Tagdal (Tuareg name: Tagdalt)[3] is a mixed Northern Songhay language of central Niger. Ethnologue considers it a "mixed Berber–Songhay language",[1][4] while other researchers consider it Northern Songhay.[5] Nicolaï (1981) argued that Tagdal was originally derived from the Tuareg languages and adopted characteristics of Songhai rather than vice versa.[6]

Tagdal
Tagdal-Tabarog
Tihishit
Native toNiger
EthnicityIgdalen, Iberogan
Native speakers
65,000 (2021)[1]
Dialects
  • Tagdal
  • Tabarog
Tifinagh
Language codes
ISO 639-3tda
Glottologtagd1238
ELPTagdal
Location of Songhay languages[2]

Northwest Songhay:

  Tagdal

Eastern Songhay:

  Dendi
Agdal
PersonAgdal
PeopleIgdalan
LanguageTagdal
Abarog
PeopleIberogan
LanguageTabarog

There are two dialects: Tagdal proper, spoken by the Igdalen people, pastoralists who inhabit a region to the east along the Niger border to Tahoua in Niger,[4] and Tabarog, spoken by the Iberogan people of the Azawagh valley on the Niger–Mali border. The Iberogan sometimes refer to their language as Tagdal.[citation needed]

Nicolaï (1981) uses the name Tihishit as a cover term. Rueck & Christiansen say that

...the Igdalen and the Iberogan have for many purposes been treated as one group, and their speech forms are closely related. Nicolaï uses "tihishit" as a common designator for these two speech forms...; however, this term is ambiguous. "Tihishit" is a term of Tamajaq origin meaning "the language of the blacks". The Igdalen and Iberogan used it to refer to all Northern Songhay speech forms.[5]

Phonology

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Consonants

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Labial Alveolar Post-alv./
Palatal
Velar Uvular Pharyn-
geal
Glottal
plain phar.
Nasal m n ŋ
Plosive/
Affricate
voiceless t k q
voiced b d ɡ
Fricative voiceless f s ʃ x ħ h
voiced z ʒ ɣ ʕ
Tap ɾ ɾˤ
Lateral l
Approximant w j
  • /w/ may be heard as [ʋ] in the Tarbun dialect.

Vowels

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Front Central Back
Close i u
Mid e ə o
Open a
  • Each of the vowels /i, e, ə, a, o, u/ tend to fluctuate within the presence of the phonemes /x, ɣ, q, ʕ, ħ/ or of a pharyngealized consonant, as [ɨ, ɛ, ʌ, ɑ, ɔ, o].[7]

Grammar

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Tagdal is an agglutinative language, most likely due to Tuareg influence.[4]: 71 

Pronouns

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Tagdal gets its pronominal system from Northern Songhay languages.

Singular Plural
1st ɣɑy iri
2nd nin ɑnji
3rd ɑnga ingi
Subject prefixes:
Singular Plural
1st ɣɑ- iri-
2nd ɘn/ni- ɑnji-
3rd ɑ- i-

Tadgal has two different prefixes used for negation. The first is -, which functions as perfective negation, and is the default choice for negation. It indicates something that might have happened in the past, but didn't, or in the case of stative verbs, something that is not true. The other negation prefix is -, which acts as a negation in the present or future. Uses of this negation are shown in these examples:[8]

  • ɣɑnɘkoy: I did not go
  • ɣɑsɘbkoy: I was not going/I do not (habitually) go
  • ɣɑnəyɑrdɑ: I disagree

References

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  1. ^ a b Tagdal at Ethnologue (26th ed., 2023)  
  2. ^ This map is based on classification from Glottolog and data from Ethnologue.
  3. ^ Ritter, Georg (2009). Wörterbuch zur Sprache und Kultur der Twareg II Deutsch-Twareg. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz. p. 735.
  4. ^ a b c Benítez-Torres, Carlos M. (2009). "Inflectional vs. Derivational Morphology in Tagdal: A Mixed Language" (PDF). In Masangu Matondo; Fiona Mc Laughlin; Eric Potsdam (eds.). In Selected Proceedings of the 38th Annual Conference on African Linguistics. Somerville: Cascadilla Proceedings Project. pp. 69–83.
  5. ^ a b Michael J Rueck; Niels Christiansen. Northern Songhay languages in Mali and Niger, a sociolinguistic survey. Summer Institute of Linguistics (1999).
  6. ^ Catherine Taine-Cheikh. Les langues parlées au sud Sahara et au nord Sahel. De l'Atlantique à l'Ennedi (Catalogue de l'exposition « Sahara-Sahel »), Centre Culturel Français d'Abidjan (Ed.) (1989) 155-173
  7. ^ Benítez-Torres, Carlos M. (2021). A Grammar of Tagdal: a Northern Songhay language. Leiden University. hdl:1887/3240577.
  8. ^ Benítez-Torres, Carlos M. (2009). Inflectional vs. Derivational Morphology in Tagdal: A Mixed Language. Cascadilla Proceedings Project. pp. 69–83. ISBN 9781574734294.