Khoe–Kwadi languages


The Khoe–Kwadi languages are a family consisting of the Khoe languages of southern Africa and the poorly attested extinct Kwadi language of Angola. The relationship has been worked out by Tom Gueldemann, Edward Elderkin and Anne-Maria Fehn.

Classification

Pronouns and some basic vocabulary have been reconstructed as being common to Khoe and Kwadi. Because Kwadi is poorly attested, it is difficult to tell which common words are cognate and which might be loans, but about 50 lexical correspondences and a common verb construction have been identified. Westphal's fieldnotes on Kwadi were still being analyzed as of 2018, with the hope that additional grammatical parallels could be identified.
Gueldemann reports the following reconstructed pronominal system, of a minimal/augmented type:
PersonMinimal
Augmented
1incl*mu?
1sg*ti~ta
?
2*sa*o or *u
3masc*base--E*base--u
3fem*base-E*base--E

where is an undetermined front vowel and the pronoun base was a deictic like *xa or a generic noun like *kho 'person'. The 3rd-person suffixes were also used on nouns, which in addition had a dual suffix *-da.
Both Kwadi and the Khoe languages have verb constructions where the first, dependent verb is marked by a suffix *-Ra and the following, finite verb is unmarked.
The nearest relative of Khoe–Kwadi may be the Sandawe isolate; the Sandawe pronoun system is very similar to that of Kwadi–Khoe, but there are not enough known correlations for regular sound correspondences to be worked out. However, the relationship has some predictive value, for example if the back-vowel constraint, which operates in the Khoe languages but not in Sandawe, is taken into account.