{{Short description|Omotic languages spoken in Ethiopia and Sudan}}{{distinguish|text=[[Mao language (India)]], [[Southern Mao language]], or the [[List of ISO 639 language codes|ISO 639-2/B]] code for [[Māori language|Māori]]}} {{Infobox language family | name = Mao | altname = Blue Nile Mao | region = [[Ethiopia]], [[Sudan]]<ref name="Omotic">{{Cite web|url=https://www.ethnologue.com/subgroup/1085/| title= Omotic languages| publisher=Ethnologue|access-date=6 March 2024}}</ref> | familycolor = Afro-Asiatic | fam2 = [[Omotic languages|Omotic]] | fam3 = [[North Omotic languages|North]]? | glotto = maoo1243 | glottorefname = Blue Nile Mao }}
The '''Mao languages''' are a branch of the [[Omotic languages]] spoken in [[Ethiopia]] and parts of [[Sudan]]. The group had the following categories: *[[Bambassi language|Bambasi]], spoken in the [[Bambasi]] [[woreda]] of [[Benishangul-Gumuz Region]], *[[Hozo language|Hozo]] and [[Seze language|Seze]] (often described together as 'Begi Mao'), spoken around [[Beica|Begi]] in the [[Mirab Welega Zone|Mirab (West) Welega Zone]] of the [[Oromia Region]]. *[[Ganza language|Ganza]], which is spoken south of [[Bambasi]] in the [[Asosa Zone]] of Benishangul-Gumuz Region, west of the Hozo and Seze languages and in [[Blue Nile State]] in [[Sudan]].<ref name="Omotic">{{Cite web|url=https://www.ethnologue.com/subgroup/1085/| title= Omotic languages| publisher=Ethnologue|access-date=6 March 2024}}</ref>
It is estimated that there are 5,000 speakers of Bambasi, 3,000 speakers each of Hozo and Seze and a few hundred Ganza speakers (Bender, 2000). During recent political upheavals, a few thousand Bambassi speakers established themselves in the valley of the [[Didessa River]] and [[Belo Jegonfoy]] [[woreda]]. Much of the Mirab Welega Zone was once the home of Mao languages, but they have lost speakers because of the increasing influence of [[Oromo language|Oromo]].
==Contact== Mao languages are in close and long-standing contact with [[Koman languages]], and linguistic affiliation does not always coincide with ethnic identity. Some Koman-speaking groups in western Ethiopia, like the [[Kwama people|Kwama]], are known as Mao<ref>{{cite journal |last=Küspert |first=Klaus-Christian |date=2015 |title=The Mao and Komo Languages in the Begi–Tongo area in Western Ethiopia: Classification, Designations, Distribution |url=https://journals.dartmouth.edu/cgi-bin/WebObjects/Journals.woa/1/xmlpage/1/article/447 |journal=Linguistic Discovery |volume=13 |issue=1 |doi=10.1349/PS1.1537-0852.A.447 |doi-access=free}}</ref>, or vice versa, as in the case of the Ganza (also known as Koma).
Intensified contact between Mao, Koman, and [[Gonga languages|Kefoid languages]] dates to the formation of the Gonga kingdom of [[Anfillo (woreda)|Anfillo]] in the late sixteenth century, following the westward migration of Kefoid-speaking elites during the [[Oromo expansion|Oromo expansions]] into the [[Gibe River|Gibe]] basin around 1560–1570<ref>{{Cite book |last=Hassen |first=Mohammed |title=The Oromo of Ethiopia: A History 1570–1860 |publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] |year=1994 |location=Cambridge |pages=33-36}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Gidada |first=Negasso |title=History of the Sayyoo Oromoo of Southwestern Wallaga, Ethiopia |publisher=Mega Printing Enterprise |year=2001 |location=Addis Ababa |pages=80; 86–88; 180–181; 237–240}}</ref>. The establishment of Anfillo brought Mao populations into sustained and asymmetric contact with Kefoid languages as well as with neighboring Koman languages, whose speakers inhabited the surrounding lowlands.
Within the Gonga political system, Mao speakers formed a subordinate social category, which promoted widespread [[bilingualism]] and language shift toward [[dominant languages]]. Mao communities were integrated as [[Serfdom|serfs]] or dependent clients of Gonga [[Elite|elites]], creating daily interaction in labor, ritual, and military contexts, conditions known to facilitate [[lexical borrowing]] and structural influence. In parallel, other Mao groups remained mobile at the margins of Gonga territories, maintaining master-client relations with [[Agrarian society|agricultural populations]] through the exchange of forest products, a setting that likewise favored multilingual repertoires<ref>{{Cite book |last=González-Ruibal |first=Alfredo |title=An Archaeology of Resistance: Materiality and Time in an African Borderland |publisher=[[Rowman & Littlefield]] |year=2014 |location=Lanham, MD |pages=306–320}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Megenassa |first=Worku Derara |title=Forest-Based Livelihoods and Socioeconomic Relations in Southwestern Ethiopia |publisher=Addis Ababa University |year=2019}}</ref>.
