Daju languages

The Daju languages are spoken in isolated pockets across a wide area of Sudan and Chad, in parts of the regions of Kordofan, Darfur, and Wadai. They belong to the Eastern Sudanic subfamily of Nilo-Saharan.

They are subclassified as follows, following Stevenson 1956:

Proto-Daju has been partially reconstructed by Robin Thelwall (1981). In his judgement, the Eastern Daju languages separated from the others perhaps as much as 2000 years ago, while the Western Daju languages were spread more recently, perhaps by the Daju state which dominated Darfur from about 1200 AD until displaced by the Tunjur. The principal phonetic difference between the two branches is the reflex of proto-Daju *ɣ, reflected as Western *r and Eastern *x.

The typical verb root in Daju is a monosyllable of the form (C)VC(C). The perfective takes a prefixed k-; the imperfective, a prefixed a(n)-. The verb takes person suffixes. Suffixes on nouns serve to mark singulative (-tic, -təs), generic, and plural forms.

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See also: Daju languages, 1200, Chad, Darfur, Eastern Sudanic languages, Generic, Kordofan, Nilo-Saharan languages, Nuba Hills