The Tuu languages, or TaaâÂÂÃÂKwi (TaaâÂÂÃÂUi, ÃÂUiâÂÂTaa, Kwi) languages, are a language family consisting of two language clusters spoken in Botswana, South Africa and Namibia. The relationship between the two clusters is not doubted, but is distant. The name Tuu comes from a word common to both branches of the family for "person".
The ancestor of Tuu languages, Proto-Tuu, was presumably also spoken in or around the Kalahari desert, as a word for the gemsbok (*!hai) is reconstructable to Proto-Tuu.
There is evidence of substantial borrowing of words between Tuu languages and other Khoisan languages, including basic vocabulary. Khoekhoe in particular is thought to have a Tuu (ÃÂKwi-branch) substrate.
Examples of borrowings from Khoe into Tuu include 'chest' (ÃÂXóõ gÃÂúu from Khoe *gÃÂuu) and 'chin' (NÃÂng gÃÂann from Khoe *ÃÂann). A root for 'louse' shared by some Khoe and Tuu languages (ÃÂxóni~kx'uni~kx'uri) has been suggested as deriving from a 'pre-Tuu/pre-Khoe substrate'.
The Tuu languages are not demonstrably related to any other language family, though they do share many similarities to the languages of the Kxüa family. This is generally thought to be due to thousands of years of contact and mutual influence (a sprachbund), but some scholars believe that the two families may eventually prove to be related.
The Tuu languages were once accepted as a branch of the now-obsolete Khoisan language family, and in that conception were called Southern Khoisan.
The languages and their relationships are thought to be as follows. In several places there is not enough data to distinguish language from dialect:
The ÃÂKwi (ÃÂUi) branch of South Africa is moribund, with only one language extant, NÃÂng, and that with only one elderly speaker. ÃÂKwi languages were once widespread across South Africa; the most famous, ÃÂXam, was the source of the modern national motto of that nation, '.
The Taa branch of Botswana is more robust, though it also has only one surviving language, ÃÂXóõ, with 2,500 speakers.
Because many of the Tuu languages became extinct with little record, there is considerable confusion as to which of their many names represented separate languages or even dialects. The term "Vaal–Orange" was once used for ÃÂUngkue (formerly spoken at the confluence of the Vaal and Orange Rivers) combined with several of the Eastern lects, which have since been separated.
There were presumably additional Tuu languages. Westphal studied a Taa variety variously rendered ÃÂà Âamani, ÃÂnamani, NgÃÂamani, ÃÂà Âamasa. It is apparently now extinct. Bleek recorded another now-extinct variety, which she labeled 'S5', in the town of Khakhea; it is known in the literature as Kakia. Another in the Nossop area (labeled 'S4a') is known as Xaitia, Khatia, Katia, Kattea. Vaalpens, ÃÂKusi, and ÃÂEikusi evidently refer to the same variety as Xatia. Westphal (1971) lists them both as NÃÂamani dialects, though Köhler lists only Khatia and classifies it as ÃÂKwi.
The Tuu languages, along with neighboring ÃÂüAmkoe, are known for being the only languages in the world to have bilabial clicks as distinctive speech sounds (apart from the extinct ritual jargon Damin of northern Australia, which was not anyone's mother tongue). Taa, ÃÂüAmkoe and neighboring GÃÂui (of the Khoe family) form a sprachbund with the most complex inventories of consonants in the world, and among the more complex inventories of vowels. All languages in these three families also have tone.