Moro language

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Moro is a Kordofanian language spoken in the Nuba Mountains of South Kordofan, Sudan.[2] It is part of the Western group of West Central Heiban Kordofonian languages and belongs to the Niger-Congo phylum.[3] In 1982 there were an estimated 30,000 Moro-speakers. This was before the second Sudan civil war and therefore the recent number of speakers might differ. There can be noted an influence of Arabic and it is suspected that today approximately a fourth of all Moro vocabulary has a relation or an origin in the Arabic language.[4]

Moro
Dhimorong
Native toSudan
RegionSouth Kordofan
EthnicityMoro Nuba
Native speakers
79,000 (2022)[1]
Dialects
  • Ulba
  • Laiyen
  • Nubwa
  • Werria
  • Nderre
  • Longorban
  • Thetogovela
Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-3mor
Glottologmoro1285
ELPMoro
Moro is classified as Definitely Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger

Phonology

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There are different intonations in the Moro language. Usually the vowels “e”, “a” and “o” have a lower tone, while the vowels “i”, “u” and “ʌ” have a higher tone. The vowel “ə” is a Schwa vowel and therefore neutral.

One can find vowel harmony, palatalization of dental stops, resistance to deletion in vowel hiatus resolution and imposition of a partially replaceable tone patterns within the language. However it is important to note that the latter two are unique to the causative in Moro (9;2,11).[5]

Segment Inventory

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Moro has a seven vowel inventory,[6][3][7][8] schematized in the table below. [ə] can be epenthetic or a reduced version of the peripheral vowels /i e o u/; it also appears in roots with no obvious source of reduction.[7] The behaviour of the schwa [ə] in Moro vowel harmony has been taken as a reason to posit two [ə] vowels in Moro - a higher one that raises vowels, and a lower one that does not.[8]

Vowel inventory
Front Central Back
High i u
Mid e ə ʌ o
Low a

In addition, light diphthongs such as [iə], [eə], [oa], and [uʌ] are also attested.[7] Light diphthongs count as a single tone-bearing unit. Vowel length is not contrastive, but lengthening is often observed in open penultimate or root-initial syllable.[7]

The consonantal inventory of Moro is given below.[7]

Consonantal inventory
Labial Dental Alveolar Retroflex Palatal Velar
Stop p b t d k g
Affricate
Fricative f v ð s
Nasal m n ɲ ŋ
Trill r
Flap ɾ ɽ
Lateral l
Glide w j

Consonants can be geminated, with the exception of [ɾ,ɽ,j]. Voiced stops and /v/ are realized as voiceless when geminate.[7]

Vowel Harmony

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Moro has a 'one-step' height vowel harmony system, in which the lower vowels /e a o/ of affixes are raised to their high counterparts [i ʌ u] if the root vowel is high.[8] In addition to root- or stem-controlled harmony, Moro also exhibits a dominant-recessive harmony pattern in which certain extension suffixes trigger raising of preceding prefixes and root vowels, and a following suffix; these harmony-triggering suffixes are the causative -i, applicative -ət̪, and passive -ən.[8]

Schwa in Moro Vowel Harmony

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Some Moro roots containing [ə] trigger vowel harmony, while others do not; similarly, while the applicative and passive suffix both contain [ə] and trigger vowel harmony, Moro exhibits other suffixes containing [ə], such as the antipassive -əꟈ, which do not. Accoustice studies confirm that the schwas which trigger vowel harmony in Moro show a significantly lower F1 formant than those which do not, and that schwas in raised vowel contexts in Moro also exhibit significantly lower F1 formants than those in non-raised contexts.[8] As such, some scholars argue that Moro includes two schwa vowels: a high schwa, which triggers vowel harmony, and a low schwa, which does not.[8]

Tone

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Grammar

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Nouns and Noun Phrases

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Noun Classes

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Moro can be categorized into 18 noun classes: 8 major, 5 minor and 5 unpaired.[3] Most of these classes have their individual class prefix, singular prefix and concord as well as plural prefix and concord.[9]

Semantic ID Class prefix Singular prefix Singular concord Plural prefix Plural concord
people g/l ?/w G L L
animals/body parts l/ŋ L L Ñ Ñ
trees ꟈ/g W G
common things g/n ? N N
Things of shapes l/ŋ l/ɽ/ɽr l/ɽ/ɽr Ŋ Ŋ
Long things ꟈ/r R R
          / g/n ? G
Large and harmful things ꟈ/j y y
Domestic/small animals ŋ/ŋ Ŋ- Ŋ- Ñ Ñ
Liquids and abstract nouns ŋ Ŋ- Ŋ-
Emotions
Cow, goat, irregular nouns r/j r Y
Foreign words j/j Y y

There are some identified rules for the construction of the plural according to its noun class:

  • If the noun starts with either “e, i, o” or “u” and the following is a “ꟈ”, those to letters in the plural will form “nꟈ-“
  • If the noun starts with either “e, i, o” or “u” and the following is a “r” or “ɽ”,  in the plural the vowel will be discarded
  • If the noun starts with “ɽ, ɽr” or “lɽr”, the first “ɽ” is dropped and the vowel that is inserted in the plural will most likely be “ə”[9]

Adjectives

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Moro language has many compound adjectives, that have their origin in the same root. One can find comparative adjectives as well as superlatives however, these are normally translated in “very, very”.[10]

Compound adjectives are formed with a suffix as following:

Gaicia Bad
Gaiciaŋaiyo Ugly
Gaicianano Sad

To construct the comparative of a simple adjective, one must change the last vowel of the adjective into “-ə -“ and then add the suffix “-tu”:

Gabəco White
Gabəcətu Very white

To form the comparative of compound adjectives one must first form the comparative of the first part of the adjective and then add the suffix:

Gamenano Happy
Gamətunano Very happy

To construct the superlative there are several opportunities:

  • Repeat one or two syllables of the word (in this case, sometimes the vowel of the repeated syllable changes and a “-ꟈ” is added)
    Example: “geꟈe” (= green) turns into “geꟈeꟈe” (=very, very green)
    Example: “gapa” (= light) turns into “gapapeꟈ” (= very, very light)
  • Double a consonant or vowel
    Example: “gafalo” (= low) turns into “gaffalo” (= very, very low) (2.1; 1-2)[10]

Pronouns and agreement

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There are eight Subject pronouns in Moro but each in two different variations. The exact meaning of these variations have not yet been determined.

Variation 1 Variation 2
I ñi Igënəñi
You (singular) ŋa Aganəŋa
He/she/it ŋu Gënəŋu
We (dual) Ləŋ Lëləŋ
We (inclusive) Nëndr/lëndr Nëndr
We (exclusive) Nanda/landa ñagananda
You (plural) ñaŋ ñaganəñaŋ
They ŋulu lënəŋulu

Each subject pronoun has its own agreement prefix. These prefixes can vary in accordance to the tense or the aspect of the verb.[11]

In the present and past tense they are attached to the particle “ga“ and used as (exemplified with the verb “tu” = “to drink”) following:

I i- Ñi igatu I was drinking
You (singular) a- Ŋa agatu You were drinking
He/she/it / (concord agreem.) Ŋu gatu He was drinking
We (dual) La-/lə- Ləŋ lagatu We were drinking
We (inclusive) La-/lə- Nëndr lagatr We were drinking
We (exclusive) ña- Nanda ñagatu We were drinking
You (plural) ña- ñan ñagatu You were drinking
They / (concord agreem.) Ŋulu latu They were drinking

The morphophonology changes when the suffix “-r” is added to the end of a verb:

  • A verb ending in either “o” or “u” in the past tense will have its vowel replaced by “-r”
  • A verb ending in either “e”, “a” or “i” will add “-r” to its end

For the future tense the subject prefixes that are mentioned above will are added to the auxiliary of the future verb. The main verb of the future tense has different subject prefixes.

