Sonjo language

Bantu language spoken in northern Tanzania
Sonjo
Gitemi
Native toTanzania
RegionArusha Region, Ngorongoro District, near the Kenyan border
EthnicitySonjo people
Native speakers
24,600 (2009)[1]
Language family
Niger–Congo?
Language codes
ISO 639-3soz
Glottologtemi1247
E.46[2]
PersonMsonjo (Batɛmi)
PeopleWasonjo (Motɛmi)
LanguageKisonjo (Ketɛmi)

Sonjo, or Temi, is a Bantu language spoken in northern Tanzania, 30–40 miles (48–64 km) west of Lake Natron. Ethnolinguistically, it is a displaced member of Guthrie’s E50 group, most other members of which are found in Central Kenya. Within that group, it is most closely related to Gikuyu. The Sonjo people number about 30,000 (2002 SIL); many of them are bilingual in Swahili, the local language of education. Sonjo is largely undescribed.

The Sonjo have lived for centuries as an isolated enclave in Maasai territory.[citation needed] They are known for their use of irrigation systems in agriculture, a rare trait which causes some historians to link them to the hitherto unexplained ruined irrigation systems of Engaruka, 60 miles (97 km) to the southeast. The term Sonjo is the name given to the people by the Maasai; they call themselves batɛmi (sg. motɛmi) and their language ketɛmi. Apart from inevitable Maasai (Eastern Nilotic) influence, Sonjo shows influence from Chaga (Bantu E40), various Southern Cushitic languages, and from Datooga.

References

  1. ^ "Temi". Ethnologue. Retrieved 2018-08-14.
  2. ^ Jouni Filip Maho, 2009. New Updated Guthrie List Online
  • Nurse, Derek & Franz Rottland. 1991. ‘Sonjo: Description, Classification, History’, in Sprache und Geschichte in Afrika, 12/13, 171-289.
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Official languagesIndigenous
languages
Bantu
Northeast
Bantu
Bena–Kinga
Chaga
Great Lakes
Kikuyu–Kamba
  • Sonjo
Northeast Coast
Takama
Kilombero
Rufiji–Ruvuma
Rukwa
Other Bantu
Cushitic
Nilotic
Isolates/unclassified
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Zone E
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Zone F
F10
[J]F20
F30
Zone G
G10
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G30
G40
G50
G60
Zone H
H10
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  • Italics indicate extinct languages.
  • Languages between parentheses are varieties of the language on their left.
  • The Guthrie classification is geographic and its groupings do not imply a relationship between the languages within them.
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Narrow Bantu languages (Zones J–M) (by Guthrie classification)
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Zone K
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Zone L
L10
L20
L30
L40
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L60
Zone M
M10
M20
M30
M40
M50
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  • Italics indicate extinct languages.
  • Languages between parentheses are varieties of the language on their left.
  • The Guthrie classification is geographic and its groupings do not imply a relationship between the languages within them.
Narrow Bantu languages by Guthrie classification zone templates
Template:Narrow Bantu languages (Zones A–B)
Template:Narrow Bantu languages (Zones C–D)
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