Talk:Niger-Congo languages
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[edit] Confusing claims
This page at first claims that Greenberg's Niger-Kordofanian languages (NK) are the same as Bendor-Samuel's Niger-Congo languages (NC) and therefore include the Kordofanian languages (K). But later on it says that NK = NC + K. What is going on? Perhaps Bendor-Samuel included K in NC, but later linguists took K out?
Jorge Stolfi 23:06, 14 May 2004 (UTC)
- Nobody's corrected this, so I will. I'm going by memory, however, so please correct me if need be!
- I believe Greenberg also used the term NK, but perhaps only after Bendor-Samuel invented it. Also, some linguists do not consider Kordofanian to be the earliest branch, but rather that it diverged strongly under non-NK language influence; it's possible some of them might use the term NC for the whole family. —kwami 01:55, 18 Apr 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Which family is the biggest?
- The Niger-Congo languages are the largest group of the world in terms of different languages.
Any data supporting this claim ?
Try this one for some fairly exact figures on a whole raft of language families:
http://www.ethnologue.com/family_index.asp
It shows the Niger-Congo family way in front of everything but Austronesian, and ahead of that too. -- Paul Drye
Difference between language and dialect is quite arbitrary and the difference in numbers isn't that big anyway, so I added "probably". -- Taw
[edit] Clutter
I think the links to the countries in which the example languages are spoken make that part of the article disorderly. Would it be OK to remove them, or is there another possibility to reduce the clutter? Strangeloop (talk) 18:14, 17 Aug 2004 (UTC)
[edit] Navbox
I've added a navbox to see if we can come up with a nice template to navigate along the major subgroups of Niger-Congo. I've not added it to other articles yet because it needs to be polished a bit first. What do others think? — mark ✎ 14:36, 19 August 2005 (UTC)
- The box might be helpful in a later stage. This moment is just adds a third outline which even is not displayed properly in my FireFox browser on a wide screen. Currently I think adding more meat to the arcticle itself is of higher priority. For example which features a common to Niger-Congo languages (noun classes, serial verb constructions etc). Hirzel 08:48, 20 August 2005 (UTC)
Fair point. I've parked it here for now. — mark ✎ 07:25, 23 August 2005 (UTC)
- I'm slowly expanding the article, having added a classification history and a bit on common features recently. Sections on tone, noun classes, and syntax will follow, and maybe a more detailed map. — mark ✎ 14:34, 29 September 2005 (UTC)
The navbox has been superseded by the {{Infobox Language family}}. — mark ✎ 08:46, 16 February 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Time since proto-language?
Does anyone have any idea how long ago the proto-Niger-Congo language is believed to have been spoken? This would be an important addition to the article. --Saforrest 17:27, 12 May 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Is this a valid language family?
Looking at the lanuage families of the world, I find it strang that the Americas, for example, have a lot of small families where Africa, where humans have supposedly lived for much longer, has so few. It should be the other way arround. Geneticists have found that genetic diversity in Africa is far higher than that of the rest of the world. With respect to languages, it should be the same. What is the reason for this? Have the Niger-Congo people replaced everybody else who might have been there bevfore, e.g. because they had agriculture or bronze age or iron age technologies the other peoples did not? Or is it just that the views of Greenberg dominate in African lingusitics and Grennberg is maybe sombody who has a tendency to lump languages together, while in oother parts of the world, the dominating linguists are applying stricter standards (just a question, I am an outsider to the field)? so is the discrepancy an Artefact due to different traditions in different branches of Linguistics? Is Niger Congo or Niger Cordofanian a language family hypothesis comparable in status to Amerindian or [[Nostratic}} or has a protolanguage or important aspects thereof actually been reconstructed and it has been shown that and how the different subfamilies have developed out of this. If anybody has access to material showing evidence for the validity of this family, please include it in the article. If there is a discussion about the validity of this family or of certain subfamilies being attributet to it in the literature, please include information about it in the article. Nannus 00:32, 9 July 2006 (UTC)
- Even though you're right that the field of African linguistics has known more lumpers than splitters historically, the validity of Niger-Congo isn't really disputed. A starting point if you're looking for evidence is Greenberg's The Languages of Africa, though that is not a reconstruction. Reconstructions for Niger-Congo (or actually only parts of it) have been carried out by Mukarovsky and by Stewart. Stewart has worked mostly on reconstructing Potou-Akanic (Ghana, Ivory Coast) and Bantu, and in a recent article (2002) he argues that his Potou-Akanic-Bantu reconstruction is a good starting-point for a reconstruction of Proto-Niger-Congo, comparable in fact (so he argues) to the 'Proto-Germanic-Latin-Greek-Sanskrit' of the poineers of Indo-European reconstruction (Stewart 2002:198-200).
