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    The Omotic languages are Afro-Asiatic languages spoken in northeastern Africa. Most Omotic speakers live in southwestern Ethiopia. The Omotic languages are fairly agglutinative.
    The Ge'ez alphabet is used to write such Omotic languages as are written.


        Omotic languages
            Language List
            See also

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    Language List
    The Omotic Languages include:

    Anfillo

    Ari

    Bambassi

    Basketto

    Bench

    Boro

    Chara

    Dime

    Dizzi

    Dorze

    Gamo-Gofa

    Ganza

    Hammer-Banna

    Hozo

    Kachama-Ganjule

    Kara

    Kefa

    Kore

    Male

    Melo

    Mocha

    Nayi

    Oyda

    Shakacho

    Sheko

    Welaytta (Welamo)

    Yemsa

    Zayse-Zergulla


    Lionel Bender (2000) classifies this group as follows:
      North Omotic/Non-Aroid
        Gonga-Gimojan
          Gimojan
            Ometo-Gimira

    Apart from terminology, this differs from Harold Fleming's earlier (1976) classification in including the Mao languages, whose affiliation had originally been controversial, and in abolishing the "Gimojan" group. There are also differences in the subclassification of Ometo, which is not given here.

    The Omotic languages were formerly classified as the West subgroup of the Cushitic languages, but as more data became available, Harold Fleming proposed that they constituted a separate subgroup of Afro-Asiatic, and this has become the prevalent view. Whether the old Cushitic language family should be split in two in this way is still controversial among some linguists; others, conversely, such as Paul Newman, regard its differences from other Afro-Asiatic languages as so great as to cast doubt on its very inclusion in the phylum, and regard it as being, at closest, the phylum's most distant branch.

    They should not be confused with the unrelated Omotik language, a nearly extinct Nilotic language of Tanzania with a similar name.

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    See also




     
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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Omotic languages". link