FYI. The name of this language is variably spelled (the one used is a French
spelling; see http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=pbp ). Fwd from
ILAT...  DZO


Posted on Mon, May. 09, 2005

Linguist's goal: to save endangered tongue
Grant lets grad student study Badiaranke language

By CHARLES BURRESS
San Francisco Chronicle
http://www.montereyherald.com/mld/montereyherald/news/11601197.htm

It's a wish come true for a University of California at Berkeley grad student
with a rare taste in wishes.

A special grant will allow Rebecca Cover to dodge malarial mosquitoes and live
in a mud hut without electricity in a hot, humid and remote corner of Africa
where, as the only white face in the village, she will attempt to communicate
in a difficult language that most of the world has never heard of.

''It's very exciting, of course,'' said Cover, 26, a doctoral student in
linguistics.

Cover's project is the only winner in Northern California among 39 grants and
fellowships in new a federal program for threatened languages.

''This is a rescue mission to save endangered languages,'' National Endowment
for the Humanities Chairman Bruce Cole said a joint statement by the NEH and
the National Science Foundation. The agencies cited experts saying that more
than 3,000 of the 6,000 to 7,000 languages now in use are approaching
extinction.

The agencies awarded $4.4 million in their new Documenting Endangered Languages
partnership.

Cover's $17,767 grant will record and analyze Badiaranke, an unwritten tongue
spoken by an estimated 12,000 people where three countries meet -- Senegal,
Guinea and Guinea-Bissau.

Although tiny in the number of users, Badiaranke belongs to the world's largest
family of languages, Niger-Congo, which consists of between 1,200 and 1,500
different tongues, said UC linguistics Professor Larry Hyman, sponsor of
Cover's proposal.

''We're very, very pleased,'' Hyman said. ''A huge number of people applied.''

''She (Cover) is very distinguished,'' he said, adding that she had come into
linguistics after receiving her undergraduate degree in astrophysics at
Williams College, where she was a valedictorian. Two of her letters of
recommendation ''said she was their best student in 30 years,'' Hyman said.

Cover said she had embarked on linguistics because of a desire to work with
endangered languages, an interest that began when she served two years in the
Peace Corps as a health education volunteer in Senegal.

''When you lose a language,'' she said in a telephone interview Thursday from
her family home in Sharon, Mass., ''you're not just losing the language, which
in itself has great value from a scientific, linguistic perspective, but from a
cultural perspective as well.

''A lot of the culture is embedded in the language. When a language dies, part
of the culture dies, too.''

Cover got a foretaste of her project last year when she spent nearly two months
in the 487-person, Badiaranke-speaking village of Paroumba in Senegal.

----- End forwarded message -----




 
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