The Tuareg (/ˈtwɑːrɛɡ/; also spelled Twareg or Touareg; endonym Imuhagh) are Berber people with a traditionally nomadic pastoralist lifestyle. They are the principal inhabitants of the Saharan desert.
The Tuareg language, a branch of the Berber languages, has an estimated 1.2 million speakers. About half this number is accounted for by speakers of the Eastern dialect (Tamajaq, Tawallammat). Most Tuareg live in the Saharan parts of Niger, Mali, and Algeria. Being nomadic, they move constantly across national borders, and small groups of Tuareg also live in southeastern Algeria, southwestern Libya and northern Burkina Faso, and a small community in northern Nigeria.
The origin and meaning of the name Tuareg has long been debated with various etymologies advanced, although it would appear that Twārəg is derived from the "broken plural" of Tārgi, a name whose former meaning was "inhabitant of Targa" (the Tuareg name of the Libyan region commonly known as Fezzan. Targa in Berber means "(drainage) channel", see Alojali et al. 2003: 656, s.v. "Targa").
The Tuareg people are nomads of the Sahara who speak various Tuareg languages. Tuareg may also refer to:
Tuareg (English pronunciation: /ˈtwɑːrɛɡ/), also known as Tamasheq (English pronunciation: /ˈtæməʃɛk/), Tamajaq, or Tamahaq, and ⵜⴰⵎⴰⵌⴰⵆ in Tifinagh, is a Berber language, or a family of very closely related languages and dialects, spoken by the Tuareg Berbers, in large parts of Mali, Niger, Algeria, Libya, Morocco and Burkina Faso, with a few speakers, the Kinnin, in Chad.
Tuareg dialects belong to the South Berber group, and are commonly regarded as a single language (as for instance by Karl-G. Prasse). They are distinguished mainly by a few sound shifts (notably affecting the pronunciation of original z and h). The Tuareg varieties are unusually conservative in some respects; they retain two short vowels where Northern-Berber languages have one or none, and have a much lower proportion of Arabic loanwords than most Berber languages. They are traditionally written in the indigenous Tifinagh alphabet. However, the Arabic script is commonly used in some areas (and has been since medieval times), while the Latin script is official in Mali and Niger. In Morocco, of the three official languages (Arabic, French and Berber), Central Atlas Tamazight is the second Berber language. Some scholars claim that Tifinagh-Tamazight is "one of the oldest languages in the world," being close both linguistically and in alphabet to Old Phoenician; that the Phoenician alphabet was progenitor of the Greek, and thereby Western, alphabets.
Ri notti cavaleri spuntanu ri vausi
firrianu ntunnu ntunnu ballanu
si priparanu i viu paittiri spiriscinu nto sonnu
accussì abbannunata cunta - ntunnu terra abbruciata sutta nfunnu scavannu acqua jlata
nzemmula beni e mali.
Es-souk si inchi
u cori si inchi
ri occhi nivuri
Es-souk si inchi
mi runi carezzi r'amuri.
Ntunnu ntunnu o focu fannu u me nomi
ballannu mi chiamanu sugnu ammira
tant'anni passati menzu a ventu e suli
si senti l'amuri comu scuma ri mari.
Ti nsunnava vulannu supra na naca r'acqua
occhi chini ri siti ballanu
si priparanu i viu paittiri spiriscinu nto sonnu
accussì addumata cunta -
vampi i focu nni runa sutta nfunnu scavannu signali r'amuri
nzemmula beni e mali.
Es-souk si inchi
u cori si inchi
ri occhi nivuri
Es-souk si inchi
mi runi carezzi r'amuri.