- Archive
- DOBES Archive
- Bainounk
- Bainounk Gubeeher
- Plants
- Elicitations
- Tree list
- DJI010312CDD
DJI010312CDD
Detailed Metadata
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- History : NAME:imdi2cmdi.xslt DATE:2016-09-09T16:19:18.215+02:00.
- Name : DJI010312CDD
- Title : Tree list
- Date : 2012-03-01
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- Description : Verification of the pronounciation and agreement patterns of all tree names
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- Continent : Africa
- Country : Senegal
- Region : Casamance
- Address : Djibonker
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- Name : DoBeS 3P
- Title : Pots plants and people - a documentation of Bainounk knowledge systems
- Id :
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- Name : Friederike Luepke
- Address : SOAS/London
- Email : fl2@soas.ac.uk
- Organisation : School of Oriental and African Studies
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- Description : Our project focuses on three endangered and connected knowledge systems – the documentation of past and present pottery practices, of plant knowledge and use, and of the nominal classification of the Bainounk languages.
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- Genre : Experiment or task
- SubGenre : Elicitation
- SubGenre : Lexical Elicitation
- Task : Unspecified
- Modalities : speech
- Subject :
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- Interactivity : interactive
- PlanningType : planned
- Involvement : Unspecified
- SocialContext : Unspecified
- EventStructure : Unspecified
- Channel : Unspecified
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- Id : ISO639-3:und
- Name : Bainounk Gubeeher (c)
- Dominant : Unspecified
- SourceLanguage : false
- TargetLanguage : true
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- Description : Baïnounk Gubëeher - literally: 'the language of Djibonker’ (called Jibëeher in Gubëeher) - is the smallest of the major Baïnounk languages. It is spoken in Senegal, in the village of Djibonker, 13km to the west of the regional capital Ziguinchor, on the road to Cape Skirring. There, about 700 people speak this Baïnounk language. About 400 speakers live in the diaspora in Dakar, the country's capital, but there, not many domains for the use of Gubëeher remain.
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- Id : ISO639-3:fra
- Name : French (c)
- Dominant : Unspecified
- SourceLanguage : Unspecified
- TargetLanguage : Unspecified
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- Description : French is the official language of Senegal, and the ex-colonial idiom, but (standard) French is only used in a small number of contexts and by ca. 10% of the population (McLaughlin 2009). French is mainly used in formal contexts.
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- Type : audio
- Format : audio/x-wav
- Size : 460 MB
- Quality : Unspecified
- RecordingConditions :
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- Start : Unspecified
- End : Unspecified
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- Date : Unspecified
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