Abidji (also known as Abiji and Ambidji) is a language of uncertain classification within the Kwa branch of the NigerâÂÂCongo family. It is spoken in Ivory Coast.
It has two dialects: "enyembe" and "ogbru". These dialects' names are used by the members of these Abidji-speaking ethnic groups to refer to themselves. The name Ambidji was given to the language by these groups' neighbors.
Abidji is spoken in these villages:
Abidji is written with a Latin alphabet, using the graphemes of . The letter upsilon is often replaced with the V with hook .
The nasal vowels are written with ( before and ): .
All vowels except have contrastive nasal forms.
Abidji's phonology is characterized by vocal harmony: its 9 vowels are divided into two sets, based on the position of the root of the tongue at the time of articulation.
All of these 9 vowels can be nasalized. Beyond that, Abidji only contains open syllables, with the sole exception being the first syllable of the word <u>dar</u>sÃÂ: "metal pot", likely a loanword.
Abidji is a tonal language. Therefore the pitch of each syllable plays a role in the meaning of words or conjugated form of a verb. Abidji has two phonemic tones, described as high and low . These can be attached to one or two vowels (e.g. kpan (H): "all"; kpan (HL): "human being").
The language's most distinct grammatical aspect is its verbal system, which is highly structured. Abidji contains 4 verb groups which are distinguished by their combination of tonal and syllabic arrangements.
The first group contains verbs with a monosyllabic root which cannot accommodate modulated tones (e.g. mékan: "I say" (L - H))
The second group contains verbs with a monosyllabic root which can carry a modulated tone (e.g. mékan: "I have" (L - HL))
The third group contains verbs with a polysyllabic root in which each syllable can only carry a singular tone (e.g. mubutu: "I ask" (L - H - L))
The fourth group only contains 5 exceptionally common verbs ("to go"; "to come"; "to eat"; "to die"; and "to fight") for which the verbal root alternates between a sequence of h followed by a vowel ('hi'), a sequence of two vowels ('ie'), and a sequence of ÃÂ followed by three vowels, based upon the conjugation of the verb in a given aspect/tense (e.g. mehi: "I come"; mie: "I came"; ÃÂieu: "to come" (infinitive))
Lexical differences between the enyembe et ogbru dialects: