Yakan-English Dictionary

Yakan-English Dictionary
Title Yakan-English Dictionary PDF eBook
Author Dietlinde Behrens
Publisher
Pages 640
Release 2002
Genre English language
ISBN

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Dictionary, Yakan-English

Dictionary, Yakan-English
Title Dictionary, Yakan-English PDF eBook
Author Dietlinde Behrens
Publisher
Pages 505
Release 2001
Genre English language
ISBN 9789711803643

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Yakan Texts

Yakan Texts
Title Yakan Texts PDF eBook
Author Dietlinde Behrens
Publisher
Pages 256
Release 2007
Genre Yakan language
ISBN

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Tausug-English dictionary

Tausug-English dictionary
Title Tausug-English dictionary PDF eBook
Author Irene Hassan
Publisher
Pages 712
Release 1994
Genre Tausug language
ISBN

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Takenobu's Japanese-English Dictionary

Takenobu's Japanese-English Dictionary
Title Takenobu's Japanese-English Dictionary PDF eBook
Author Takenobu Yoshitarō
Publisher
Pages 2548
Release 1920
Genre Japanese language
ISBN

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English / Hausa Dictionary

English / Hausa Dictionary
Title English / Hausa Dictionary PDF eBook
Author John C. Rigdon
Publisher Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
Pages 316
Release 2017-07-24
Genre
ISBN 9781973863304

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Hausa is one of Africa's single most spoken languages. It is Hausa's general ease of use that has contributed to its becoming so widely used. A member of the Chadic branch of the Afro-Asiatic languages Hausa is spoken as a first language by about 34 million people, and as a second language by about 15 million more. Native speakers of Hausa are mostly to be found in the north of Nigeria and in Niger (where it is an official language), but the language is widely used as a lingua franca in a larger geographic band across sahelian Africa north of the Congo basin, and west of central Sudan. As a lingua-franca, Hausa is especially prevalent in Ghana, used by Hausa traders in zango (Hausa urban districts) in major cities. It is also used by Fulani herdsmen, Dagomba/Gurunsi farmers as a second language, by the official Islamic clergy of the country, and as an inter-ethnic group lingua-franca north and east of all Akan dominated areas. In total, Hausa speakers in Ghana number between 4-7 million of all Hausa-speakers, making it a very handy language to know in the marketplace. Hausa is also used extensively in Cameroon alongside Fulani in the far north and as far south as Gabon. In Central/Northeast Africa, Hausa is used in Chad and Sudan among the Hausa-Fulani communities, and smaller Muslim tribal groups, in and around Khartoum and Kordofan (in addition to Arabic). Two famous Sudanese singers, Fadimatu and Sabrin, occasionally sing in Hausa on the popular Sudanese national television program Nogoum, noting the increasing recognition of the Hausa language in otherwise Arabic-dominated Sudanese society. Hausa is a tonal language which employs two distinct tones, high and low, but doesn't sound as distinctly tonal as other African languages. There are also many special implosive and explosive consonants used in Hausa that may have to be learned by ear, but are completely comprehensible without mastering. Hausa employs a 5 vowel system like Spanish (a, e, i, o, u), and grammar is quite easy to learn. This dictionary contains 10,200 terms in English and Hausa. A guide to English and Hausa pronunciation is also included. It is derived from our Words R Us system.

A Dictionary of Austronesian Monosyllabic Roots (Submorphemes)

A Dictionary of Austronesian Monosyllabic Roots (Submorphemes)
Title A Dictionary of Austronesian Monosyllabic Roots (Submorphemes) PDF eBook
Author Robert Blust
Publisher Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Pages 288
Release 2022-05-09
Genre Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN 3110781697

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This book documents an understudied phenomenon in Austronesian languages, namely the existence of recurrent submorphemic sound-meaning associations of the general form -CVC. It fills a critical gap in scholarship on these languages by bringing together a large body of data in one place, and by discussing some of the theoretical issues that arise in analyzing this data. Following an introduction which presents the topic, it includes a critical review of the relevant literature over the past century, and discussions of the following: 1. problems in finding the root (the "needle in the haystack" problem), 2. root ambiguity, 3. controls on chance as an interfering factor, 4. unrecognized morphology as a possible factor in duplicating evidence, 5. the shape/structure of the root, 6. referents of roots, 7. the origin of roots, 8. the problem of distinguishing false cognates produced by convergence in root-bearing morphemes from legitimate comparisons resulting from divergent descent, and 9. the problem of explaining how submorphemes are transmitted across generations of speakers independently of the morphemes that host them. The remainder of the book consists of a list of sources for the 197 languages from which data is drawn, followed by the roots with supporting evidence, a short appendix, and references.