Asa and Aramanik: Gushitie hunters in Masai-Land

dc.contributor.authorFleming, Harold C.
dc.date.accessioned2021-10-07T12:51:01Z
dc.date.available2021-10-07T12:51:01Z
dc.date.issued1196
dc.descriptionAvailable in Print form, East Africana Collection, Dr Wilbert Chagula Library, ( EAF FOS F52)en_US
dc.description.abstractA few years ago Greenberg (1963b) called attention to the probability that the Mogogodo language, spoken by a broken pastoral people living in the foothills just north of Mt. Kenya, belonged to the Cushitic family of Hamito-Semitic (Afroasiatic) and showed special affinities with the Galla- Konso division of East Cushitic. In so doing he greatly strengthened the evidence linking the main mass of Cushitic languages in Ethiopia-Somalia and the several Cushitic outliers in Tanzania (Iraqw, Mbugu, etc.). Shortly before this, Greenberg (1962, 1963a: 49) and the present writer had inde¬pendently come to the conclusion that the Sanye language of coastal Kenya recorded by Dammann (1950) was in fact South Cushitic, rather than a “Bushman” language as some scholars had imagined.2 With Mogogodo in central highland Kenya and Sanye in the Kenya coastal lowlands, the previous sizable gap between East and South Cushitic has been appreciably bridgeden_US
dc.identifier.citationFleming, Harold C. (1969) Asa and Aramanik: Gushitie hunters in Masai-Landen_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://41.86.178.5:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/15888
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherBoston Universityen_US
dc.subjectAramanik languageen_US
dc.subjectAsa languageen_US
dc.subjectCushitic familyen_US
dc.subjectMogogodo Languageen_US
dc.titleAsa and Aramanik: Gushitie hunters in Masai-Landen_US
dc.typeArticleen_US
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