Reconstruction:Proto-Bantu/ngàdí
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Proto-Bantu
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Evidently a Bantu innovation, as no cognates outside of Narrow Bantu are known.
Noun
[edit]*ngàdí class 9 (plural *ngàdí class 10)[1]
Usage notes
[edit]The sense "blood" (likely in class 6) may be an innovation in Proto-Eastern Bantu; the proposed semantic motivation is the reddish colour of palm oil, which would be an ideal target for taboo replacement of an earlier word for "blood".
See also
[edit]Descendants
[edit]- Dengese (C81): bongaji (“palm pit”)
- Kerewe (J24): igazi (“oil palm”)
- Kimbundu (H21): ngaji (“palm nut”)
- Kwanyama (R21): omaadi (“oil, fat, grease”)
- Luba-Kasai (L31): dikadi (“raphia palm”)
- Lungu Mambwe-Lungu (M14/15): chazi (“oil palm”)
- Mbukushu (K333): maghadhi (“oil”)
- Ndumu (B63): mari (“oil, fat, grease”)
- Ntandu Kongo (H16): maási (“palm oil”)
- Rwanda-Rundi (J61/62): umugázi (“oil palm”) (Giha), ingazí (“Senegal date palm”) (Kinyarwanda)
- Simba (B302): gékadi (“black-fruited oil palm”)
- Songe (L23): kyají (“clump of palm nuts”)
- Tetela (C71): dikadí (“raphia palm”)
- Tongwe (F11): sigasi (“oil palm”)
- Yansi (B85): meay (“oil, fat”)
From an Eastern Bantu sense "blood":
- Chichewa (N31): mwazi (“blood”)
- Lungu Mambwe-Lungu (M14/15): uwazi (“blood”)
- Makonde (P23): myadi (“blood”)
- Southern Bantu:
- Sotho-Tswana:
- Nguni:
- Tswa-Ronga:
Possibly related, although the sound change to the initial consonant of the stem would be highly irregular:
- Nyakyusa (M31): unnasi (“coconut palm”)
- Luhya (J32): munazi (“oil palm”)
- Saamia (J34): omunazi (“oil palm”)
- Sabaki:
- Maore Comorian (G44D): nadzi (“coconut”), munadzi (“coconut palm”)
- Ngazidja Comorian (G44a): nazi (“coconut”), mnazi (“coconut palm”)
- Swahili (G42): nazi (“coconut”), mnazi (“coconut palm”)
- Sangu (Tanzania) (G61): mnasi (“oil palm”)
- Tooro (J12): omunazi (“date palm”)
- Luganda (J15): munazi (“oil palm”)
- Yao (P21): naasi (“coconut”)
References
[edit]- Bostoen, Koen (2005), "A diachronic onomasiological approach to early Bantu oil palm vocabulary." Studies in African Linguistics 34 (2): 143–188.