Soddo (autonym kÃÂstane "Christian"; formerly called Aymälläl in Western sources, after a particular dialect of it) is a Gurage language spoken by a quarter million people in southern Ethiopia. It is an Ethiopian Semitic language of the Northern Gurage subfamily. Its native speakers, the Soddo Gurage people (Kistane), live predominantly in the Soddo district of the Gurage Zone.
As in most Ethiopian languages, noun qualifiers generally follow the noun.
The definite article is expressed by the suffix -i, e.g.: goà ¡ "boy" > goà ¡-i "the boy"; ätit "sister" > ätiti "the sister"; bayyoÃÂà"children" > bayyoÃÂÃÂ-i. If the noun ends in -a or -ä, it normally loses this vowel when -i is suffixed: angaÃÂÃÂa "cat" > angaÃÂÃÂ-i "the cat". A noun ending in -i usually stays the same: abi "(the) father, proprietor". A noun ending in -e, -o, -u adds a y before the suffix: ge "house" > geøi "the house"; wälläho "neighbor" > wällähoøi "the neighbor". If the noun has a qualifier, the article is used with the first element: maläk' ge "big house" > maläk'-i ge "the big house"; yä-à ¡um-i ge "the house of the official" (lit. "of-official-the house"); yä-mät't'-i mÃÂss "the man who came" (lit. "who-came-the man".)
There is no real indefinite article, though indefiniteness can be expressed by preposing the word attÃÂ or k'una, meaning "one".
Nouns have two genders, masculine and feminine, which affect verb concord.
Nouns which are definite objects (direct or indirect) are both marked with the prefix yä- or nä-: e.g. yä-geøi aà ¾à ¾o "he saw the house"; yä-zämmih÷an abännÃÂt "he gave it to his brother" (lit. "to-his-brother he-gave-him"). Direct objects may additionally be marked by adding the object suffix pronouns to the verb: e.g. yabiddi tÃ¤à ¡akkunnÃÂt "I asked my father" (lit. "my-father-obj. I-asked-him".)
A possessed noun is marked by the prefix yä-, and the possessor precedes the possessed: yä-à ¡um-i ge "the house of the official" (lit. "of-official-the house"). If the possessed noun has a preposition prefixed to it, this yä- is omitted: babiddi färäz rather than *bä-yä-abiddi färäz for "on my father's horse".
Possessives can also be formed by simply adding yä- to the standalone pronouns, e.g.: yädähÃÂm t'ÃÂb "your clan".
Reflexive pronouns are formed by äras-, gubba-, k'um- plus the possessive suffixes, e.g. ädi äras-ÃÂddi mät'afi t'afkunnÃÂt "I myself wrote the book".
Proximal: zi "this, these"; zini "this one". E.g.: zi mÃÂss "this man", zi mÃÂà ¡t "this woman", zi säboÃÂà"these men".
Distal: za "that, those, that one, those ones"; zani "that one there". E.g. tä-za mÃÂss goy mät't'ahi "I came with that man".
kullÃÂm = "all" (placed before or after the noun); kullÃÂm-u, bä-mollaw = "whole". yät'oma = "only, alone". "Each, every" is expressed by noun reduplication.
The copula (positive and negative) is irregular in the present tense:
Example: zämmidi nähä "you are my brother".
The past tense ("he was", etc.) is expressed by the verb näbbär conjugated regularly in the perfect; "he was not" etc. is with annäbär. The future tense is expressed by the imperfect of hono: yÃÂhonu "he will be", etc. The negative future tense is likewise expressed by tihon. The present copula in subordinate clauses is expressed by the subordinate perfect of honä, e.g.: däffär yähonä tädi-goy yalfu "he who is courageous will go with me.
"It is he", etc. can be expressed by adding an element -tt between the pronoun and the copula: e.g. k÷a-ttÃÂ-n "it is he".
The existential verb "be at", "exist" in the present is:
In the past and future, it is expressed just like the copula, with näbbärä and honä. In subordinate clauses the present is expressed with -allä conjugated in the perfect (negative -lellä), e.g.: bämeda yallÃÂmi säboÃÂàaraà ¡ näm "the people who are in the field are farmers".
The possessive verb "he has" etc. is expressed with the existential verb yino "it is" (agreeing with the object possessed) plus object suffix pronouns (i.e. "it is to him" etc.)
A Soddo verb may have anywhere from one to four consonants, or may be a compound with balo "say" (e.g. bÃÂk'k' balo "appear".) In the former case, they fall into three "conjugations" differing in their vowels and in gemination of the imperfect, illustrated for a three-consonant verb:
Derived stems can be formed in several ways:
There are two tenses/aspects, perfective (past) and imperfective (non-past); each has distinct forms for main versus subordinate clauses, and positive versus negative. There are also distinct jussive, imperative, and impersonal forms.
The form with suffixed -m is used in subordinate clauses to connect verbs not otherwise connected, in a way analogous to Japanese -te; it can be translated as "and", as a gerund, or as a resultative. The perfect in -m followed by näbbär forms the pluperfect.
The negative perfect is formed by prefixing al-, with vowel change; for the conjugations mentioned above, the resulting forms are al-säfärä, al-täkkälä, and al-ÃÂ'afärä.
Examples: ge arÃ¤à ¡à ¡o "he built a house"; banätäw k'ÃÂn awänna-m bämida tonnaw "having put butter on the top of his head, he sat outside".
Like the perfect, the subordinate forms can take the suffix -m to express a series of non-past actions. This can be combined with näbbär to express a habitual past action.
Examples: ahoññ gäbäya nalfu "today we shall go to the market"; yÃÂgädÃÂl mÃÂss "the man who kills"; mas tÃÂnäsa-m yibara wawt'a tÃÂk'ärsi "she picks up the sleeping mats and begins to remove the dung."
It can be augmented by -ÃÂn, with no obvious change in meaning.
Examples: ahoññ yÃÂmät'a timäsÃÂl "it does not seem that he will come today"; ädah÷an t-aykäfÃÂl alläfo "he left without paying his debt".
These are negated by the prefix ay-: ayÃÂsfär, ayà ¡Ã¤kkÃÂt, aygalb. The 2nd person forms then change to conform to the others: attÃÂsfär, attÃÂsfer, attÃÂsfärÃÂm, attÃÂsfärma.
E.g.: