Amagama Ezinyoni: Zulu Names of Birds

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Amagama Ezinyoni: Zulu Names of Birds Authors: , , Format: Paperback / softback First Published: Published By: University of KwaZulu-Natal Press
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Pages: 304 Language: English ISBN: 9781869144500 Categories: ,

Amagama Izinyoni: Zulu Names of Birds lists all the bird species found in KwaZulu-Natal and surrounds, gives the proposed standardised Zulu name for each species, and explains the underlying meaning and how the name came into being. All earlier names for these birds, even if no longer in current use, have been recorded here, making this a historical repository of Zulu bird names as well. This book is the result of the six-year Zulu Bird Name Project. Between 2013 and 2018, annual workshops, organised and facilitated by the three authors, brought together a total of eighteen mother-tongue Zulu-speaking bird experts to research the names of bird species present in the Zulu-speaking area of South Africa. At the start of the project, only approximately 40 per cent of the bird species of this area had species-specific Zulu names; by the end of the project all 550 species had unique names. The comprehensive introduction explains the methodology used in the Zulu bird name workshops, providing a template for linguists and ornithologists who might wish to do similar bird-naming exercises in the other African languages of southern Africa. The introduction also provides some linguistic and onomastic insights into bird naming generally and Zulu bird names in particular.

Weight0.5 kg
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Author Biography

Adrian Koopman is an emeritus professor of Zulu at the University of KwaZulu-Natal. He is the author of Zulu Names (2002), Zulu Plant Names (2015) and Zulu Bird Names and Bird Lore (2019). Noleen Turner is an honorary research professor in the African Languages Department at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban. Her areas of research interest include Second Language (Zulu) Teaching, Zulu Oral Studies, Onomastics and Humour Studies. Roger Porter has had a life-long interest in birds and has travelled extensively on bird trips to several countries in Africa as well as to Madagascar, India and Antarctica. Before retirement, he was a wildlife ecologist and conservation planner at the Natal Parks Board and KZN Wildlife.