Azeb Amha
Azeb Amha (1967) is a linguist working on the morphology and syntax of Afroasiatic languages, with a special focus on Omotic languages. A senior researcher at the African Studies Center Leiden, Azeb is co-editor of the international Journal of African Languages and Linguistics (with Felix Ameka) and member of the board of the Dutch Society for African Studies (NVAS).
Azeb Amha | |
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Born | 1967 |
Occupation | Linguist |
Academic background | |
Alma mater | Addis Ababa University, Leiden University |
Academic work | |
Institutions | Leiden University |
Main interests | morphology and syntax of Afroasiatic languages |
After undergraduate studies at Addis Ababa University in Ethiopia, Azeb obtained her PhD degree from Leiden University. Her thesis, a comprehensive grammar of the Maale language of South-West Ethiopia, was hailed as "an example of descriptive linguistics at its best".[1] Her broad-ranging work since then has involved research on and audio-visual documentation of the linguistic and cultural heritage of the Oyda, Zargulla and Wolaitta peoples, whose languages belong to the Omotic branch of the Afro-Asiatic language family.
In 2007, her research on language endangerment and audiovisual documentation (with Maarten Mous and Anne-Christie Hellenthal) was one of 7 finalists for the Academische Jaarprijs [2] and in 2016, she was awarded a competitive research grant for a three year project of the Endangered Languages Documentation Project for the linguistic and ethnographic documentation of endangered cultural practices of the Zargulla people in South-West Ethiopia.[3] Her collection on house construction and farming among the Zargula people is available in the repository of the Endangered Languages Archive.[4]
Key publications
- Amha, Azeb. 1996. 'Tone-accent and prosodic domains in Wolaitta'. Studies in African Linguistics, 25(2). 111–138.
- Amha, Azeb. 2001. The Maale Language (CNWS Publications 99). Leiden: Leiden University.
- Amha, Azeb & Dimmendaal, Gerrit J. 2006. 'Converbs in an African perspective'. In Ameka, Felix K. & Dench, Alan & Evans, Nicholas (eds.), Catching Language. The standing challenge of grammar writing, 393–440. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
- Amha, Azeb. 2012. 'Omotic'. In Frajzyngier, Zygmunt & Shay, Erin (eds.), The Afroasiatic Languages, 423–504. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Amha, Azeb. 2013. Directives to humans and to domestic animals – the imperative and some interjections in Zargulla. In: Marie-Claude Simeone-Senelle and Martine Vanhove (eds.), Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Cushitic and Omotic Languages, Paris, 16–18 April 2008. Cologne: Köppe (ISBN 978-3-89645-488-1).
- Amha, Azeb. "Complex predicates in Zargulla." In Wiesbaden explorations in Ethiopian Linguistics: Complex Predicates, finiteness and interrogativity, pp. 91–119. Harrassowitz Verlag, 2014.
- Azeb Amha. 2017. Commands in Wolaitta. In Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y. and R. M. W Dixon (eds.) Commands: a cross-linguistic typology, pp. 283 –300. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Amha, Azeb. "The morphosyntax of negation in Zargulla." LOT Occasional Series 13 (2009): 199-220.
- Amha, Azeb, James Slotta and Hannah S. Sarvasy. 2021. Singing the individual: Name tunes in Oyda and Yopno. Frontiers in Psychology, 12:667599. Doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2021.667599
- Ameka, Felix and Azeb Amha. 2022. "Research on language and culture in Africa". In: Nico Nassenstein & Svenja Völkel (eds.) Approaches to Language and Culture, pp. 339–383. [Volume 1 of book series Anthropological Linguistics”] Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
References
- Hayward, Richard J. (2009). "What's been Happening in Omotic?". Journal of Ethiopian Studies. 42 (1/2): 85–106. ISSN 0304-2243. JSTOR 41967463.
- ""Letterenteam Mous bij beste zeven Academische Jaarprijs 2007". www.leidenuniv.nl (in Dutch). Retrieved Oct 15, 2022.
- "New research project documenting Zargulla, an endangered Omotic language in Ethiopia". African Studies Centre Leiden. Oct 13, 2016. Retrieved Oct 15, 2022.
- "Documentation of house-construction and terrace farming in Zargulla, an endangered Omotic language". Endangered Languages Archive. 2017. Retrieved Oct 17, 2023.
External links
Media related to Azeb Amha at Wikimedia Commons