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The Kuliak languages—Ik, Soo, and Nyang'i—are spoken by small relict communities in the mountains of northeastern Uganda. Bender (1989) had classified them within the Eastern Sudanic languages, but by Bender (2000) he had separated them out as a peripheral isolate within Nilo-Saharan. Significant influence from Cushitic languages, and more recently Nilotic languages, is observable in the vocabulary and phonology. Bernd Heine proposed a reconstruction of Proto-Kuliak. Soo and Nyang'i form a subgroup, Western Kuliak, against Ik. Blench notes that Kuliak appears to retain a core of non-Nilo-Saharan vocabulary, suggesting language shift from an indigenous language like that seen in Dahalo. Nyang'i is close to extinct (there is one remaining speaker with reasonable fluency), and Soo is moribund. However, Ik is vigorous, and growing. ;Internal classification }} ==References== * Heine, Bernd (1976) ''The Kuliak Languages of Eastern Uganda''. Nairobi: East African Publishing House. * Laughlin, C. D. (1975) "Lexicostatistics and the mystery of So ethnolinguistic relations" in ''Anthropological Linguistics'' 17:325-41. * Fleming, Harold C. (1982) "Kuliak external relations: step one" in ''Nilotic Studes (Proceedings of the international symposium on languages and history of the Nilotic Peoples, Cologne, January 4–6, 1982'', Vol 2, 423-478. * Blench, Roger M. (2006) Archaeology, Language and the African Past . Lanham: Altamira Press. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Kuliak languages」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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