Bamum language

Bamum (Bamun: Shü Pamom [ʃŷpǎˑmə̀m] "language of the Bamum", or Shümom "Mum language"), also spelled Bamun or in its French spelling Bamoun, is an Eastern Grassfields language of Cameroon, with approximately 420,000 speakers.[1] The language is well known for its original script developed by King Njoya and his palace circle around 1895. Cameroonian musician Claude Ndam was a native speaker of the language and sang it in his music.[2]

Bamum
Shüpamom
ꛀꛣꚧꚳ
RegionCameroon, Nigeria
EthnicityBamum people
Native speakers
420,000 (2005)[1]
Latin script, Bamum syllabary (being revived)
Language codes
ISO 639-3bax
Glottologbamu1253
Page from a manuscript in the Bamum script

Phonology

Bamum has tone, vowel length, diphthongs and coda consonants.

Vowels

The simple vowels are:

FrontCentral Back
Unrounded Rounded Unrounded Unrounded Rounded
Close i yɨɯ u
Mid e ə o
Open-mid ɛ ɔ
Open a

Bamum vowels can be normal or half-long /ˑ/.

Consonants

The consonants are:

Labial Alveolar Post-
alveolar/
Palatal
Velar Labialized
velar
Labial-
velar
Glottal
Plosive Plain Voiceless ptkk͡pʔ
Voiced bdɡɡʷg͡b
Prenasalized Voiceless ᵐpⁿtᵑkᵑkʷᵑ͡ᵐk͡p
Voiced ᵐbⁿdᵑɡᵑɡʷ ᵑ͡ᵐg͡b
Fricative Plain Voiceless fsʃx
Voiced vzʒɣ
Prenasalized Voiceless ᶬfⁿsᶮʃ
Voiced ᶬvⁿzᶮʒ
Nasal mnɲŋŋʷ ŋ͡m
Rhotic r
Approximant lj w

Tones

Bamum has five tones[3][4]

ToneIPA
àlow
áhigh
āmid
ǎrising
âfalling

References

  1. Bamum at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  2. Cathy Kell (14 September 2005). "Cameroon: Claude Ndam : Committed To Culture". Retrieved 28 August 2015.
  3. https://www.unicode.org/L2/L2007/07023-bamum-report.pdf
  4. Nchare (2012).


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