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Jalaa language



         


Jalaa (bàsàrə̀n dà jàlààbè̩)
Spoken in: Nigeria
Region: Loojaa settlement in Balanga Local Government Area, Ranking: Not in top 100
Genetic
classification:
Unclassified

 Jalaa

Language codes
ISO 639-2mis
SILCET

Jalaa (autonym bàsàrə̀n dà jàlààbè̩) is an endangered language of northeastern Nigeria (Loojaa settlement in Balanga Local Government Area, Bauchi State), of uncertain (possibly Niger-Congo) origins. It is nearly extinct; the ethnic group has come to use the Bwilim dialect of Cham in daily life, and the few remaining speakers of Jalaa, all elderly, are much more fluent in Cham than in Jalaa.

Traditionally, the Jalabe (as the ethnic group is called) are said to have come to Loojaa from an area a few miles south within the Muri Mountains, where they had shared a settlement with Tso and Kwa clans. (The name of this settlement, Cèntûm or Cùntûm, is used as a name for the language in some sources.) Later, during the nineteenth century, the Cham arrived in the area, fleeing attacks from the larger Waja to the north; the Cham intermarried with the Jalabe, and the Jalabe began to adopt the Cham language.

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Lexicon

The Jalaa lexicon too is strongly influenced by Cham (which it has in turn influenced); some similarities are also found with the nearby noun class system are two of the plural suffixes: Jalaa -ta versus Cham -te̩ and (for humans) Jalaa -bo, -ba versus Cham -b(e̩).

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Bibliography






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