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Bangime: secret language, language isolate, or language island?

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List,  Johann-Mattis
CALC, Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Hantgan, A., & List, J.-M. (2020). Bangime: secret language, language isolate, or language island? Journal of Language Contact.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0004-96E1-4
Abstract
We report the results of a qualitative and quantitative lexical comparison between Bangime and neighboring
languages. Our results indicate that the status of the language as an isolate remains viable, and
that Bangime speakers have had different levels of language contact with other Malian populations at different
time periods. Bangime speakers, the Bangande, claim Dogon ancestry, and the language has both
recent borrowings from neighboring Dogon varieties and more rooted vocabulary from Dogon languages
spoken to the east from whence the Bangande claim to have come. Evidence of multi-layered long-term
contact is clear: lexical items have even permeated even core vocabulary. However, strikingly, the Bangande
are seemingly unaware that their language is not intelligible with any Dogon variety. We hope
that our findings will influence future studies on the reconstruction of the Dogon languages and other
neighboring language varieties to shed light on the mysterious history of Bangime and its speakers.