Bench language


Bench is a Northern Omotic language of the "Gimojan" subgroup, spoken by about 174,000 people in the Bench Maji Zone of the Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples Region, in southern Ethiopia, around the towns of Mizan Teferi and Shewa Gimira. It has three varieties: Benchnon, Shenon, and Mernon, which Blench considers to be distinct languages but which Rapold states are "...mutually intelligible...varieties of one and the same language".
In unusual variance from most of the other languages in Africa, Bench has retroflex consonant phonemes. The language is also noteworthy in that it has six phonemic tones, one of only a handful of languages in the world that have this many. Bench has a whistled form used primarily by male speakers, which permits communication over greater distances than spoken Bench. The whistle can be created using the lips or made from a hollow created with both hands. Additionally, this form of the language may be communicated via the 5-stringed krar.

Phonology

The phonemic vowels of Bench are.
There are six phonemic tones: five level tones and one rising tone 23. The top tone is sometimes realized as a high rising 45. On the vowel o, they are
The consonants are:
All of these can occur palatalized, but only before, suggesting an alternate analysis of a sixth phonemic vowel. Labialized consonants are reported for and, but their phonemic status is unclear; they only occur after.
For the phoneme the realizations of and are in free variation; has the allophone before back vowels.
The syllable structure is V + tone or N, where C represents any consonant, V any vowel, N any nasal, and brackets an optional element. CC clusters consist of a continuant followed by a plosive, fricative, or affricate; in CCC clusters, the first consonant must be one of or , the second either or a voiceless fricative, and the third or .

Grammar

Nouns

Plurals may optionally be formed by adding the suffix ; however, these are rarely used except with definite nouns. E.g.: "her relatives"; "all the people".

Pronouns

Personal pronouns

The word goes slightly beyond being a reflexive pronoun; it can mark any third person that refers to the subject of the sentence, e.g.:
The oblique form is basic, and serves as object, possessive, and adverbial. The subject form has three variants: normal, emphatic - used when the subject is particularly prominent in the sentence, especially sentence-initially - and reduced, used as part of a verb phrase. The "locative" term means "to, at, or for one's own place or house", e.g.:

Determiners

The main determiners are "that, the" and "this". As suffixes on a verb or an ablative or locative phrase, they indicate a relative clause. E.g.:
"the woman who is in the house"

Demonstratives

The demonstratives include "here", "there ", "there ", "down there", "up there". Alone, or with the determiner suffixes or added, these function as demonstrative pronouns "this person", "that person", etc. With the noun phrase marker, they become demonstrative adjectives. E.g.:

Numbers

The numbers are:
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
100
1000

20, 30, etc. are formed by adding "ten" to the unit. In compound numbers, is added to each 'figure, thus:
When a cardinal number functions as an adjective, the suffix can be added ''. Ordinal numbers are formed by suffixing to the cardinal, e.g.: "fourth".

Adjectives

Adjectives are sometimes intensified by changing the tone to top; e.g. "big" → "very big".

Verbs

Verbs with monosyllabic roots can have three different forms of their active stems: the singular imperative, which is just the root; the past stem, usually identical to the root but sometimes formed by adding -k ; and the future stem, usually identical to the root but sometimes formed by changing the tone from mid 3 to high 4 or from bottom 1 to top 5. Some have causative and passive forms. Verbal nouns are formed from the stem, sometimes with tone change or addition or.
Verbs with polysyllabic roots have at least two forms, one with an intransitive or passive meaning and one with a transitive or causative meaning; the former ends in, the latter in. A passive may be formed by ending in. Verbal nouns are formed by taking the bare stem without or.
Compound verbs are formed with "say" or "cause to say", a formation common among Ethiopian languages.
The primary tenses are simple past, future, present perfect ; negative E.g.: → "he went"; "he will go"; "he has gone".
There are four corresponding participles: past, present perfect, imperfect, and negative
The order of affixes is: root----person/number-marker.

Orthography and literature

A Latin-based orthography was adopted in 2008. Previously, the New Testament had been published in the Bench language using an orthography based on the Ethiopian syllabary. Tones were not indicated. Retroflex consonants were indicated by such techniques as using extra symbols from the syllabary and forming new symbols.