Maʼa is a Bantu language of Tanzania.
13-419: The Mbugu people speak two divergent registers , which have been treated as separate languages by some authorities (e.g. Tucker and Bryan): Mbugu or "Normal Mbugu" (autonym kiMbugu ) is purely Bantu, with vocabulary closely related to Pare , while Maʼa or "Inner Mbugu" (autonym kiMaʼa ) consists of an inherited Cushitic vocabulary with Bantu morphology similar to that of Shambala and Pare. They share
26-629: A broad plain. As a result, it's possible that the Serengeti was in mind. From there, the Kwavi drove the Mbugu away and followed them to Mugwe in the east. Meinhof speculates that they may have interacted with the Burungi there or nearby. Similar to Mbugu, Burungi, like Iraqw , is a Southern Cushitic language. The tribe then divided into three sections, traveling once again eastward through Moshi and Same to Lasa in
39-577: A grammar, to the point that their syntax is identical and a passage in one can be translated to the other simply by changing the content words . The Cushitic element was identified as South Cushitic by Ehret. However, Kießling (2001) notes a large East Cushitic admixture. Mous presents the Cushitic element as a register of a Bantu language, and identifies it as largely East Cushitic rather than South Cushitic. Normal Mbugu distinguishes 29 consonants. Inner Mbugu distinguishes an additional four: /ʔ ɬ x x/, for
52-498: A total of 33. The table below displays the consonants of Mbugu in IPA format, along with Mous' (1995) practical orthography in angle brackets where it differs from IPA. Both registers of Mbugu distinguish five vowels. Three tones are distinguished in Mbugu: high, low, and falling. Low tone is default (unmarked). High tone is represented with an acute accent ⟨á⟩ , while falling tone
65-562: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Bumbuli District, Tanga Bumbuli is one of the 11 districts of Tanga Region in Tanzania . The district is bordered to the north the Lushoto District and is surrounded on three sides in the south by Korogwe District . It was split from Lushoto District in 2013. As of 2016, Bumbuli District was administratively divided into 18 wards . This Tanga Region location article
78-627: Is represented with the sequence ⟨áa⟩ . Mbugu people Tanga Region ( Lushoto District ) The Mbugu people, also known as the Va'maa , Ma'a ( Wambugu , in Swahili ) are an ethnic Bantu and linguistic group hailing from western Usambara Mountains of Lushoto District in Tanga Region of Tanzania . Tanzania's Mbugu (or Ma'á) language is one of the few true hybrid languages, combining Bantu grammar with Cushitic lexicon. In actuality,
91-515: The Kilindi dynasty in Usambara, had a Nango wife is true. Then Nango must have been established there by the seventeenth century. The following remarks concerning the "Mbugu" give some indications of a perplexed language situation: The "Mbugu" identify as va-ma'a and speak ki-ma'a . The clans that traveled to Usangi solely speak Kipare . Despite having lived in Usambara for more than 200 years, some of
104-471: The Nango went to Shume in Usambara and continued to be a Sambaa clan. The remaining group (the six Mbugu clans) reversed into Pare, where they later kept in touch with Vudei for a long time. The Mbugu travelled to Usangi , which is immediately south of Ugweno, but it is unclear at what point they were there. Later, they relocated south once more, this time to Shume in Usambara. Some writers, like Meyer, have used
117-708: The clans there solely speak Kipare. The 'Mbugu' claim that there are no more songs and folktales in their language; all of the proverbs, songs, and tales I gathered were in Chasu. The Wambugu have a distinctive tone when speaking Kipare. There are a few linked families in Magamba' that speak a language that no-one can decipher. The Sambaa distinguish between two Wambugu lineages that have entirely different origins. These are from "Umbugwe", also known as Wambugwe, and "Ukwavi-Upare", also known as Wambugu-Makei. The inferences to be made from these sporadic hints would seem to be that while some of
130-413: The name Kwambugu to refer to a region in the same general area of Usambara as Shume. They discovered the Nango already established here; later, they expanded into Usambara, reaching Malo, Magamba near Lushoto, and Bumbuli . According to legend, the Mbugu lived in Usambara prior to 1650. The main body of the Mbugu could have followed, possibly not too long after, if the legend that Mbegha , the founder of
143-402: The people referred to as Mbugu and identifying as va-ma'a still speak their original language, ki-maa, which is made up of a non-Bantu substratum and a Bantu superstructure, others have completely lost all traces of their native tongue and now speak "Kipare" or "Casu". However, the actual language situation has proven to be a little more complicated. This article about a Tanzanian ethnicity
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#1732876353458156-476: The people speak two languages: one closely related to Pare and the other mixed (differing from the first mainly in the lexicon). They are estimated to be around 60,000 Mbugu people left. Historically the Mbugu were in the vicinity of Lake Victoria or, less likely, Lake Eyasi . However, Archibald Tucker 's informant used the Swahili phrase bahari ya pili , which means 'the other/second sea' and can also refer to
169-595: The valley between the western Usambara Mountains and the southern Pare Mountains . Previously, the tribe had been in Ugweno , in the northern Pare Mountains . The tribe was divided into three groups: six clans of Mbugu; six clans each of Nango and Dufu . When the Maasai attacked them at Lasa, they broke off once more: the Dufu moved south into Zigua territory and assimilated into the Zigua;
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