There have been identified following rules:

  • The vowel of the subject prefix is dropped if a verb starts with a vowel
  • The prefixes for “we dual” and “we inclusive” become “aɽ-“ if the verb starts with a “r-“ or “ɽ-“
  • Compound verbs (to be happy; to be sad etc.) are handled differently

The subject prefix of the future tense is exemplified in the following using the auxiliary “-gidi” and the verb “tu” (to drink):

Future tense SP Example Translation
I ñi-/ ñe- Igiꟈi ñiti I will drink
You (singular) ŋa- Agiꟈi nati You will drink
He/she/it Aŋə- Giꟈi aŋəti He will drink
We (dual) Alə- Lagiꟈi aləti We will drink
We (inclusive) Alə + r- Lagiꟈr alətr We will drink
We (exclusive) ña- ñagiꟈi ñati We will drink
You (plural) ña- ñagiꟈi ñati You will drink
They Alə- Liꟈi aləti They will drink

Moro also has a set of eight object pronouns for each tense: In case of the past tense, the object infix will be added to the end of the verb, while in case of the present tense it is inserted between the tense marker “ga” and the verb stem.[11]

OP Present OP Past OP Future
I Iña ñe/ ñ i ñə
You (singular) ŋa Aŋa ŋa
He/she/it Ma Ma Ma
We (dual) Ndə Nde Ndə
We (inclusive) Ndə Ndr Ndə
We (exclusive) Ndə Nde Ndə
You (plural) Ndə Nde Ndə
They Lo

Also with object pronouns there are some morphophonemic changes:

  • Verbs ending in “u” will turn their vowel into “i” (or “w” / “ə” before “aŋa”)
  • Verbs ending in “o” or “e” will turn their vowel into “ə” (in the case on “aŋa” it disappears)
  • Verbs ending in “a” will also drop their vowel in case of “aŋa”

In case of the past tense, the object infix will be added to the end of the verb, while in case of the present tense it is inserted between the tense marker “ga” and the verb stem:

Past tense; verb: “ma” – “gamənde” (= married us)
Present tense; verb: “ma” – “gandəma” (= marries us)
Future tense; verb: “ma” – “giꟈi aŋəndəme” (= will marry us)

Again, compound verbs are handled slightly differently. While in the present and future tense they can take the same agreements as simple verbs, in the past tense the object pronoun is inserted before the “-alo” or “-ano”.[12]

Adpositions

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Researches could identify some pre- and postpositions in the Moro language. The postposition “-ŋa” can be translated to “with” and can be added at least to verbs:

Example: “ŋenŋa nəwujənu” means “talk with parables”

In other cases the prepositions “o-“ for singular and “lə-“ for plural can express that someone is from a certain place:

Example: “tofəgəlla” (= a place); “otofəgəlla” (= a person from that place); “tofəgəlla” (= people from that place”[13]

Verbs and Verb Phrases

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Tense

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In Moro there are so far three identified tenses: the past, the present and the future. While the future- and the past tense take tense markers, the future tense comes with an additional auxiliary.[14]

The past tense is usually used at the start of a story and often follows the word “when”. Additionally, it describes an action from the past that is still ongoing in the present. It is important to note that if a story is started with the past tense it indicates that other actions of the same time are in the past tense too. The present tense is used to describe actions that happened at the same time as the one before and if the word “when” is used, it changes its meaning to “while”. Finally, it describes new situations that have not been there before. The future tense is used for the expression of an intention to do something.[15]

The tense marker for the past tense is “ga” and it comes with little exceptions:

  • If the verb starts with a consonant: “ga-“ + verb root
  • If the verb starts with a vowel: “g-“ + verb root
  • If the verb starts with “ci”, “co” or “j”: “gai-“ + verb root
Verb root Verb in past tense Translation
-tu Gatu Drank
-erido Gerido Walked
-naico Ganaico Gave

For the present tense, the tense marker remains “ga-“ but there are more rules regarding the changes of vowels:

