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   » » Wiki: Herero Language
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Herero (Otjiherero) is a spoken by the and in and , as well as by small communities of people in southwestern . There were speakers in these countries between 2015 and 2018.


Distribution
Its linguistic distribution covers a zone called , which is constituted of the region of along with the Otjozondjupa and . The , who are related to the Herero and Mbanderu, speak a dialect very close to Otjiherero. Many Herero-speakers live in , the capital of Namibia.


Phonology

Consonants
The sounds /f s l/ are found in loanwords.


Vowels


Script
Because of the translation of missionary Gottlieb Viehe (1839–1901) of the Bible into Herero, at the end of the 19th century, the spoken language was transcribed to an alphabet based on the Latin script. Father Peter Heinrich Brincker (1836–1904) translated several theological works and songs.


Orthography
  • a - ɑ
  • b - b
  • d - d
  • ḓ - d̪
  • e - ɛ
  • f - f
  • g - g
  • h - h
  • i - i
  • j - j
  • k - k
  • l - l
  • m - m
  • mb - ᵐb
  • mw - mʷ
  • n - n
  • ndj - ⁿdʒ
  • ng - ᵑɡ
  • ngw - ᵑɡʷ
  • nj - ɲ
  • ṋ - n̪
  • o - ɔ
  • p - p
  • r - r
  • s - s
  • t - t
  • tj - t͡ʃ
  • ṱ - t̪
  • u - u/w
  • v - v
  • w - w
  • y - j
  • z - z

Long vowels are doubled.

f and l are only used in loanwords.


Grammar

Education
Otjiherero is taught in Namibian schools both as a native tongue and as a secondary language. It is included as a principal material at the University of Namibia. Otjiherero is also one of the six minority languages that are used by the Namibian State Radio (NBC). Gamsberg Macmillan, , has published the only dictionary in Otjiherero.


Varieties
The variety is now considered a separate Bantu language, as sometimes is ( Otjizemba). Bantu Classification , Ehret, 2009. Maho (200) also removes to Bantu Zone R.10, while differentiating North-West Herero (Kaokoland Herero, including Zemba and presumably Himba and Hakaona), R.311, and Botswana Herero (including Mahalapye Herero), R.312, as distinct from but closely related to Herero proper. Within Herero proper, he recognizes two dialects: Central Herero and Mbandero (East Herero).

Northwest/Zemba is found on either side of the Namibian–Angolan border. Central Herero covers a large area in central Namibia, with East Herero and a few islands to the east but still in Namibia. Botswana Herero consists of a few scattered islands in Botswana, with about 15% of the population of Herero proper.

separates Zimba as a distinct language but retains Himba, East Herero, and Botswana Herero within the Herero language. However, it no longer recognizes as a dialect but as a separate language.


Sources
  • Brincker, Peter Heinrich (1886, 1964). Wörterbuch und kurzgefasste Grammatik des Otji-Herero. Leipzig (reprint 1964 Ridgwood, NJ: The Gregg Press).
  • Hahn, C. Hugo (1857). Grundzüge einer Grammatik des Hereró. Berlin: Verlag von Wilhelm Hertz.
  • Lutz, Marten (2006). "Locative inversion in Otjiherero: more on morpho-syntactic variation in Bantu." In: Laura Downing, Lutz Marten & Sabine Zerbian (eds.), Papers in Bantu Grammar, ZAS Papers in Linguistics 43, 97–122.
  • Marten, Lutz & Nancy C. Kula (2007). "Morphosyntactic co-variation in Bantu: two case studies." SOAS Working Papers in Linguistics 15.227-238.
  • Möhlig, Wilhelm, Lutz Marten & Jekura U. Kavari (2002). A Grammatical Sketch of Herero (Otjiherero). Köln: Köppe (Grammatische Analysen afrikanischer Sprachen; v.19).


External links
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