cabdi good :af maay and somali are seperate languages
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Re: cabdi good :af maay and somali are seperate languages
what about the kurds? turkish kurds speak a very distant dialect than those in iraq and they hardly understood eachother
yer they r one nation
syrian kurds and arbil of iraq speak closer dialect than those in sulaymaniya north of iraq
every nation is like that
sidamo r not the same as other romos
we r not like the tigraay and amhara who r totally different ethnicities yet would like to call themselves the habasha nation so the notion that somalis have homogeneous culture is quite true
the world is uniting based on cultures so fock these desperate calls!
yer they r one nation
syrian kurds and arbil of iraq speak closer dialect than those in sulaymaniya north of iraq
every nation is like that
sidamo r not the same as other romos
we r not like the tigraay and amhara who r totally different ethnicities yet would like to call themselves the habasha nation so the notion that somalis have homogeneous culture is quite true
the world is uniting based on cultures so fock these desperate calls!
- Lancer
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Re: cabdi good :af maay and somali are seperate languages
How are they the same language when you can only understand two or three words every
sentence spoken? America,Dakhtar and a few other words is the only thing I understood.
You can't follow what he is talking about.
sentence spoken? America,Dakhtar and a few other words is the only thing I understood.
You can't follow what he is talking about.
Re: cabdi good :af maay and somali are seperate languages
Garre have their own language called Af-Garre which is different than Maay Maay. Garre is not even part of Raxanweeyn but it is part of Digil confederation which are several clans that united under this umbrella. Garre's language is almost same as Afan-Ormo and they can understand each other, but Rahawayn and Oromo cannot comminicate with out interpreter.WaaliCas wrote:Af-Maay is a hybrid of Somali and Afaan-Borana of the larger Oromiffa. The Gare (Rahawein sub-group) and the Borana can have full communication without any issue. The Borana call them Gabra (Gare)----Saglan Borana, Sagaltama Garba (Sagal wa Borana, sagashana wa Gare). The Oromo sub-groups are divided into numeric groups for example four, six, nine, ninety and the Rahawein are the same.
They were assimilated into the Somali society after the Somali jihad wars against Waaq practicing Oromo (Gaallo) even though the Somalis themselves were Waaqists just few centuries before them. In short, D&M are hybrid groups of many groups but they are closer to Borana than lamagodle Somali Maxa Tidhi/tiri.
The Oromo themselves are close relatives of the Somalis. All that separated them was religion. The Somali language that you know as Somali isn't the original Somali put heavily polluted language by Arabic and other foreign tongues (English, Italian, Indian,).
The Borana represent the closest thing to the original Somalis and the Maay people are the closest group to the Borana. I personally have great deal of respect for the Borana, D&M and the larger Oromo even though I reject Oromia as a republic(many Oromo hold strong resentment and represal against Somalis are inevitable should they achieve an independent state. That's the only reason I oppose them).
Re: cabdi good :af maay and somali are seperate languages
true but for more clarification only the garre of south somalia r digil and speak the easiest maay dialectdayax123 wrote:Garre have their own language called Af-Garre which is different than Maay Maay. Garre is not even part of Raxanweeyn but it is part of Digil confederation which are several clans that united under this umbrella. Garre's language is almost same as Afan-Ormo and they can understand each other, but Rahawayn and Oromo cannot comminicate with out interpreter.WaaliCas wrote:Af-Maay is a hybrid of Somali and Afaan-Borana of the larger Oromiffa. The Gare (Rahawein sub-group) and the Borana can have full communication without any issue. The Borana call them Gabra (Gare)----Saglan Borana, Sagaltama Garba (Sagal wa Borana, sagashana wa Gare). The Oromo sub-groups are divided into numeric groups for example four, six, nine, ninety and the Rahawein are the same.
They were assimilated into the Somali society after the Somali jihad wars against Waaq practicing Oromo (Gaallo) even though the Somalis themselves were Waaqists just few centuries before them. In short, D&M are hybrid groups of many groups but they are closer to Borana than lamagodle Somali Maxa Tidhi/tiri.
The Oromo themselves are close relatives of the Somalis. All that separated them was religion. The Somali language that you know as Somali isn't the original Somali put heavily polluted language by Arabic and other foreign tongues (English, Italian, Indian,).
The Borana represent the closest thing to the original Somalis and the Maay people are the closest group to the Borana. I personally have great deal of respect for the Borana, D&M and the larger Oromo even though I reject Oromia as a republic(many Oromo hold strong resentment and represal against Somalis are inevitable should they achieve an independent state. That's the only reason I oppose them).
those in mooyaale and wajir have a totally different dialect thats closer to southren oromo but are associated with somalis
their traditions say they hail from arsi
Re: cabdi good :af maay and somali are seperate languages
lol just some letters r missing like qaaf, cayn, xaaLancer wrote:How are they the same language when you can only understand two or three words every
sentence spoken? America,Dakhtar and a few other words is the only thing I understood.
You can't follow what he is talking about.
its like the lebanese arabic but its grammar is quite different wich doesnt change the fact that its a somali dialect
Re: cabdi good :af maay and somali are seperate languages
Theirs not much differences in either dialects, just gotta train your ears to pick up on what's being said. A lot of Somalis in my city speak it fluently and those that understand it but dont speak it, and there mostly from the south. Northerners have little exposure to the dialect therefore its quite reasonable for them to have a different presumption of the dialect.
Re: cabdi good :af maay and somali are seperate languages
My family are 'Northerners' who migrated to Maay areas a century ago. Both parents speak Af-Maay but I don't understand jackshit what they are saying when they use it.Armaan wrote:Theirs not much differences in either dialects, just gotta train your ears to pick up on what's being said. A lot of Somalis in my city speak it fluently and those that understand it but dont speak it, and there mostly from the south. Northerners have little exposure to the dialect therefore its quite reasonable for them to have a different presumption of the dialect.
Re: cabdi good :af maay and somali are seperate languages
I have cousins who grew up in the states their whole lives, they parents would speak maay when their discussing things they don't want them to understand, long story short, it took 'em about a couple months to depict what was being said, and it got to a point they're parents don't speak it around them anymore. Just depends on the person and how eager they are to understand it.
Re: cabdi good :af maay and somali are seperate languages
Af may is Somali. Saudis and Egyptians speak differently and both are Arabic. Simple.
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Re: cabdi good :af maay and somali are seperate languages
Jamatul linguistic wal DNA states af maay is not somali waa af Jin 

Re: cabdi good :af maay and somali are seperate languages
the main difference between the two dialects is the pronounciation so if you learn their letters you will be familiar with it
secondly maay is abit different grammatically
this is due to the long isolation and the natural barriers between the two somali communities such as the rivers, way of life
when your trying to judge a dialect you must have some background in dialect comparisons
is cabdi bood a scholar? no. he use to be a goalkeeper of a football team lol
but since he hails from burco and have listened a lot of songs in his marfash, he thinks hes natural scholar lol
burco is the suugaan dialect not even the standard dialect like the central somali dialect
halkakan waa radio mogadishu, the scholars said no its too local
halkan waa radio mogadishu? more common so it has been adopted as the standard dialect
if you want hees, gabay yes go for waqooyi
the somali standard dialect is a pastoral dialect, means its not all the somali language
the somali poets such as yam yam, hadrawi, sangub, mustafe sh elmi always express in their poems some thing thats called poetic sensibility/ al sowar al shicriya simply bc they r using pastoral instruments such as the sorts of the trees, water sources, times, months, seasons etc
but when you need the same linguistic instruments for farming you need to go for maay and that makes it rich language
so the standard dialect only represents the postral culture not the urbanic culture
for your sake i have been seaching some maay sources and i have came across of this link and I can already understand it!
he says what sort is this masago and all r trying to give the right answer
finally the non maay koonfur is a colloquial dialect just likethe collquial french or arabic
so our reer badiyes think its not good somali lol
xaa tiri a shortness of maxaa tiri
xoow yiri a shortness of ma xoow yiri
why I have to say maxoo yiri?
