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Vaal–Orange, also known as Seroa, is an extinct ǃKwi language of South Africa and Lesotho. It comprised the ''(unicode:ǂUngkue)'' dialect (also rendered ''(unicode:ǂKunkwe)'') of the Warrenton area, recorded by Carl Meinhof, and the ''(unicode:ǁŨǁ’e)'' dialect (also rendered ''(unicode:ǁKu-ǁ’e)'' or ''(unicode:ǁKuǁe)''),〔Distinguish ''(unicode:ǁNg ǃ’e)'', a form of , and ''(unicode:Nǀhuǁéi)'', which is a variety of Taa.〕 spoken near Theunissen and Bethany in South Africa and into Lesotho, recorded by Dorothea Bleek.〔Tom Güldemann (2011) "The Lower Nossob varieties of Tuu: ǃUi, Taa or neither?"〕 The name "Vaal–Orange" comes from the Vaal and Orange Rivers, which converge where (unicode:ǂUngkue) dialect was spoken. ''Seroa'' is the Sesotho name, literally "language of the ''Baroa'' (Bushmen)". Like ǀXam, ǂUngkue used 'inclusory' pronouns for compound subjects: : :'The lion and jackal and ostrich, they went'. (Meinhof 1929) ==References== *(''Structural isoglosses between Khoekhoe and Tuu: the Cape as a linguistic area ). Tom Güldemann hr:ǁXegwi jezik it:Lingua ǁxegwi 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「Vaal–Orange language」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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