Masaba | |
---|---|
Lumasaba | |
Native to | Uganda |
Region | Eastern, south of the Kupsabiny, Bugisu Province |
Ethnicity | Masaba, Luhya |
Native speakers
|
2.7 million (2002 & 2009 censuses) |
Niger–Congo
|
|
Dialects |
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Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | Variously: – Masaba (Gisu, Kisu, Dadiri, Buya) – Bukusu (Tachoni) – Tachoni |
Glottolog |
masa1299 (Masaaba)buku1249 (Bukusu)tach1242 (Tachoni)
|
JE.31 |
Masaba (Lumasaaba), sometimes known as Gisu (Lugisu) after one of its dialects, is a Bantu language spoken by more than two million people in East Africa. Gisu dialect in eastern Uganda is mutually intelligible with Bukusu, spoken by ethnic Luhya in western Kenya. Masaba is the local name of Mount Elgon and the name of the son of the ancestor of the Gisu tribe. Like other Bantu languages, Lumasaba has a large set of prefixes used as noun classifiers. This is similar to how gender is used in many Germanic and Romance languages, except that instead of the usual two or three, there are around eighteen different noun classes. The language has a quite complex verb morphology.
Varieties of Masaba are as follows:
Dadiri is spoken in the north, Gisu in the center, and Buya in the center and south of Masaba territory in Uganda. Bukusu is spoken in Kenya, separated from ethnic Masaba by Nilotic languages on the border.
See Bukusu dialect for details of one variety of Masaba.
Masaba has a basic 5-vowel system consisting of /i, e, a, o, u/.