Hehe language
Hehe, also known by its native name Kihehe, is a Bantu language that is spoken by the Hehe people of the Iringa region of Tanzania, lying south of the Great Ruaha River. In the 1970s, it was estimated that 190,000 people spoke Hehe. A more recent estimate puts the number at 1,200,000. There has been some Bible translation. Hehe may be mutually intelligible with Bena.
There are four main dialects: Kalenga, Koisamba, Sungwa, and Mufindi. Among other differences, Sungwa has sounds /t͡s/ and /d͡z/ which are absent from other dialects.
Grammar
Hehe has 15 noun classes, marked with prefixes.Hehe has a complex tense-aspect-mood system.
Phonology
Consonants
Stops and affricates
- In the "stop/affricate" group, // and // are described by Nyamahanga as affricates, the others being stops. // is described as palato-alveolar, and // as palatal.
Prenasalised consonants
- The five prenasalised consonants are voiced but not implosive. If they are preceded by a vowel, the vowel is usually long.
- When an implosive consonant is preceded by a nasal prefix such as N-, the prefix assimilates with the following consonant and changes it to the appropriate prenasalised consonant; e.g. ku-ɗeta when preceded by N- changes to ⁿdeta ; ku-ɠeːⁿda changes to ᵑgeːⁿda.
- The combination of N- + a voiceless stop, however, does not result in a prenasalised consonant but a simple nasal, e.g. ku-pepa becomes mepa.
- The voiced labial-velar approximant /w/ changes to /ᵐbʷ/ when nasalised, e.g. ku-weːⁿda > ᵐbʷeːⁿda.
- The phoneme // is described by Nyamahanga as a labio-dental approximant. When nasalised it becomes, e.g. ku-ʋalila > ᵐbalila. It cannot be followed by the vowel /o/ but changes to /w/ in this situation.
- The labio-dental fricative // when preceded by nasal N either changes to // or remains as //; in either case the nasal is dropped, e.g. ku-fika > ʋika or fika.
- The lateral approximant /l/ changes to /ⁿd/ when prenasalised, e.g. ku-lima > ⁿdima.
Consonants with glide
- Most consonants can be labialised, that is, followed by a glide . Nyamahanga treats these labialised consonants as separate phonemes to the unlabialised consonants. Labialised consonants tend to be followed by a long vowel, except in the final syllable of a word, e.g. muhʷeːhʷe.
- Most consonants can be followed by the glide vowel in the same way. In situations where /ki/ and /ɠi/ might be expected to form a glide vowel, they are transformed into the phonemes /t͡ʃ/ and /ʄ/: e.g. ki- + uɠípa becomes ʧ-uːɠípa, with compensatory lengthening of the vowel.
Other consonants
- occurs in the language, but is mainly heard in Swahili loanwords.
Vowels
In addition to these ten vowels, Kihehe also has a syllabic //. This can occur initially, medially, or finally, and can bear a tone, e.g. ḿtalám̩ . Unlike the nasal in the nasalised consonants, this syllabic /m̩/ does not assimilate to the following consonant or cause a following implosive consonant to become plosive.Syllable structure
Apart from /m̩/, and the fact that words may begin with a vowel, every syllable in Kihehe consists of the form CV, where C = consonant, V = vowel, and G = glide. Two different vowels normally cannot follow each other. When a prefix such as tu- is added to a verb starting with a vowel, the vowels are combined into one syllable; e.g. tu + íᵐba becomes tʷíːᵐba, with lengthening of the /i/ to compensate for the shortening of the /u/. An exception is the prefix ĕː, which is added to 3rd person singular verbs without assimilation of the vowels, e.g. ĕː-alyá.Tones
Like most Bantu languages, Kihehe is a tone language. Tones can have both a lexical function and a grammatical function.There are two levels of tones, high and low. A non-final syllable with a short vowel can be either H or L. If a syllable with a long vowel has a tone, it will have either a rising tone or a falling one. If a final syllable has a tone, it is always a falling tone.
As in other Bantu languages, the H and L tones are asymmetrical. When two H tones come together, the second H tone is lost and becomes L. A noun with three syllables usually has only one H tone, but nouns with more than three syllables can have more than one H tone.