandala: eldugọmẹ, lugwama
- → Glavda: áadləgòma, ádləgòma
- → Mafa: dlúgúmây, dlúgúmáy
- → Matal: dlígùmí
- → Mofu-Gudur: ɬágwàmò
- → Daba: dlogomo
- → Cibak: dlugwam
- → Huba: dlə́gwàm
- → Margi: adlugwom, ləgwam
- → Musgu: dlìgìnìi
- → Buduma: lògùmé
- → Lagwan: lògòmè
- → Guduf-Gava: lungwome
- → Kwang: lokúma, lògə̀mà, kùlùkum (“horse”), kúlóogúm (“horse”)
- → Kabalai: làkmà (“horse”)
- → Lele (Chad): lùŋmà (“horse”)
- → Ndam: lùkmà, làam (“horse”)
- → Sokoro: lúgumo
- → Dangaléat: lòkùmò
- → Migaama: lókùmu
- → Birgit: lòkòmó, lògòmó
- → Niellim: lwāàgūùm (via a Chadic language)
- → Podoko: dúgwąmạ
- → Gidar: dǫgǫ́mọ
- → Bacama: lùkápto (with an added suffix and possibly assimilation of the /m/)
- → Masana: lámka, lákmáná (possibly metathesis or suffixation); kúlum (“horse”), kúlúmná (“horse”) (perhaps borrowed via Kanuri)
- Likely borrowing into Mande, the origin of which is uncertain but possibly Zenaga
- → Bambara: ɲɔ̀gɔmɛ́
- → Kita Maninkakan: ɲɔ̀gɔmɛ́
- → Susu: ɲɔxɔmɛ
- → Soninke: ɲogome
- → Mende: ɲɔ́má
References
- Kossmann, Maarten (2005) Berber Loanwords in Hausa (Berber Studies; 12), Köln: Rüdiger Köppe Verlag, →ISBN, →ISSN
- Kossmann, Maarten (2013) The Arabic Influence on Northern Berber (Studies in Semitic Languages and Linguistics; 67), Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill, , →ISBN
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