fix your nomadic logic!
secondly maay is abit different grammatically
this is due to the long isolation and the natural barriers between the two somali communities such as the rivers, way of life
when your trying to judge a dialect you must have some background in dialect comparisons
is cabdi bood a scholar? no. he use to be a goalkeeper of a football team lol
but since he hails from burco and have listened a lot of songs in his marfash, he thinks hes natural scholar lol
burco is the suugaan dialect not even the standard dialect like the central somali dialect
halkakan waa radio mogadishu, the scholars said no its too local
halkan waa radio mogadishu? more common so it has been adopted as the standard dialect
if you want hees, gabay yes go for waqooyi
the somali standard dialect is a pastoral dialect, means its not all the somali language
the somali poets such as yam yam, hadrawi, sangub, mustafe sh elmi always express in their poems some thing thats called poetic sensibility/ al sowar al shicriya simply bc they r using pastoral instruments such as the sorts of the trees, water sources, times, months, seasons etc
but when you need the same linguistic instruments for farming you need to go for maay and that makes it rich language
so the standard dialect only represents the postral culture not the urbanic culture
for your sake i have been seaching some maay sources and i have came across of this link and I can already understand it!
he says what sort is this masago and all r trying to give the right answer
finally the non maay koonfur is a colloquial dialect just likethe collquial french or arabic
so our reer badiyes think its not good somali lol
xaa tiri a shortness of maxaa tiri
xoow yiri a shortness of ma xoow yiri
why I have to say maxoo yiri?
fix your nomadic logic!
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Re: cabdi good :af maay and somali are seperate languages
Sahal,what position did you play?what linguistic qualifications do you have apart from interpreting for benefit claimants?,cabdi good just gave an opinion.you are emotional about that for some reason .
Re: cabdi good :af maay and somali are seperate languages
I understand afmaay people more than when a lander speaks to me. 

Re: cabdi good :af maay and somali are seperate languages
I have been following him for a while on somali channel and find him very biasedBaastoUnit wrote:Sahal,what position did you play?what linguistic qualifications do you have apart from interpreting for benefit claimants?,cabdi good just gave an opinion.you are emotional about that for some reason .
he makes alot of nonsense and you can see that he has narrow horizon by discrediting some of the songs of yem yem and now discrediting maay as a somali dialect besides his consistent burco stuff 24/7
as for me im just good reader of the continental cultures specially the middle east and north africa or the afro-asiatic cultures so i can make some cultural comparisons atleast but i keep myself to myself.
qalabksan wuxoo ka mid ahaan jirey qalab qadimi ah ooo waayadii hore la isticmaali jirey ee sheeg magiciisa iyo shaqadiisa
waa meeqo jumlad? hal jumlo ayaa dialect looqad ks dhigta!
Last edited by sahal80 on Sun May 17, 2015 5:11 pm, edited 2 times in total.
- Lancer
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Re: cabdi good :af maay and somali are seperate languages
Sahal is very arrogant. I notice it from the time I spent here that he finds anyone else opinion but his wrong.
You said the non may koonfur dialect is colloquial which means informal or slang
and you guys shorten everything like the examples gave.
xaa tidhi to maxaa tidhi
xoow yidhi to ma xoow yidhi
Now tell me what's is wrong with speaking like that. If anything show you guys are the ones who speak
with a slang by shortening phrases like the ghetto African Americans do with English. You guys basically bastardized the
Somali language so you have no right to be speaking so arrogantly.
You said the non may koonfur dialect is colloquial which means informal or slang
and you guys shorten everything like the examples gave.
xaa tidhi to maxaa tidhi
xoow yidhi to ma xoow yidhi
Now tell me what's is wrong with speaking like that. If anything show you guys are the ones who speak
with a slang by shortening phrases like the ghetto African Americans do with English. You guys basically bastardized the
Somali language so you have no right to be speaking so arrogantly.
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