The designation ''Mao'' historically functioned as a sociopolitical label applied to diverse subordinate populations (also known as Nao, Mawo, Manno, or Manjo) rather than a single linguistic entity<ref>{{Cite book |last=Huntingford |first=G. W. B. |title=The Galla of Ethiopia: The Kingdoms of Kafa and Janjero |publisher=International African Institute / Oxford University Press |year=1955 |location=London |publication-date=1955 |pages=136 |doi=10.4324/9781315308111}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Lange |first=Dierk |title=Ancient Kingdoms of West Africa: Africa-Centred and Canaanite-Israelite Perspectives |publisher=J. H. Röll |year=1982 |location=Dettelbach |pages=242, 260}}</ref>. This has contributed to the present-day linguistic diversity and fragmentation of Mao languages, as well as to their heavy contact-induced restructuring through prolonged interaction with Koman, Kefoid, and later [[Oromo language|Oromo]] languages.
==Numerals== Comparison of numerals in individual languages:<ref name="ChanNumeralsAA">{{Cite web|url=https://lingweb.eva.mpg.de/channumerals/Afro-Asiatic.htm|title=The Afro-Asiatic Language Phylum|last=Chan|first=Eugene|publisher=Numeral Systems of the World's Languages|date=2019}}</ref>
{| class="wikitable sortable" ! Language !! 1 !! 2 !! 3 !! 4 !! 5 !! 6 !! 7 !! 8 !! 9 !! 10 |- | [[ISO 639:gza|Ganza (Gwàmì Nánà)]] (1) || ʔìʃì kwéʔèn || mámꜜbú || tʼíꜜzí || máꜜs’í || k’wísʼí || ʔìʃkìbínꜜ || mámpʰìn || wòbóꜜ || ʃèléꜜ || kónsó-báꜜ (litː 'hand-pair') |- | [[ISO 639:gza|Ganza (Gwàmì Nánà)]] (2) || ʔìʃì kwéʔèn || mámꜜbú || tʼíꜜzí || máꜜs’í || k’wísʼí || ʔìʃkìbínꜜ || mámpʰìn || wòbóꜜ || ʃèléꜜ || kónsó-báꜜ (litː ''hand-pair'') |- | [[ISO 639:gza|Ganza]] (3) || ʔíʃkúwéén || mámbùʔ || tíízìʔ || más’s’ìʔ || k’wíssíʔ || ʔíʃkípín || mámpín || wóp’ò || ʃéléʔ || kónsóbààʔ |- | [[ISO 639:hoz|Hozo]] (1) || ʔónnà || dòmbó || sìjázì || bétsʼì || kwítsʼì (lit: 'hand') || kwítsʼì ʔòttá ʔónnà (5 + 1) || kwítsʼì ʔòttá dòmbó (5 + 2) || kwítsʼì ʔòttá sìjázì (5 + 3) || kwítsʼì ʔòttá bétsʼì (5 + 4) || pʼóʃì |- | [[ISO 639:hoz|Hozo]] (2) || ʊnːa / onna || dʊmbo / dombo || sìɑːsi /siyazi || bɛtsíː / betsʼi || kʷɪtsí / kʼwitsi (lit: 'hand', kutsi) || kɛniː / ota-onna (5 + 1) || ʔɔːta / ota-dombo (5 + 2) || ʔɔ̀ːtá / ota-siyazi (5 + 3) || ʔɔ̀ːtì / ota-beːtsi (5 + 4) || pʼɔ́ːʃi / poːši |- | [[ISO 639:myf|Northern Mao]] || hishkì || numbo || teezè || mesʼe || kʼwíssí || kyaansè || kúlùmbò (litː ''hand-two'' ?) || kúteezé (litː ''hand-three''?) || kúsmésʼe (litː ''hand-four'' ?) || kúúsú |- | [[ISO 639:sze|Sezi (Seze / Sezo)]] (1) || ʔìʃílè || nòmbé || sììzé || besʼsʼé || kʼwíssé (lit: 'hand', kusɛ) || kʼwíssé ʔòòt ʔìʃílè (litː 5 remaining 1) || kʼwíssé ʔòòt nòmbé (litː 5 remain. 2) || kʼwíssé ʔòòt sììzé (litː 5 remaining 3) || kʼwíssé ʔòòt besʼsʼé (litː 5 remain. 4) || kúúsé |- | [[ISO 639:sze|Seze (Sezo)]] (2) || ɪ̀ʃìlɛ / ɪšilɛ || nɔ̀mbɛ́ / noːmbɛ || sìːzí /siːzɛ || bɛ̀sʼɛ́ / bɛtsʼɛ || kʼúsɛ́ / kʼʊsse (lit: 'hand', kusɛ) || dʒɑ;j / ot-šilɛ || ʔɔːt nɔ̀mbɛ́ / ot-nombɛ || ʔɔ̀ːt síːzí / ota-siːzɛ || ʔɔ̀ːt bèːtsʼé / ota-bɛːsʼɛ || ̞kʊ́ːsɛ̀ / kʊːsɛ |}
==See also== *[[Wiktionary:Appendix:Mao word lists|Mao word lists]] (Wiktionary)
==Further reading== *{{cite journal|url=https://journals.dartmouth.edu/cgi-bin/WebObjects/Journals.woa/1/xmlpage/1/article/447|doi=10.1349/PS1.1537-0852.A.447|title=The Mao and Komo Languages in the Begi–Tongo area in Western Ethiopia: Classification, Designations, Distribution|first=Klaus-Christian|last=Küspert|journal=Linguistic Discovery|volume=13|issue=1|date=2015|doi-access=free}}
==References== {{reflist}}
{{Omotic languages}}
[[Category:Languages of Ethiopia]] [[Category:Language families]] [[Category:Mao languages| ]] [[Category:Omotic languages]]