The Saharan languages are a small family of languages across parts of the eastern Sahara, extending from northwestern Sudan to southern Libya, north and central Chad, eastern Niger and northeastern Nigeria. Noted Saharan languages include Kanuri (9.5 million speakers, around Lake Chad in Chad, Nigeria, Niger, and Cameroon), Daza (700,000 speakers, Chad), Teda (60,000 speakers, northern Chad), and Zaghawa (350,000 speakers, eastern Chad and Sudan). They have been classified as part of the hypothetical but controversial Nilo-Saharan family.
A comparative word list of the Saharan languages has been compiled by Václav Blažek (2007).[1]
Roger Blench argues that the Saharan and Songhay languages form a Songhay-Saharan branch with each other within the wider Nilo-Saharan linguistic phylum.[2]
Reconstruction
Cyffer (2020:385) gives the following Proto-Saharan reconstructions:[3]
Gloss
Proto-Saharan
Kanuri
Teda-Daza
Beria
mouth
*kai
cî
kai
āā
tongue
*tiram
tə́lam
tirmẽ́su
tàmsī
ear
*simo
sə́mo
šímo
liver
*masin
kəmáttən
maasen
màī
knee
*kurum
ngurumngurum
kórú
person
*am
âm (pl.)
amo
ɔ̄ɔ̄
leaf
*kur
kálú
kólú
ɔ́gʊ́r
big
*kut
kúra
kɔra
ʊ́gʊ́rī
that
*tu
túdu
te̥ye
tɔ̄
to die
*nu
nú
nus
nʊ́í
to come
*it
ís
ri
tíí
to see
*tu
rú
ru
ír̥ì
to drink
*sa
yá, sá
ya
yá
to say
*n
n
n
n
Comparative vocabulary
Sample basic vocabulary of Saharan languages from Blažek (2007):[4]
^Cyffer, Norbert. 2020. Saharan. In: Rainer Vossen and Gerrit J. Dimmendaal (eds). The Oxford Handbook of African languages, 383-391. Oxford University Press.
^Blažek, Václav. 2007. ]https://www.muni.cz/en/research/publications/763232 On application of Glottochronology for Saharan Languages]. In Viva Africa 2007. Proceedings of the IInd International Conference on African Studies (April 2007). Plzeň: Dryáda, 2007. p. 19-38, 19 pp. ISBN978-80-87025-17-8.
^Doris Löhr, H. Ekkehard Wolff (with Ari Awagana). 2009. Kanuri vocabulary. In: Haspelmath, Martin & Tadmor, Uri (eds.) World Loanword Database. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, 1591 entries.