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1
The etymology of mbunzú for ‘White-man’ in Sango: Central African history
Abstract: The word mbunzú (occurring in literature also as mbunju) for a white person in Sango might have an origin in Ngbandi, the indigenous language that provided most of its linguistic material, or a Bobangi one. A Ngbandi origin would appear to be the better one because it is indigenous and is found in a trustworthy dictionary. It occurs as mbunzú in Lekens 1958 with one meaning: ‘white,’ as a noun. The gloss is followed by a note, according to which the word referred to (“werd gegeven aan”) the chief (“hoofdman”) elephant, whose hide was red (“rood”). When blacks for the first time saw white persons, they compared them with the elephant (“in verwantschap met”). This seems to be a folk etymology. We note that the word is not entered as one meaning something like ‘red elephant’ or ‘the leader of a herd of elephants.’ And while the hides of elephants must always vary in color, we cannot attest to the leaders (always female, it is said) being red-skinned. In his dictionary of 1952 the word is considered a noun referring only to whites and there are four adjectives for ‘white’ as well as an ideophone. Like other words in the language, this one must have been copied from Sango. A strong argument for its origin in Sango is that (a) the first Ngbandis to have encountered whites were the riverine ones in 1887, not the ones among whom Fr Lekens was working and (b) the first language used by Catholic missionaries among them was Sango. The hypothesis proposed here is that mbunzu the Sango word for a white (man or woman) is related to the Bondjo, an ethnic group alleged to have inhabited the region somewhere around Bangui and further south in the 1890s.
Keyword: Africa; Central African Republic; Language and colonization; Sango language
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1807/76688
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2
A different view of Sango
Samarin, William J.. - : Societe des Africanistes, 2008
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3
Convergence and the retention of marked consonants in Sango
Samarin, William J.. - : Brill, 2008
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4
Review of Sociolinguistique urbaine: la vie des langues à Ziguinchor (Sénégal), by Caroline Juillard
Samarin, William J.. - : De Gruyter, 1998
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5
Review of Language attitudes in Sub-Saharan Africa: A sociolinguistic overview, by Efurosibina Adegbija
Samarin, William J.. - : University of Nebraska Press, 1996
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6
The colonial heritage of the Central African Republic: a linguistic perspective
Samarin, William J.. - : Boston University African Studies Center, 1989
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7
Language in the colonization of Central Africa, 1880-1900
Samarin, William J.. - : Taylor and Francis, 1989
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8
French and Sango in the Central African Republic
Samarin, William J.. - : University of Nebraska Press, 1986
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9
The linguistic world of field colonialism
Samarin, William J.. - : Cambridge University Press, 1984
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10
Colonization and Pidginization on the Ubangi River
Samarin, William J.. - : De Gruyter, 1982
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11
Linguistic Adaptation to Speech Function
Samarin, William J.. - : De Gruyter, 1978
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12
Survey of Bantu ideophones
Samarin, William J.. - : University of London * School of Oriental and African Studies, 1971
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13
Priorities for research in sociolinguistics in Africa
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14
Review of A phonetic study of West African languages, by Peter Ladefoged
Samarin, William J.. - : Linguistic Society of America, 1964
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15
Review of Tone Languages, by Kenneth L. Pike
Samarin, William J.. - : Cambridge University Press, 1951
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