Tyap language
Tyap is a regionally important dialect cluster of Plateau languages in Nigeria's Middle Belt, named after its prestige dialect. It is also known as Katab or Kataf. It is also known by the names of its dialectical varieties including Sholyia̠. Other dialects are Fantswam, Gworok, Takad, Tyap proper, Tyecha̠rak and Tyuku. According to Blench, Jju—with more speakers—appears to be a form of Tyap.
Distribution
Native Tyap speakers are primarily found in the local government areas of Jema'a, Kaura and Zangon Kataf, although pockets of speakers are also found in Kachia and Kauru in southern Kaduna state of Nigeria. There are also large speaking communities in Kaduna South and Chikun Local Government Areas of the state.Dialects
Achi has it that the Atyap speak a language in the Kwa group of the Benue-Congo language family.Furthermore, according to Achi et al., the Kataf Group to which Tyap language belongs, is a member of the eastern Plateau. He went further to suggest that by utilizing a glotochronological time scales established for Yoruba and Edo languages and their neighbours, the separation of the Kataf Group into distinguishable dialects and dialect clusters would require thousands of years. Also mentioned was that, 'Between Igala and Yoruba language, for example, at least 2,000 years were required to develop the distinction, while 6,000 years were needed for the differences observable in a comparison of Idoma and Yoruba language clusters', noting that this indicates that 'even within dialect clusters, a period of up to 2,000 years was needed to create clearly identifiable dialect separation and that it is thus a slow process of steady population growth and expansion and cultural differentiation over thousands of years'.
The implication for Tyap is that it has taken thousands of years to separate, in the same general geographical location from its six or so most closely related dialects. As a sub-unit they required probably more thousands of years earlier to separate from other members of the Kataf group like Gyong, Hyam, Duya and Ashe who are little intelligible to them. The stability of language and other culture traits in this region of Nigeria has been recognized.
Tyap has a number of dialects, including:
Dialect | Description |
Fantswam | Also known as Kafanchan by the Hausa, it is spoken by inhabitants of the Fantswam chiefdom in Jema'a and is closely related to the Jju, Gworok and Tyap Proper dialects. |
Gworok | Also known as Kagoro by the Hausa and Gwoot in Tyap Proper, it is spoken by inhabitants of the A̠gworok chiefdom in Kaura and is a junction dialect between Jju and Takat. The dialect was influenced by neighbouring dialects of the nearest language cluster, most notably Nikyob-Nindem and others. |
Jju | Also known as Kaje by the Hausa and Jhyia̠ in Tyap Proper and often listed as a separate language, it is spoken by inhabitants of the Ba̠jju chiefdom in Zangon Kataf and the Jema'a, Kachia and Kaura LGAs. Jju has the greatest number of speakers of any Tyap dialect, and was influenced by Izere and Rigwe. Jju was also influenced by the dialects of its present Hyam-speaking neighbours and former neighbours, especially Izere. These contacts seem to be the leading factor in its drift from Tyap in comparison to other dialects. |
