What does the word tututu make you think of?
It’s an ideophone from Bebe (Naami) a language spoken in parts of Cameroon, and to a speaker of Bebe, tututu suggests the sound of a grinding mill.
Other ideophones in Bebe include:
- kpaŋkpaŋkpaŋ = the sound of a bell
- gbaaaŋ = the sound of a door closed with force
- waaa = the sound of a running water
- ŋgɔɔɔŋ = the sound of a lion roaring
- ŋaaaŋ = the sound of a baby crying
Source: Naami Orthography Guide, by Grace Tabah and Mkounga Tala Blaise
You can find out more about Bebe on Omniglot – this is a new page I added today, and finding out about the ideophones in this language inspired me to write this post.
An ideophone is a member of the class of words that depict sensory imagery or sensations, evoking ideas of action, sound, movement, color, or shape. They are also known as mimetics or expressives. Unlike onomatopoeic words, which imitate sounds, ideophones can also indicate action, state, intensity, smell, colour or manner. They are common in such languages as Japanese, Korean, Tamil, Yoruba and Zulu.
Here are some examples:
- がぶがぶ (gabugabu) = gulping, guzzling, gulp gulp – Japanese
- きびきび (kibikibi) = briskly – Japanese
- しとしとと降る (shitoshito to furu) = to rain or snow quietly – Japanese
- 가물가물 (gamulgamul) = (light) fading away into the distance, moving away faintly, in a blurred manner – Korean
- 버글버글 (beogeulbeogeul) = boilingly while spreading in all directions; bubblingly while spreading in all directions – Korean
- 꽁냥꽁냥 (kkongnyangkkongnyang) = lovey-dovey – Korean
- படபட (paṭapaṭa) = fluttering – Tamil
- புசுபுசு (pucupucu) = soft and bushy, fluffy – Tamil
- விறுவிறு (viṟuviṟu) = energetically, lively, spicy – Tamil
- khazimula = shining brightly – Zulu
- qaqa = bursting – Zulu
- jabula = happily – Zulu
Does your language have ideophones, or anything similar? Do you have any interesting examples?
For more information about ideophones see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ideophone
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Category:Korean_ideophones
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Category:Japanese_onomatopoeias