- Mukarovsky, Hands (1976077). A Study of Western Nigritic. 2 vols. Vienna: Veröffentlichungen des Institus für Ägyptologie und Afrikanstik der Universität Wien.
- Stewart, John. 2002. 'The potential of Proto-Potou-Akanic-Bantu as a pilot Proto-Niger-Congo', in Journal of African languages and linguistics, 197-224.
- — mark ✎ 16:18, 18 November 2006 (UTC)
[edit] the yoruba language is listed under bantu
the yoruba language is incorrectly listed as a bantu language it should be listed under benue congo which is a part of the larger volta congo family —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 151.203.33.225 (talk) 11:22, 12 January 2007 (UTC).
- Actually, it is listed under Benue-Congo and I couldn't find anyplace in the article suggesting that it is a Bantu language. — mark ✎ 12:42, 12 January 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Bantu
Mel, is it really your argument that I have to source the statement that the Bantu languages include most of the languages of central, eastern, and southern Africa, or you will remove it? This is trivially verifiable. john k 20:26, 10 March 2007 (UTC)
- So why exactly do you not provide a source? Is your claim that editors don't have to provide sources for what they say (or even explanations of their edits in edit summaries), but that it's up to others to do it for them? --Mel Etitis (Talk) 22:50, 10 March 2007 (UTC)
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- BUt u dont remove it if it isnt a disputed fact, add a fact tag, but it could b considered a WP:POINT if someone said the sky is blue and u said prove it. The map of Africa shows the distribution of Bantu languages, i dont c the problem. also watch the language thing, if an editor feels someone is being unreasonable just explain it on the talk page. the bad languages weakens your case. I think the cursing editors changes are allowable, esp due to the fact the many things have no [citation needed]--Halqحَلَقَة הלכהሐላቃህ 23:45, 10 March 2007 (UTC)
- I apologize for my inappropriate language earlier. As to the rest, like Halaqah says - not everything has to be cited, and the basic claim in my statement is about as close to "common knowledge" as one can get. Columbia says, for instance, that the Bantu "inhabit most of the continent S of the Congo River except the extreme southwest." The map in this article shows more or less my point. The revert was clearly a WP:POINT violation because I was arguing with Mel on another talk page. Would Mel revert me if I made an unsourced edit that George W. Bush is President of the United States, or that the Earth is the third planet from the sun, too? john k 05:21, 11 March 2007 (UTC)
- I will be 100% honest, when i saw that edit dispute i knew it had personal roots. It happens to me, where people dont like you disrupt all your edits. It is sad, but what the revert was about was a WP:POINT and yes we should cite references, dont get me wrong but just add fact tags and allows the user to reply, esp if the addition isnt crazy stuff. We need to edit wiki not attack each other.--Halqh حَلَقَة הלכהሐላቃህ 11:23, 11 March 2007 (UTC)
- BUt u dont remove it if it isnt a disputed fact, add a fact tag, but it could b considered a WP:POINT if someone said the sky is blue and u said prove it. The map of Africa shows the distribution of Bantu languages, i dont c the problem. also watch the language thing, if an editor feels someone is being unreasonable just explain it on the talk page. the bad languages weakens your case. I think the cursing editors changes are allowable, esp due to the fact the many things have no [citation needed]--Halqحَلَقَة הלכהሐላቃህ 23:45, 10 March 2007 (UTC)
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