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  1. The heart of the handbook is in parts II–VI, with four overview chapters on the Cushitic, Ethiosemitic, Nilo-Saharan, and Omotic language families, concise grammatical descriptions of 33 oral languages and Ethiopian Sign Language, as well as two chapters on the particularities of two non-native Ethiopian languages, English and Arabic. The ...

  2. Statistics on the JetPunk quiz Nilo-Saharan Language Family. ... Top Today. Geography. History. User Quizzes. ... Languages Classification ...

  3. Nilo-Saharan languages, Group of perhaps 115 African languages spoken by more than 27 million people from Mali to Ethiopia and from southernmost Egypt to Tanzania.The concept of Nilo-Saharan as a single stock combining a number of earlier groupings was introduced in 1963 by Joseph H. Greenberg; most Africanists accepted it as a working hypothesis, though shifts have taken place.

  4. Abstract. Interspersed between two other major phyla on the African continent, Afro-Asiatic (mainly to the north) and Niger-Congo (mainly to the south), lies the Nilo-Saharan phylum. In this chapter a survey is presented of the major groups classified as members of this phylum by Greenberg and other authors in subsequent contributions.

  5. Egypt - Arabic, Coptic, Nubian: The official language of Egypt is Arabic, and most Egyptians speak one of several vernacular dialects of that language. As is the case in other Arab countries, the spoken vernacular differs greatly from the literary language. Modern literary Arabic (often called Modern Standard Arabic or al-fuṣḥā, “clear” Arabic), which developed out of Classical, or ...

  6. May 18, 2023 · Because Arabic is one of the official languages of more than 20 countries, mostly in the Middle East or North Africa, Arabic speakers in the U.S. represent a large, multi-national group. Arabic speakers are defined as those who report speaking Arabic or a Near East Arabic dialect (such as Syriac, Aramaic, Chaldean or Syrian).

  7. Nilotic languages are part of the Eastern Sudanic subbranch of Nilo-Saharan languages. The Nilotic languages are usually divided into a Western group (containing such languages as Acholi, Burun, Dinka, Lango, Luo, Mabaan, Nuer, and Shilluk), an Eastern group (including Bari, Karimojong, Lotuxo, Maa [the language of the Maasai people], Teso ...

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