Sholyia̠ | Also written Sholio and called Moro'a by the Hausa, it is spoken by inhabitants of the A̠sholyia̠ chiefdom in the Kaura LGA. In an early Tyap publication during the early 1990s, a Tyap Proper dialect related to Sholyia̠, the A̠shong A̠shwui sub-dialect was used. Tyap Proper and Sholyia̠ have separate language committees; the former completed its New Testament translation in 2015, and the latter translation is still in progress. Sholyia̠ is influenced by the Beromic dialect of Iten, Rigwe and Gworok; its speakers share common borders on the east and south, respectively. |
Takat | Also known as Attakar by the Hausa is spoken by inhabitants of the A̠takat chiefdom in Kaura LGA of Kaduna state and Riyom LGA of Plateau state. Takat is closely related to the Gworok, Tyuku and Jju dialects. Although its speakers see themselves as brothers of the Ba̠jju, Takat seems more related to the aforementioned dialects than to Jju. |
Tyap Proper | The dialect is spoken by inhabitants of the A̠tyap chiefdom in Zangon Kataf and in Kaura, Jema'a and Kauru. Tyap Proper seems to be the mother dialect from which the other dialects evolved, and was influenced by contacts which caused it to drift from its parent, proto-Plateau language root. British colonial anthropologist, C. K. Meek classified most of the proto-Plateau ethno-linguistic groups as part of the "Kataf Culture Complex", speaking closely related dialects of a possible single language, during the 1920s. |
Tyecha̠rak | Also known as Kachechere by the Hausa, it is spoken by the A̠tyecha̠rak people in the A̠tyap, A̠sholyia̠ and A̠gworok chiefdoms in Zangon Kataf and Kaura LGAs and as far south as the Jema'a LGA. |
Tyuku | The Tyuku dialect is spoken by the A̠tyuku people in Jema'a Local Government Area, who live a few kilometers from the A̠takat around the Ni̱mbyia̱ forest reserve of southern Kaduna state. The dialect is most closely related to Takat and has the most language drift of any Tyap dialect, second to Jju. |
Other dialects | Other dialects related to Tyap include Kulu, Nghan and Terri. |
Phonology
The Tyap alphabet had 39 letters, as drafted by the Tyap Literacy Committee during the early 1990s:a | a̱ | b | ch | chy | d | e | f | g | gb | gh | ghw | ghy |
h | i | i̱ | j | jhy | k | kh | kp | l | m | n | ng | ny |
o | p | r | s | sh | shy | t | ts | u | v | w | y | z |
However, a present development as at 2018, has the basic Tyap Basic Alphabetical Chart reduced to 24, as follows:
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p r s t u v w y z
The letter "ch" would henceforth be represented by the symbol "c", without the "h". All others remain the same.
Vowels
Tyap has seven vowels and five diphthongs:.Consonants
The language has over 80 digraphic labialized and palatalized consonant sounds, classified into fortis and lenis modifications. The following table contains the main basic consonant sounds of Tyap:Bilabial | Labiodental | Alveolar | Post-alveolar | Palatal | Velar plain | Labio-velar | Glottal | |
Nasal | ||||||||
Plosive | ||||||||
Affricates | ||||||||
Fricatives | ||||||||
Lateral | ||||||||
Approximants | ||||||||
Rhotic |
Pronunciation and Vocabulary
- a |a| as in
- a̠ |ə| as in
- b |b| as in
- c |t͡ʃ| as in
- cy |t͡ʃ͡j| as in
- d |d| as in
- e |e; ɛ| as in
- f |f| as in
- g |g| as in
- gb |g͡b| as in
- gh |ɣ| as in
- ghw |ɣ͡w| as in
- ghy |ɣ͡j| as in
- h |h| as in
- i |i| as in
- i̠ |ɪ| as in
- j |d͡ʒ| as in
- jhy |ʒ͡j| as in
- k |k| as in
- kh |x| as in
- kp |k͡p| as in
- l |l| as in ; ryi in Jju ]
- m |m| as in
- n |n| as in
- ng |ŋ| as in
- ny |ɲ| as in
- o |ɔ; o| as in
- p |p| as in
- r |r| as in
- s |s| as in
- sh |ʃ| as in
- shy |ʃ͡j| as in
- t |t| as in
- ts |t͡s| as in
- u |u| as in
- v |v| as in
- w |w| as in
- y |j| as in ye in Sholyia̠, Tyeca̠rak; yi in Takat, Tyuku]
- z'' |d͡z| as in
Sentences