  • If the verb starts with a consonant: “ga-“ + verb root + last vowel changes
  • If the verb starts with “i”: “ga-“ + “b” + (“i” turns into “ə”) + verb root + last vowel changes
  • If the verb starts with “e”, “ë” or “a”: “ga-“ + “b” + verb root + last vowel changes
  • If the verb starts with “w”, “u”, “o” or “a”: “g-“ + verb root + last vowel changes
  • The changes of the last vowel work according to the following: “e” remains “e”; “i” changes to “ia”; “o” changes to either “a”, “ia” or “wa”; “u” changes to either “ia”, “a” or “wa”
Verb root Verb in the present tense Translation
-tu Gatia Drink
-erido Gaberida Walk
-naico ganaica Give

Within the present tense they are also more rules regarding the compound verbs (to be happy; to be sad etc.). In Moro these verbs end with “-alo” or “-ano” and follow other agreements than simple verbs:

  • They do not change their last vowel
  • To differ from the past tense, there is a variation in tone in which the past has a high tone and the present has a low tone (here: ´ = high tone; ` = low tone)
Verb root Past tense Present tense Translation
- ŋəranano Gaŋəránano Gaŋərànano To be happy
-cianano Gaiciánano Gaiciànano To be sad
-eɽiano Geɽíano Geɽìano To be untrustworthy

The future tense is constructed by using the auxiliary “giꟈi” which is then followed by the main verb. There are following rules:

  • Verbs starting with a consonant other than “ŋ”: “aŋə-” + verb root + last vowel changes
  • Verbs starting with “n”: “a-” + verb root + last vowel changes
  • Verbs starting with a vowel: “aŋ-“ + verb root + last vowel changes
  • The changes of the last vowel work according to the following: “u” becomes “i”; “o” becomes “e”; “a” and “i” remain the same[11]
Verb root Future tense Translation
-tu (giꟈi) Aŋəti Will drink
-naico (giꟈi) Aŋənaice Will walk
-erido (giꟈi) Aŋeride Will give

Syntax

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Basic constituent order

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A simple Moro clause consists of the Subject – Verb – Object:

Trwí

policeman

ꟈʌdəri

stops

trʌmbílí.

car

Trwí ꟈʌdəri trʌmbílí.

policeman stops car

The order of a noun phrase is in the order of: Noun – Demonstrative – Numeral – Adjective. Noun classes are common in Niger-Congo languages, especially in Bantu languages like Kikuyu or Swahili.[16]

Nádám Nətínə Nəgətfan Nóré
Books Those Two red

Derivational Morphology

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Within the Moro language, several notations according to (verbal) derivations have been made. So far the following derivational morphemes have been described:

  1. Causative: add “-i”
  2. Passive/reflexive: “-ən-“ + change of the last vowel
    Example: “raico” = to pour; “raicenu” = to be poured
  3. Applicative: suffix “ət”
  4. Antipassive: “əꟈ”[5]
  5. Repetitive: add the prefix “ka-“
    Example: “arənꟈo” = to divide; “akarənꟈo” = to divide many times
  6. Simultaneous: add “ta-“ to the verb before the concord agreement
  7. Narrative/sequential: add “nə-“ to the verb before the concord agreement (2.1; 3)
  8. Adjective: if “-nano” is added to certain adjectives, they can turn into verbs
    Example: “gaicia” (=bad) + “nano” = gaicianano[17]
  9. Locative: use the suffix “e-“ or “i-“ in sccordance with the following vowels
    Example: é-lógopájá = in the cup; í-lútí = in the owl[5]

Writing system

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Before the arrival of the first missionaries in 1936, Moro was written with Arabic letters, therefore Latin capital letters were not known by Moro speakers.[4] Missionaries created an orthography including capital letters and also translated the New Testament into Moro in the Ləŋorəban dialect. Today Moro consists of 22 consonants and 7 vowels with one of them being a Schwa.[18]

Moro alphabet[19]
A B C D E Ë Ə F G I J K L M N Ñ Ŋ O P R S T U W Y
a b c d e ë ə f g i j k l m n ñ ŋ o p r ɽ s t u w y


