Shilha language

Shilha
Tachelhit; Tashelhiyt
Taclḥiyt - ⵜⴰⵛⵍⵃⵉⵢⵜ - تاشلحيت
Pronunciation/ˈtæʃəlhɪt/
Native toMorocco
RegionSouss-Massa, Guelmim-Oued Noun, Drâa-Tafilalet, Marrakech-Safi, Béni Mellal-Khénifra, Laâyoune-Sakia El Hamra and Dakhla-Oued Ed-Dahab
EthnicityShilha, Berber Jews
Native speakers
5.8 million (2020)[1]
Dialects
Arabic, Latin, Tifinagh
Language codes
ISO 639-3shi
Glottologtach1250
  Tashelhit language area
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.
PersonAclḥiy (male)
Taclḥiyt (female)
PeopleIclḥiyn (male)
Ticlḥiyin (female)
LanguageTaclḥiyt
Young man speaking Tachelhit, recorded in Cuba.

Tashelhiyt or Tachelhit (/ˈtæʃəlhɪt/ TASH-əl-hit; from the endonym Taclḥiyt, IPA: [tæʃlħijt]),[a] or also known as Shilha (/ˈʃɪlhə/ SHIL-hə; from its name in Moroccan Arabic, Šəlḥa) is a Berber language spoken in southwestern Morocco. When referring to the language, anthropologists and historians prefer the name Shilha, which is in the Oxford English Dictionary (OED). Linguists writing in English prefer Tashelhit (or a variant spelling). In French sources the language is called tachelhit, chelha or chleuh.

Shilha is spoken in an area covering around 100,000 square kilometres. The area comprises the western part of the High Atlas mountains and the regions to the south up to the Draa River, including the Anti-Atlas and the alluvial basin of the Sous River. The largest urban centres in the area are the coastal city of Agadir (population over 400,000) and the towns of Guelmim, Taroudant, Oulad Teima, Tiznit and Ouarzazate.[2][3][citation needed]

In the north and to the south, Shilha borders Arabic-speaking areas. In the northeast, roughly along the line Demnate-Zagora, there is a dialect continuum with Central Atlas Tamazight. Within the Shilha-speaking area, there are several Arabic-speaking enclaves, notably the town of Taroudant and its surroundings. Substantial Shilha-speaking migrant communities are found in most of the larger towns and cities of northern Morocco and outside Morocco in Belgium, France, Germany, Canada, the United States and Israel.[3][citation needed]

Shilha possesses a distinct and substantial literary tradition that can be traced back several centuries before the protectorate era. Many texts, written in Arabic script and dating from the late 16th century to the present, are preserved in manuscripts. A modern printed literature in Shilha has developed since the 1970s.[4]

  1. ^ Shilha at Ethnologue (26th ed., 2023) Closed access icon
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference :3 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ a b Adnor, Abdellah (2004). An Electronic Tashlhit-English Dictionary (Prototype) (PhD thesis). Mohammed V University, Rabat, Morocco. p. 13-14.
  4. ^ El Mountassir, Abdallah (2004). "La littérature écrite et la question de l'aménagement linguistique de l'amazigh". La littérature amazighe: oralité et écriture, spécificités et perspectives (PDF). Colloque international sur la littérature amazighe. l'Institut royal de la culture amazighe. pp. 139–140. ISBN 995443903X.


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