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Ogiek language
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==Dialects== There are three main Ogiek varieties that have been documented, though there are several dozen named local Ogiek groups: *''Kinare'', spoken around the Kenyan place Kinare on the eastern slope of the [[Great Rift Valley, Kenya|Rift Valley]]. The Kinare dialect is extinct, and Rottland (1982:24-25) reports that he found a few old men from Kinare in 1976, married with [[Kikuyu people|Kikuyu]] women and integrated in the Kikuyu culture, whose parents had lived in the forests around Kinare as honey-gathering Ogiek. They called themselves /akié:k pa kínáre/, i.e. ''Ogiek of Kinare''. *''Sogoo'' (or ''Sokóò''), spoken in the southern [[Mau Forest]] between the Amala and [[Ewas Ng'iro]] rivers (Heine 1973). The actual status of the Sogoo dialect is unclear. [[Bernd Heine]] included some Sogoo vocabulary in his 'Vokabulare ostafrikanischer Restsprachen' (1973). [[Franz Rottland]], following Heine's directions, came across a Sogoo settlement of ten round huts in 1977, and reported that he was told that there were several other Sogoo settlements in the immediate surroundings (Rottland 1982:25). The Sogoo speakers had contact with the Kipsikii, another Kalenjin people, and were able to point out lexical differences between their own language and [[Kipsigis language|Kipsigis]]. Ten years later, [[Gabriele Sommer]] (1992:389) classified the Sogoo dialect as being threatened by extinction. The Sogoo variety was recorded in an area where Kipchorng'wonek Okiek reside (Sogoo is the name of a settlement/center there). Extensive texts from naturally occurring conversation recorded in both Kipchorng'wonek communities and Kaplelach Okiek communities are available in the publications of Dr. Corinne A. Kratz. *''[[Akie people#Language|Akie]]'' (or ''Akiek''), spoken in Tanzania in the southern part of [[Arusha]] region. Akie is spoken by various little groups in the steppes south of Arusha, which is the territory of the [[Masaai people|Maasai]]. Akie is probably dying out because many of its speakers have shifted to, or are shifting to, [[Maasai language]]. Maguire (1948:10) already reported a high level of bilinguality in Maasai, and remarked that "[t]he language of the ''Mósiro'' [an Akie clan name] is dying, as any language except Masai tends to do in the Masai country." In the 1980s, however, Corinne Kratz and James Woodburn visited Akie groups in Tanzania during survey research and found that they were fully bilingual in Akie and Maasai.
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