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Southern Sakalava dialect

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Southern Sakalava
Native to
EthnicitySakalava
Language codes
ISO 639-3
Glottologsaka1291
Linguasphere31-LDA-da

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Southern Sakalava is a dialect of Malagasy[1] spoken by the Sakalava from the region of Melaky to Atsimo Andrefana.[2]

Classification

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Southern Sakalava belongs to the Austronesian language family and part of the Southern Malagasic subgroup alongside Bara,Tanosy,Masikoro,Tandroy,Mahafaly and Karimbola.[3][4][5]

Characteristics

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The Southern Sakalava dialect displays several phonological and lexical characteristics that distinguish it from the Merina-based Standard Malagasy. These features are also shared with other southern Malagasy dialects such as Tandroy, Tanosy, Vezo, Mahafaly, and Bara.

One notable feature is the dropping of the final -na in trisyllabic words. For example, tana is used instead of tànana (hand), tanà for tanàna (village), sofy for sofina (ear), and antety for antanety (field), the latter also common in Southern Sakalava.

There is also a tendency to substitute l for d, as in valy for vady (spouse), lily for didy (law, order), and malio for madio (clean). This phonological change is a hallmark of Southern Sakalava and other southern dialects. However, in the Northern Sakalava dialect, the consonant d is retained, and this shift to l does not occur, despite both varieties being spoken by groups identified as Sakalava.

The s following a t is often omitted, producing forms like raty instead of ratsy (bad).

The consonant v may be replaced by b, for example, abo for avo (high).

The consonant z is frequently dropped. Aiza (where) becomes aia. The pronoun izy (he/she) becomes ihy, a form typical of southern dialects such as Mahafaly, Vezo, and Bara.

Words ending in -tra often become -tsy, such as hafatra becoming hafatsy (message), and mandefitra becoming mandefitsy (to tolerate), a pattern consistent with southern Malagasy varieties.

The form anakahy is used for "mine", a feature found in both northern and southern Malagasy dialects.

The Southern Sakalava spoken in Besalampy is transitional between Northern Sakalava and the more southern varieties of Menabe and Atsimo Andrefana. It shares some northern features like the use of ndreky for "and", but is mostly aligned with southern vocabulary.

Comparative Vocabulary of Northern and Southern Sakalava
# Gloss Northern Sakalava Southern Sakalava
1 One Araiky Raiky
2 I / Me I Izaho
3 All Jiaby Iaby
4 You Anao / Anô Iha
5 Only / Also / Just Fôna Avao
6 If Raha Laha
7 And Ndreky No
8 Face Sôra Tarehy
9 She/He Izy Ihy
10 Message Hafatra Hafatsy
11 To tolerate Mandefitra Mandefitsy
12 Bird Vorogno Voro
13 Woman Manangy Ampela
14 When Rehefa Lafa

Geographic distribution

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Southern Sakalava is primarily spoken in the regions of Melaky (also known as Ambongo), Menabe, and northern Atsimo Andrefana. It is the primary dialect of the cities of Morondava, Maintirano, and Besalampy, as well as in the area surrounding the Tsingy de Bemaraha and the Avenue of the Baobabs. [6][7]

Vocabulary

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Southern Sakalava Vocabulary with Standard Malagasy comparison
# Gloss Standard Malagasy Southern Sakalava
Conjunctions & Connectors
1 And Sy No
Qualities & Descriptions
2 Beautiful Tsara Soa
Articles
3 The Ny Ty
Prepositions
4 From Avy Baka
Actions & Verbs
5 To watch Mijery Manenty
Natural World
6 Sky Lanitra Lanitry
Time
7 Year Taona Tao
People
8 Woman Vehivavy Ampela
9 Dear Ry Lehy
Adverbs
10 Only / Also Ihany / Foana Avao
11 Here Eto Etoy / Eto

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "[Article title not specified]". The Antananarivo Annual and Madagascar Magazine. 3 (9–12): 90. 1885.
  2. ^ Ferrand, Gabriel (1903). Essai de phonétique comparée du malais et des dialectes malgaches : thèse pour le doctorat d'université (in French). Paris: Ernest Leroux, Libraire-Éditeur. p. XL.
  3. ^ Turcotte, Denis (1981). La politique linguistique en Afrique francophone: une étude comparative de la Côte d’Ivoire et de Madagascar (in French). Presses de l’Université Laval. p. 57.
  4. ^ Sambo, Clément; Gueunier, Noël Jacques (2001). Langages non conventionnels à Madagascar : argot des jeunes et proverbes gaillards (in French). Karthala. p. 304.
  5. ^ Bright, William (1992). International Encyclopedia of Linguistics. Oxford University Press. p. 205. ISBN 9780195051964.
  6. ^ "Translations - Islands Mission". Retrieved 2025-05-13.
  7. ^ Molet, Louis (1957). Petit guide de toponymie malgache (PDF) (in French). Tananarive: Scientific Research Institute of Madagascar, Department of Human Sciences. pp. map (unnumbered) + p. 7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link) The map is placed before the numbered pages.