Ḥarsusi
[别称 Ḥarsūsī, Harsusi, Hersyet]语系:Afro-Asiatic
·濒危
语系:Afro-Asiatic
·濒危
信息不完整 “Africa” ( ch. 7) . Gerrit J. Dimmendaal and F. K. Erhard Voeltz (2007) , Christopher Moseley · Routledge
"An estimated 700 speakers left in the 1970s. This estimate was made, however, during a period when many people had left their region to work in oil wells. The actual number of speakers may therefore be higher."
Mehri
Arabic
信息不完整 “Glottolog” .
信息不完整 “The Modern South Arabian Languages” (378-423) . Marie-Claude Simeone-Simelle (1997) , Robert Hetzron · London & New York: Routledge
The speaker number of no more than 600 put forth in Johnstone 1977:x was made during the period when many Harasís had left their region to go and work in oil wells. Since then, the founding of the National park in Jiddat alHarasís provided employment and gave the possibility to many emigrants to come back, and thus putting off the danger of the disappearance of their language which was quite real in the seventies.
Arabic
Native speakers use their mother tongue for private purposes, in the family circle and with other speakers of the same language; many a speaker uses several MSAL, when these languages are closely related. Both in Oman and in the Yemen, Arabic is the language used for official intercourse (administration, school, army).
Spoken by the Harasís and the ‘Ifar, in the area of Jiddat al-Harasís (north-east of Dhofar)
信息不完整 “The World Atlas of Language Structures” . Bernard Comrie and David Gil and Martin Haspelmath and Matthew S. Dryer · Oxford University Press