There is only one article containing any original research on the language, Wilson (1970), which only a handful of other articles discuss. John G. Wilson's article furnishes only a short word list, and was written at a time when the language, if it existed, was nearly extinct. The article was based mainly on the limited memories of two very old women, one "a child of one of the residual Oropom families that had remained after the break-up of the Oropom here (Matheniko county)" who "remembered a few words of the language", the other an old lady called Akol "descended from the prisoners taken by the Karimojong on the Turkwel" who was "able to furnish many Oropom words". Under the circumstances, only the barest details of Oropom could be ascertained.
On this basis, Wilson concluded that it must have had at least two dialects: one spoken around the Turkwel area, containing a significant number of Luo words, and some Bantu words, and one spoken around Matheniko county with fewer Luo words. Both contain Kalenjinloanwords.[citation needed]
Classification
Wilson ascribed it to the Khoisan group, seemingly based solely on its physical appearance; but this identification is unreliable; Harold C. Fleming describes it as a "ridiculous suggestion". Elderkin (1983) says that "The Oropom data of Wilson (1970) shows some resemblances to Kuliak, some of which could well be mediated through Nilotic, with which it seems to have more resemblances (F. Rottland, personal communication)... There are many fewer resemblances worth noting with Hadza and only a minimal number with Sandawe." He quotes eight potentially similar words between Oropom and Hadza, and four between Oropom and Sandawe. Harold Fleming also notes that "initial inspection suggests some possible commonality" between Oropom and the Kuliak languages, a probably Nilo-Saharan relic group found in Northern Uganda among such tribes as the Ik. However, in the absence of further work, Oropom remains an unclassified language.[citation needed]
Status
Bernd Heine, who surveyed the area less than ten years after Wilson and found no trace of the language, expressed skepticism that it existed at all.[1] Both Lionel Bender and Roger Blench have opined that the language was made up as a joke.[1] Souag (2004) lists several motives Wilson's informants might have had to fabricate the language, and observes that even in his article, Wilson notes that he had to deal with "charlatans" once word got out that he was looking for anyone with knowledge of the language.[1]
Vocabulary
This wordlist, taken from the appendix to Wilson (1970), is based on Akol's memories (and thus is considered by Wilson as belonging to the "Turkwell dialect"). He says that he collected words from the other dialect as well, but apparently never published them. The list consists of less than a hundred words, which are likely to be all the vocabulary that will ever be known of the language.
Arrow: motit
Bad: girito
Black: timu
Blue: puthia
To boil water: mak
Bow: terema
To burn: mala
Breast: kisina
Brother: lukiya
Bull: losogol
Cat: ariet
Cattle: pange
Chalcedony: atunatun
Child: muto
Clever person: woth
To cook: ipo
Cooking pot (black): kiriente
Cooking pot: kodo
Cow: ngobo
Cowrie shell: pel
Crocodile: moro
To cut: tubo
Day: awar
To dig: chege
Dog: kokuye
Dry: de-au
Ear-ring: napiroi
Ear: ki-ito
Egg: iken
Eland: ongor
Enemy: bu
Eye: kongiye
Fat: moda
Father: mamunyu
Fire: emaa
Fish: karu
food: araukoo
Fool: bung
Foot: apaukoo
Gazelle: tuth
To give: we
Goat: ngoror
Good: pau
Grass: purung
Grooved design on pots: nacipa
Hair: akopito
Hand: akeleng
Hard: keter
Honey: madik
House: apirgoo
Leopard: meri
To lie down: lura
Lion: ru
Man: muren
Mark on forehead: nageran
To marry: ritha
Meat: apintoo
Milk: coko
Moon: Pele
Mother-in-law: yo
Mother: iyoo
Neck bangles: gorom
Night: riono
Nose: torom
Oil: konoye
Old man: kuko
Old woman: kukuye
Penis: oyaa
Rain: lat
To receive: aruka
Red: kopurat
Seer: murwe
Sheep: merek
Sister: pese
To sit: paja
To sleep: sanan
Snake: kwolta
Soft: lujuk
Soil: nyapid
To speak: dokol
Spear: ngokit
Stone wrist bangle: aurare
Sun: Aca
To swim: redik
Thief: mokorat
Tooth: ne-et
Tree: telegai
Vagina: kibunte
To walk: pauwo
Warrior: lim
Water: lata
Wet: ret
White: pele
Witch: ariet
Wizard: rimirim
Woman: nakwanta
Women's apron: ongor
Bibliography
J. G. Wilson. "Preliminary Observations on the Oropom People of Karamoja, their Ethnic Status, Culture, and Postulated Relation to the Peoples of the Late Stone Age." The Uganda Journal, 34, 2, 1970. pp.125–145.
Elderkin, E. D. (1983) 'Tanzanian and Ugandan isolates'. In Nilotic studies: proceedings of the international symposium on languages and history of the Nilotic peoples, Cologne, January 4–6, 1982 vol. 2 / Rainer Vossen, Marianne Bechhaus-Gerst (eds [clarification needed]), vol. 2, pp 499–521.
Harold C. Fleming (1983) 'Kuliak External Relations: Step One'. In Nilotic studies: proceedings of the international symposium on languages and history of the Nilotic peoples, Cologne, January 4–6, 1982 vol. 2 / Rainer Vossen, Marianne Bechhaus-Gerst (eds [clarification needed]), vol. 2, p.429.
Blench, Roger M. 1999. "Are the African pygmies an ethnographic fiction?" Central African hunter-gatherers in a multidisciplinary perspective: challenging elusiveness, pp 41–60. Edited by Karen Biesbrouck, Stefan Elders & Gerda Rossel. Research School of Asian, African and Amerindian Studies (CNWS), State University of Leiden. Leiden.
Blench, Roger M. 1993. "Recent Developments in African Language Classification" The Archaeology of Africa: Food, Metals and Towns (ISBN041511585X), edited by Thurstan Shaw, page 135.