- or
Majangir, live in
southwestern Ethiopia and
speak a Nilo-Saharan
language of the
Surmic cluster. The 1998
census gave the
total of the
Majangir po****tion...
- polyphonic.
Dorze polyphonic singing (edho) may
employ up to five parts;
Majangir, four parts. In the highlands,
traditional string instruments include the...
- of 1,097
meters above sea level. The town is said to be
named after a
Majangir man who once had a bee hive in the
large tree that
stood in the marketplace...
-
south numerous subgroups of the
Gimira people, and to the west lay the
Majangir people. The
native language, also
known as Kaffa, is one of the Omotic...
- the
Southern Nations, Nationalities, and People's Region,
surrounded by
Majangir and
Shekkacho peoples, with whom they intermarry. The
former have heavily...
- Nilo-Saharan 52,815 0.10 151,489 0.20
Messengo ???? 15,341 0.03 10,964 0.01
Majangir Nilo-Saharan 21,959 0.03
Mossiye Afro-Asiatic 9,207 0.02 19,698 0.03 Murle...
- Nilo-Saharan 52,815 0.10 151,489 0.20
Messengo ???? 15,341 0.03 10,964 0.01
Majangir Nilo-Saharan 21,959 0.03
Mossiye Afro-Asiatic 9,207 0.02 19,698 0.03 Murle...
- a
small bell. The toom, a lamellophone, is used
among the Nuer, Anuak,
Majangir, Surma, and
other Nilo-Saharan groups.
Metal leg
rattles are
common throughout...
- is
named for one of the
three largest indigenous groups in Gambela, the
Majangir. This zone is
bordered on the
south and east by the
Southern Nations, Nationalities...
-
plural (Bryan 1959).
Adjectives are
formed by
stative relative clauses.
Majangir (also
called Majang) and
Southwest Surmic languages (Fleming 1983) share...