Weyto language: Difference between revisions

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'''Weyto''' is a speculative [[extinctdead language|dead]] language]] thought to have been spoken in the [[Lake Tana]] region of [[Ethiopia]] by the [[Weyto people|Weyto]], a small group of [[hippopotamus]] hunters who now speak [[Amharic language|Amharic]].{{Citation needed|date=September 2022}}
 
The Weyto language was first mentioned by the Scottish traveler [[James Bruce]], who spoke Amharic. Bruce passed through the area about 1770 and reported that "the Weyto speak a language radically different from any of those in Abyssinia," but was unable to obtain any "certain information" on it, despite prevailing upon the king to send for two Weyto men for him to ask questions, which they would "neither answer nor understand" even when threatened with hanging. The next European to report on the Weyto, [[Eugen Mittwoch]], described them as uniformly speaking a dialect of Amharic (Mittwoch 1907). This report was confirmed by [[Marcel Griaule]] when he passed through in 1928, although he added that at one point a Weyto sang an unrecorded song "in the dead language of the Wohitos" whose meaning the singer himself did not understand, except for a handful of words for hippopotamus body parts which, he says, had remained in use.{{Citation needed|date=September 2022}}