ESTONIAN ACADEMY
PUBLISHERS
eesti teaduste
akadeemia kirjastus
PUBLISHED
SINCE 1965
 
Linguistica Uralica cover
Linguistica Uralica
ISSN 1736-7506 (Electronic)
ISSN 0868-4731 (Print)
A Bantu Ghost in Uralistics?; pp. 46–50
PDF | 10.3176/lu.2004.1.07

Author
André Hesselbäck
Abstract

Swahili is not to be taken as evidence for an original Uralic lingua franca in this guilt-by-association way, simply because it does not originate in any pidgin or creole language. Arabic can be said to play the same role in the development of Swahili as it does in many of the Turkic languages, e.g. Tatar. The study of Swahili, therefore, could be of interest to anyone studying the impact of the Turkic languages on the Uralic languages. Studies of these current processes in Africa can shed light on previous processes in, for instance, the Volga-Kama area of Russia. It is in this way Swahili is of use to Uralistics: properly described by trained scholars with an up-to-date view on the language in question, cooperating with scholars in other linguistic subdisciplines.

References

Freeman-Grenville,  G.  S.  P.  1974,  Some Aspects of the External ­Relations of the East African Coast: before 1800. - Foreign Relations of African States, London (Colston Papers XXV), 69-83.

Gerhardt,  L.  1995,  Swahili-Sprachgeschichte. - Swahili-Handbuch, Köln (Afrikawissenschaftlicher Lehrbücher, Band 7), 25-39.

Künnap,  A.  2000,  About Some Morphological Features of Proto-Uralic. - The Roots of Peoples and Languages of Northern Eurasia II and III, Tartu 2000 ­(FU 23. Historia Fenno-Ugrica), 27-32.

Künnap,  A.  2000, On Linguistic Relationships. - The Roots of Peoples and Languages of Northern Eurasia II and III, Tartu 2000 ­(FU 23. Historia Fenno-Ugrica), 137-144.

Lodhi,  A.  Y.  1994,  Arabic Grammatical Loans in the Languages of Eastern Africa. - University of Trondheim. Working Papers in Linguistics 22,  [Trond­heim], 60-74.

Lodhi,  A.  Y.  2000a, Arabic Loans in Swahili. - Orientalia Suecana XLIX, Uppsala, 74-81.

Lodhi,  A.  Y.  2000b, Oriental Influences in Swahili. A Study in Language and Culture Contacts, Göteborg (Orientalia et Africana Gothoburgensia 15).

Mazrui,  A.  M.,  Sharif,  I.  N.  1994,  The Swahili. Idiom and Identity of an African People, Trenton, New Jersey.

Nurse,  D.,  Hinnebusch,  T.  1993,  Swahili and Sabaki. A Linguistic History, Berkeley.

Nurse,  D.,  Spear,  T.  1985,  The Swahili. Reconstructing the History and Language of an African Society, 800-1500, Philadelphia.
https://doi.org/10.9783/9781512821666

Pearson,  M.  N.  2000,  The Indian Ocean and the Red Sea. - The History of Islam in Africa, Oxford-Cape Town-Athens, 37-59.

Taagepera,  R.  2000,  Uralic as a Lingua Franca with Roots. - The Roots of Peoples and Languages of Northern Eurasia II and III, Tartu 2000 ­(FU 23. Historia Fenno-Ugrica), 381-395.

The Roots of Peoples and Languages of Northern Eurasia II and III, Tartu 2000 ­(FU 23. Historia Fenno-Ugrica).

Thomason,  S.  G.,  Kaufman,  T.  1988,  Language Contact, Creolization and Genetic Linguistics, Berkeley.
https://doi.org/10.1525/9780520912793

Wiik,  K.  2000,  European Lingua Francas. - The Roots of Peoples and Languages of Northern Eurasia II and III, Tartu 2000 ­(FU 23. Historia Fenno-Ugrica), 202-236.

Back to Issue