Dialect comparison
Numbers ()
- 0: gum/sa̠khat
- 1: a̠nyiung
- 2: a̠feang
- 3: a̠tat
- 4: a̠naai
- 5: a̠fwuon
- 6: a̠taa
- 7: a̠natat
- 8: a̠ni̠nai
- 9: a̠kubunyiung
10 to 100
- 10: Swak
- 11: Swak ma̠ng a̠nyiung
- 12: Swak ma̠ng a̠feang
- 13: Swak ma̠ng a̠tat
- 14: Swak ma̠ng a̠naai
- 15: Swak ma̠ng a̠fwuon
- 16: Swak ma̠ng a̠taa
- 17: Swak ma̠ng a̠natat
- 18: Swak ma̠ng a̠ni̠nai
- 19: Swak ma̠ng a̠kubunyiung
- 20: Nswak nfeang
- 30: Nswak ntat
- 40: Nswak nnaai
- 50: Nswak nfwuon
- 60: Nswak a̠taa
- 70: Nswak a̠natat
- 80: Nswak a̠ni̠nai
- 90: Nswak a̠kubunyiung
- 91: Nswak a̠kubunyiung ma̠ng a̠nyiung
- 92: Nswak a̠kubunyiung ma̠ng a̠feang
- 93: Nswak a̠kubunyiung ma̠ng a̠tat
- 94: Nswak a̠kubunyiung ma̠ng a̠naai
- 95: Nswak a̠kubunyiung ma̠ng a̠fwuon
- 96: Nswak a̠kubunyiung ma̠ng a̠taa
- 97: Nswak a̠kubunyiung ma̠ng a̱natat
- 98: Nswak a̠kubunyiung ma̠ng a̠ni̠nai
- 99: Nswak a̠kubunyiung ma̠ng a̠kubunyiung
Hundreds
- 100: Cyi jhyiung
- 200: Cyi sweang
- 300: Cyi tsat
- 400: Cyi nyaai
- 500: Cyi tswuon
- 600: Cyi a̠taa
- 700: Cyi a̠natat
- 800: Cyi a̠ni̠nai
- 900: Cyi a̠kubunyiung
- 479: Cyi nyaai ma̠ng nswak a̠natat ma̠ng a̱kubunyiung
Thousands
Below are the modern Tyap Counting style in thousands:
- 1,000: Cyi kwop jhyiung
- 2,000: Cyi kwop sweang
- 3,000: Cyi kwop tsat
- 4,000: Cyi kwop nyaai
- 5,000: Cyi kwop tswuon
- 6,000: Cyi kwop a̠taa
- 7,000: Cyi kwop a̠natat
- 8,000: Cyi kwop a̠ni̠nai
- 9,000: Cyi kwop a̠kubunyiung
- 2,018: Cyi kwop sweang ma̠ng nswak ma̠ng a̠ni̠nai
- 10,000: Cyi kwop swak
- 100,000: Cyi kwop cyi jhyiung
Larger numbers
- 1,000,000: Milyon or cyi kwop cyi kwop jhyiung or simply Cyi kwop a̠ka̠feang jhyiung
- 1,000,000,000: Bilyon or Cyi kwop cyi kwop cyi kwop or simply Cyi kwop a̠ka̠tat jhyiung
- 1,000,000,000,000: Trilyon or cyi kwop cyi kwop cyi kwop cyi kwop or simply Cyi kwop a̠ka̠naai jhyiung.
Tyap Names for other languages
Language | Classification | Tyap name |
English | West, Germanic, Indo-European | Shong |
Fulfulde | Central, Eastern Fula, Fulani-Wolof, Sene-Gambian, Northern, West Atlantic | Fa̠taa |
Hausa | A.1, A, West Chadic | Kpat |
Hyam | Hyamic, Northwestern, Western Plateau, Platoid, East Benue-Conɡo | Da |
Igbo | Igbo, Igboid, West Benue-Conɡo | Kuma̠cyi |
Iten | Beromic Plateau, Platoid, East Benue-Conɡo | Tyen |
Kulu | Northern Plateau, Platoid, East Benue-Conɡo | Sunkurum |
Nɡhan | Ninzic Plateau, Platoid, East Benue-Conɡo | Byoot; Byurok |
Nikyob | A, Southwestern, Western Plateau, Platoid, East Benue-Conɡo | Ku |
Riɡwe | Southcentral, Central Plateau, Platoid, East Benue-Conɡo | Kuut; Kuruk |
Tiv | Tivoid, Southern Bantoid, East Benue-Conɡo | Zi̠ya; Zi̠tya |
T'kurmi | Kauru, Northern Jos, Eastern Kainji, Platoid, East Benue-Conɡo | Wai |
Tsam | Piti-Atsam, Eastern Kainji, Platoid, East Benue-Conɡo | Tsamyio |
Yoruba | Yoruboid, Defoid, West Benue-Conɡo | Ghwangkpang |
Endangered language
Research has shown that the Tyap language is classified as one of the endangered languages vulnerable towards extinction.A study by Ayuba showed that Tyap is endangered and that Hausa language and the non-transmission of Tyap by the older generation of Atyap to the younger generation largely accounted for the endangerment of Tyap. The study recommended, among other measures, that the Atyap Community Development Association should set up a committee to create awareness on the need for Atyap to rise up and save their language and another to work towards establishing vacation schools where older adults would provide pre-school child care where Tyap children could be immersed in the language.