Dialects

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There are 7 dialects of Moro (Guest 1997a).[20] Ethnologue names are given in parentheses.[1]

  • Laiyənia or Layenia[21] (Laiyen)
  • Tobəɽelda or Thetogovela[22] (Toberelda, Umm Gabralla)
  • Uləba (Ulba)
  • Lənəbwa (Nubwa)
  • Nḏərria or Ndërria[21] (Nderre)
  • Ləmwarəŋ (Dhimorong; = Werria)
  • Ləŋorəban (Longorban, Umm Dorein)

Each dialect corresponds to a separate clan, except for Ləmwarəŋ and Ləŋorəban, which are amalgamated into a single clan known as the Wërria. Thus, there is a total of 6 different clans. There is a lexical difference within the dialects, especially with the labials: “t” and “d” or “ɽ” and “t”. In other cases, the “b” of the Ləŋorəban dialect is noted as “f, v, w,” in other dialects.

Example: “vomit” in the Ləŋorəban dialect is: “biu”, while in other dialects it is: “fiꟈu” or “wiꟈu”.

There are also significant semantic differences in the dialects.

Example: “majen” in Ləŋorəban means “now” but in other dialect refers to “a long time ago”.

This even leads to the fact, that speakers of the Tobəɽelda dialect are not able to understand the translation of the New Testament which was translated into the Ləŋorəban dialect.[18] An explanation for this might be, that the speakers of the Ləŋorəban dialect seem to be geographically isolated from speakers of other dialects and receive influence from other languages they are surrounded by such as Katcha or Utundi.[23]

References

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  1. ^ a b Moro at Ethnologue (27th ed., 2024)  
  2. ^ "Moro Language Project". moro.ucsd.edu. Retrieved 2023-01-31.
  3. ^ a b c Gibbard, George, Rohde, Hannah, and Rose, Sharon (2009). 'Moro Noun Class Morphology'. In Masangu Matonodo et al. (eds.) Selected Proceedings of the 38th Annual Conference on African Linguistics, pp. 106-117. Somerville, MA: Cascadilla Proceedings, p. 117. Project. http://www.lingref.com/cpp/acal/38/paper2139.pdf?q=moro
  4. ^ a b SUDAN LOCAL LANGUAGE CENTRE: Notes on Language Use in the Moro Community in Khartoum. p. 1.
  5. ^ a b c Strabone, Andrew and Rose, Sharon (2012). 'Morphophonological properties of Moro causatives'. In Connell, Bruce and Rolle, Nicholas (eds.) Selected Proceedings of the 41st Annual Conference on African Linguistics: African Languages in Contact, pp. 92-103. Sommerville, MA: Cascadilla Proceedings Project. http://www.lingref.com/cpp/acal/41/paper2740.pdf
  6. ^ Black, K.; Black, K. (1971). The Moro Language Grammar and Dictionary. Linguistic Monograph Series. Vol. 6. Khartoum: Sudan Research Unit, Faculty of Arts.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Jenks, Peter; Rose, Sharon (2011). "High Tone in Moro: Effects of Prosodic Categories and Morphological Domains". Natural Language and Linguistic Theory. 29: 211–250. doi:10.1007/s11049-011-9120-x. S2CID 14067976.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Ritchart, Amanda; Rose, Sharon (2015). "Schwas in Moro Vowel Harmony". In Kramer, Ruth; Zsiga, Elizabeth; Tlale Boyer, One (eds.). Selected Proceedings of the 44th Annual Conference on African Linguistics (PDF). Cascadilla Proceedings Project. pp. 231–242.
  9. ^ a b Guest, Elizabeth. 1997: Moro Noun Classes. p. 1.
  10. ^ a b Guest, Elizabeth. 1998: Miscellaneous Moro Grammar. p. 1-2.
  11. ^ a b c Guest, Elizabeth. 1997: Moro Verbs. p. 1-7.
  12. ^ Guest, Elizabeth. 1997: Moro Verbs. p. 4-7.
  13. ^ Guest, Elizabeth. 1998: Miscellaneous Moro Grammar. p. 5.
  14. ^ Guest, Elizabeth. 1997: Moro Verbs. p. 1-3.
  15. ^ Guest, Elizabeth. 1998: Miscellaneous Moro Grammar. p. 4.
  16. ^ Jenks, Peter (2014). 'Head Movement in Moro DPs: Evidence for a Unified Theory of Movement'. In Santana-LaBarge, Robert E. (ed.) Proceedings of the 31st West Coast Conference on Formal Linguistics, pp. 248-257. Somerville, MA: Cascadilla Proceedings Project. https://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/document?repid=rep1&type=pdf&doi=3572bcf0d316e8ec04d2f68aebd218b1969ff915
  17. ^ Guest, Elizabeth. 1998: Miscellaneous Moro Grammar. p. 3.
  18. ^ a b Guest, Elizabeth. 1997: Moro Phonology. p. 3.
  19. ^ Guest 1997a.
  20. ^ http://www.rogerblench.info/Language/Niger-Congo/Kordofanian/Moro/guest_moro-phonology1997.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  21. ^ a b Blench, Roger. 2005. A dictionary of the Moro language of the Nuba hills, Sudan. m.s.
  22. ^ Moro Language Project
  23. ^ Guest, Elizabeth. 1997: History of the Moro NT. p. 1.

