Elamite language
Modern Elamite | |
---|---|
Lisan Haltamtime | |
Pronunciation | [li.sän häl.täm.ti.me] |
Native to | Elam |
Ethnicity | Elamites |
Native speakers | 2.7 million (2018) |
Early forms | Old Elamite
|
Elamite Latin alphabet Perso-Arabic script (historically) | |
Official status | |
Official language in | Elam |
Recognised minority language in | |
Regulated by | Elamite College of Grammar Kuliyah Nahume Haltamtime |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-1 | ELY |
ISO 639-3 | – |
The Elamite Language (lisan Haltamtime, [li.sän häl.täm.ti.me]), sometimes referred to as Modern Elamite to distinguish it from its historical forms, is a language spoken primarily in Elam and in bordering regions of neighbouring Iran. Linguistically, Elamite is unrelated to the other languages of the region and is a language isolate unrelated to any other known living language. The Elamites are indigenous to and primarily inhabit the region of Elam.
Native speakers of Elamite live in a contiguous area that straddles the edge of the Iranian plateau and follows the course of the Karun river to the Persian gulf. The northern and central parts of Elam and the Iranian province of Ilam form the core of the historically Elamite speaking area. In the southern- and westernmost parts of Elam, Arabic has either displaced Elamite or Elamite was never spoken natively to begin with.
Under Qajar rule, public use of Elamite was frowned upon and often regarded as a sign of separatism and growing nationalism. After Elam became independent in 1921, this trend reversed and education and publishing in Elamite began to flourish. As part of this process, a standardised form of the Elamite language was developed by the University of the Republic (now the Royal Elamite University) in the early 1920s. Although variation within dialects still exists, the standardised form is considered universally easy to understand and employ in formal situations (education, mass media, literature).
A language isolate, Elamite is believed to be one of the few surviving Pre-Semitic and Pre-Indo-Iranian languages of the ancient Near East. The origin of the Elamites and their language isn't conclusively known, though the most accepted theory is that early forms of Elamite developed in the area well before the arrival of Semitic peoples. A relationship to the Dravidian language family was suggested by Igor M. Diakonoff and later defended by David McAlpin; this hypothesis has not gained mainstream acceptance however. Elamite has borrowed extensively from surrounding languages over the years — particularly from Arabic following the Islamic conquest of Elam and Iran.
History and classification
Geographic distribution
Official status
Grammar
Syntax
While literary Elamite has a canonical subject-object-verb (SOV) word order, it is not strongly left-branching. However, because Elamite is a pro-drop language, the subject of a sentence is often not apparent until the end of the finite verb.
- Kitab dabantiname in berah. (I am reading the blue book)
- Kitab dabantiname in berat. (Youa are reading the blue book)
- Kitab dabantiname in beraš. (He/she is reading the blue book)
^a singular informal form.
In the colloquial language, there has been a leftward migration of the verbal element in that, in day-to-day speech, word order can often appear as subject-verb-object (SVO); this is particularly common in the southwestern part of the language area.
- Berah kitabi dabantinameyn. (I am reading the blue book)
- Berahu kitabi dabantinameyn. (We are reading the blue book[s])
This ordering of phrases is considered nonstandard and stylistically unsound in prose.
Main clauses precede subordinate clauses.
- Una iddašta ha al'ahad na inna mayizziš. (He told me that he wouldn't come on Sunday)
There exists an interrogative particle, mi, which indicates a polar question. It isn't used in the literary form of the language, but in colloquial speech it can be heard at the end of the question.
- Berat kitabi mi? (Are you reading the book?)
Grammatical modifiers, such as adjectives, follow the nouns they modify. In the literary form, the noun takes no morphological modification; in the colloquial form, an adjunct structure similar to Persian izâfah marks the relationship between the noun and its modifier. After a consonant it appears as -i, and after a vowel or y it appears as -ye.
- Literary: kitab dabantiname (blue book); arayan šilhame (powerful government); ayli šišniri (beautiful girl)
- Colloquial: kitabi dabantiname (blue book); arayani šilhame (powerful government); ayliye šišniri (beautiful girl)
Phonology
Vowels
Front | Central | Back | |
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Close | i /i/ |
u /u/ | |
Mid | e /e/ |
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Open | a /ä/ |
The Elamite language features only four vowels: /ä/, /e/, /i/, and /u/.
Consonants
Labial | Alveolar | Palatal or postalveolar |
Velar or labiovelar |
Uvular | Glottal | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | m /m/ |
n /n/ |
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Plosive | voiceless | p /p/ |
t /t/ |
k /k/ |
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voiced | b /b/ |
d /d/ |
g /ɡ/ |
(apostrophe) /ʔ/[A] | |||
Affricate | j /d͡ʒ/[A] |
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Fricative | voiceless | f /f/ |
s /s/ |
š /ʃ/ |
x /χ/[A] |
h /h/ | |
voiced | z /z/ |
q /ʁ/[A] |
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Lateral | l /l/ |
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Approximant | y /j/ |
w /w/ |
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Rhotic | r /ɾ~r/ |
A Not found in native words; only occur in loanwords.