Talk:Fula language

Latest comment: 1 year ago by 212.60.95.216 in topic How are you in fula

The relatedness of the Fula language to the Serer language.

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"Fula is related to Serer language" [1] all attempts to mention this on this articled were permanently deleted. Whoever is making claims in the Serer language article about the relatedness of Serer and Fula should also mention that in the Fula language article. I see no justifiable reason why the relatedness of the two languages is mentioned by the same author in the Serer language article but totally left out and permanently deleted every time it is mentioned in the Fula language article. Tamsier (talk) 16:36, 24 September 2011 (UTC)Reply

Notes

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  1. ^ Sapir, David, 1971. "West Atlantic: an inventory of the languages, their noun-class systems and consonant alternation". In Sebeok, ed, Current trends in linguistics, 7: linguistics in sub-Saharan Africa. Mouton, 45–112

Undue section template on infobox

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This template has been added in the infobox. The reason being the infobox suggests some sort of superiority of one language over another. Attempts to resolve this issue has been permanently deleted. Tamsier (talk) 17:01, 24 September 2011 (UTC)Reply

U have placed an inappropriate template. Please familiarize yourself with Wiki template codes. You completely messed up the page. And always use the talk page to explain the nature of the Undue section. (with SOURCES) It is not a case of your say-so. If the thing is a problem explain why here. No need to edit war with experienced editors. I have corrected the error and put back your NPOV notice. You will however have to STATE why that notice was placed on the article. What is wrong with this page, if you cannot do so then the tags will have to be removed. Do not put tags for sections in info box.--Halqh حَلَقَة הלכהሐላቃህ (talk) 18:03, 24 September 2011 (UTC)Reply

Noun classes & comment on standards

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Couple of items on the form of the class indicators, and quick comment re future of standards for languages like Fula. First, removed the leading apostrophe from the "o" since that is never used in writing. By convention, initial glottals (even if pronounced as such) in Fula are never marked. Second, last I checked, it was general usage not to use the "eng" before "g" for the prenasalized form, such that one would write "ng-" rather than "ŋg." Variant spellings of geminate forms sometimes use the eng before the "ng" per jaŋngude rather than the more common janngude (to read, study). I'm beginning to think that there may be utility in a new regional conference on updating orthography standards for cross-border languages to facilitate use of language data (for development of apps etc. in the languages). Minor differences such as these crop up more or less organically for various reasons, but arguably do more harm for regional use of regional languages like Fula, than good.--A12n (talk) 05:21, 28 October 2013 (UTC)Reply

Is v used in some cases for loanwords???

Formally, no, at least in my experience. It is not a sound normally distinguished in the language, and is typically replaced by "w" in loans. OTOH, it might certainly appear in what people write when using loanwords.--A12n (talk) 19:31, 3 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

Other scripts ... or orthographies

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In the subsection Other scripts, appears this sentence: "In the 1960s Mali and Senegal each invented their own scripts to write Fula; in the 1970s Nigeria invented its own script too." Not clear what this refers to, unless what is meant are the slightly differing orthographic conventions for the standard extended-Latin script (namely the choice of ɲ or ñ for the palatal n, or the ƴ or 'y for the ejective y).--A12n (talk) 19:37, 3 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

Noun classes, again

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Removed "man" from the list, as it's not a noun class. It was added 9 September 2015 by 109.128.186.122, but not clear what the source was. Also removed "lekkol" (school) as example from "kol." The latter class is rarely used - i.e., one or two nouns only in this class. Loan words like lekkol typically fall in the "o" class.--A12n (talk) 01:48, 6 October 2017 (UTC)Reply

Speakers?

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The article doesn't say how many people speak it, whether nativly or as a second/foreign language. Please add that information.--Solomonfromfinland (talk) 12:55, 3 December 2019 (UTC)Reply

How are you in fula

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How are you in fula 212.60.95.216 (talk) 22:29, 8 May 2023 (UTC)Reply