Further reading

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  • Blench, Roger. 2005. A dictionary of the Moro language of the Nuba hills, Sudan. m.s.
  • Black, K. & K. Black 1971. The Moro language: grammar and dictionary. Khartoum: Sudan Research Unit. MacDiarmid, P.A. and D.N.
  • Edwards, G. 1941. Moro Dictionary. (handwritten m.s.)
  • Gibbard, George, Hannah Rohde & Sharon Rose. (2009). Moro Noun Class Morphology. In M. Matondo, F. McLaughlin & E. Potsdam (eds.) Selected Proceedings of the 38th Annual Conference on African Linguistics. Cascadilla Proceedings Project, 106-117.
  • Guest, Elizabeth (1997a). "Moro Phonology" (PDF). m.s.
  • Guest, Elizabeth. 1997b. Moro Noun Classes. m.s.
  • Guest, Elizabeth. 1997c. Moro Verbs. m.s.
  • Guest, Elizabeth. 1997d. Moro Verbs Lexicon. m.s.
  • Guest, Elizabeth. 1997e. History of the Moro NT. m.s.
  • Guest, Elizabeth. 1998. Miscellaneous Moro Grammar. m.s.
  • Jenks, Peter. (to appear) Noun phrases in Moro. In R. Blench & T. Schadeberg (eds.) Languages of the Nuba Mountains.
  • Jenks, Peter & Sharon Rose (2011). High Tone in Moro: Effects of Prosodic Categories and Morphological Domains. Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 29, 211-250.
  • Jenks, Peter and Sharon Rose. (to appear) Syllable Weight and High Tone in Moro. Papers from the 45th Chicago Linguistic Society.
  • Rose, Sharon. The morphological structure of the Moro verb. In R. Blench & T. Schadeberg (eds.) Languages of the Nuba Mountains.
  • MacDiarmid. 1931. The languages of the Nuba Mountains. Sudan Notes and Records 14:149-162.
  • Schadeberg, Thilo C. 1981. A Survey of Kordofanian. Volume 1: The Heiban Group. Hamburg: Helmut Buske.
  • Stevenson, Roland C. 1956-57. "A survey of the phonetics and grammatical structures of the Nuba Mountain languages, with particular reference to Otoro, Katcha and Nyimang". Afrika und Übersee 40:73-84, 93-115; 41:27-65, 117-153, 171-196.
  • Strabone, Andrew & Sharon Rose. (2012). Morpho-phonological properties of the Moro causative. Selected Proceedings of the 41st Annual Conference on African Linguistics. Cascadilla Proceedings Project.
  • Moro Marriage notes
  • Notes on Language Use in the Moro Community in Khartoum
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