Tutlayin Tijanatin Tigmmuḍanin n Lmɣrib
Tutlayin Tijanatin Tigmmuḍanin n Lmɣrib gant yat trabbut n tantalyin timaziɣin, ar ttyusawalnt ɣ Lmɣrib, gr tmnaḍt n Jrada d tmnaḍt n Brkan.
Tutlayin Tijanatin Tigmmuḍanin n Lmɣrib
Adusmil n | Tutlayin Tijanatin |
---|---|
Tamazirt | Lmɣrib |
Autochtone de | Tamnaḍt Tagmuḍant |
Système d'écriture | Tifinaɣ, alphabet latin, alphabet arabe |
Institution de normalisation | Asinag Agldan n Tussna Tamaziɣt |
Gant zɣ trabbut tantalant Tajant, aẓnt i tantlayin Tirifiyin[1] d tantala n Ayt Snus dɣ nttat. [2]
Ar ttyusawaln Tutlayin Tijanatin Tigmmuḍanin n Lmɣrib ɣ dar tqbilin timaziɣin n Bni Buzgu, Bni Yɛla, Zkara, Bxata, Haddiyin; Ayt Iznassn d Rwabɛ.[3][4]
Isaɣuln
ssnfl- ↑ J. Bourrilly, Éléments d'éthnographie marocaine, p.42 (Larose, 1932)
- ↑ G. P. Murdock, African Cultural Summaries, Volume 10 (Human Relations Area Files, 1958) : "The Zekara (Zkara), with whom are grouped the neighboring Bekhti (Oulad Bekhti), Chebel (Beni Chebel), Yala (Beni Yaala, Beni Yala), and Zeggu (Beni Bou Zeggou) of eastern Morocco and the Snus (Beni Snous) across the border of Algeria, belong to the Zenata division of the Berber branch of the Hamito-Semitic linguistic stock."
- ↑ P. Behnstedt, La frontera entre el bereber y el arabe en el Rif Archived 2016-10-12 at the Wayback Machine, p.14 (E.D.N.A, volume 6, 2002)
- ↑ note: P. Behnstedt (2002) cites Derawesh; the latter is actually a sub-tribe of Beni Bouzegou