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Khoemana

ǃOrakobab or Khoemana, also known as Korana, ǃOra, or Griqua, is a moribund Khoe language of South Africa.

Khoemana

South Africa, Namibia

Korana (kqz): 6 (2008)[1]
Xiri (xii): 187[2]

Either:
kqz – Korana
xii – Xiri

Names[edit]

"Khoemana" (from khoe 'person' + mana 'language') is more commonly known as either Korana /kɒˈrɑːnə/ korr-AH-nə (also ǃOrakobab, ǃOra, Kora, Koraqua) or Griqua (also Gri [xri], Xri, Xiri, Xirikwa).[3] The name 'Korana' reflects the endonym ǃOra IPA: [ǃoɾa] or ǃGora IPA: [gǃoɾa], referring to the ǃOra people.[4] Sometimes ǃOra is also known as Cape Khoe or Cape Hottentot, though the latter has become considered derogatory. The various names are often treated as different languages (called South Khoekhoe when taken together), but they do not correspond to any actual dialect distinctions, and speakers may use "Korana" and "Griqua" interchangeably. Both names are also used more broadly, for example for the Griqua people. There exist (or existed) several dialects of Khoemana, but the details are unknown.[5]

The phoneme [k] can be realized as /c/ before [e] or [i].

An intervocalic [p] and [b] are sometimes realized as /β/.

[s] is stated to be alveolar-postalveolar when not followed by a close front vowel [i], [ĩ], or [e].

The aspirated phoneme [tʰ] is realized as an affricate sound /ts/ when followed by a close front vowel [i], [ĩ], or [e].

The aspirated sound [kʰ] can sometimes be realized as [kx]. Some Griqua speakers may pronounce [kʰ] as [kʼ].

The [tsʼ] sound only seldom occurs.

[m] and [n] can occur syllabically as [m̩] and [n̩].

The trilled [r] can also be realized as a flapped [ɾ] in some speech.

Voicing can be very weak in Khoemana in casual speech, so voiced plosives can be hard to distinguish from voiceless plosives.

[5]

Khoemana is closely related to Khoekhoe, and the sound systems are broadly similar. The strongly aspirated Khoekhoe affricates are simply aspirated plosives [tʰ, kʰ] in Khoemana. However, Khoemana has an ejective velar affricate, /kxʼʔ/,[6] which is not found in Khoekhoe, and a corresponding series of clicks, /ǀ͡xʼ ǁ͡xʼ ǃ͡xʼ ǂ͡xʼ/. Beach (1938)[7] reported that the Khoekhoe of the time had a velar lateral ejective affricate, [k͡ʟ̝̊ʼ], a common realisation or allophone of /kxʼ/ in languages with clicks, and it might be expected that this is true for Khoemana as well. In addition, about half of all lexical words in Khoemana began with a click, compared to a quarter in Khoekhoe.


In Korana, [oe] and [oa] can be pronounced as [we] and [wa].


There are four tones in Khoemana: high (notated with an acute accent), rising (notated with a caron), mid (no accent), and falling (notated with a circumflex).

Population[edit]

Reports as to the number of Khoemana speakers are contradictory, but it is clear that it is nearly extinct. It was thought to be extinct until the discovery of four elderly speakers around Bloemfontein and Kimberley.[8] A 2009 report by Don Killian of the University of Helsinki estimated that there were less than 30 speakers at the time.[5] Matthias Brenzinger reported in 2012 that one possible speaker remained, but that she refused to speak the language.[9] The discrepancies could be because the language has multiple dialects and goes by several names, with scholars not always referring to the same population.[5] Khoemana is listed as "critically endangered" in UNESCO's Language Atlas.[10] The loss of this endangered language would have a significant impact on the heritage and culture of Khoemana speakers.[11]

Attestation[edit]

Robust Khoemana (before more recent language attrition) is principally recorded in an 1879 notebook by Lucy Lloyd, which contains five short stories; some additional work was done in Ponelis (1975).[12] As of 2009, the EuroBABEL project is searching for remaining speakers.

Besten, Michael Paul (2006). (PDF) (Thesis). Faculty of Arts, Leiden University.

Transformation and reconstitution of Khoe-San identities: AAS le Fleur I, Griqua identities and post-apartheid Khoe-San revivalism (1894–2004)

Halford, Samuel James (1949). The Griquas of Griqualand: A Historical Narrative of the Griqua People, Their Rise, Progress and Decline. Juta.  4379924.

OCLC

Killian, Don (2008). Khoemana and the Griqua (Thesis). :10138/33876.

hdl

Jenkins, Trefor (1975). "The Griqua of Campbell, Cape Province, South Africa". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 43 (1). Wiley Online Library: 71–78. :10.1002/ajpa.1330430111. PMID 1155593.

doi

Robertshaw, PT (1978). "The origin of pastoralism in the Cape". South African Historical Journal. 10. Taylor & Francis: 117–133. :10.1080/02582477808671538.

doi

The Rosetta Project (2010). .

The Swadesh List

Waldman, Linda (2006). "Klaar Gesnap As Kleurling: The Attempted Making and Remaking of the Griqua People". African Studies. 65 (2). Routledge: 175–200. :10.1080/00020180601035633. S2CID 144687031.

doi

Voßen, Rainer (1997). Die Khoe-Sprachen: Ein Beitrag zur Erforschung der Sprachgeschichte Afrikas. (Quellen zur Khoisan-Forschung/Research in Khoisan Studies, 12.). Köln: Cologne: Rüdiger Köppe. pp. 92–94.

Maingard, L.F. 1962. Korana Folktales. Grammar and Texts. Johannesburg: Witwatersrand University Press

at the Wayback Machine (archive index)

ǃKorana grammar at Cornell

ǃKorana basic lexicon at the Global Lexicostatistical Database

ELAR archive of

Dictionary of Korana ('Ora)

Rosetta Project: Xiri Swadesh List