Sokna (also Sawknah, Sukna; native name: Tasuknit)[2] is a presumably extinct
Eastern Berber language which was spoken in the town of
Sokna (Isuknan) and the village of
Fuqaha in northeastern
Fezzan in
Libya. According to Václav Blažek (1999), Sokna was also spoken in the oasis of
Tmassa.[3]
The most extensive and recent materials on it are Sarnelli (1924)[4] for Sokna and Paradisi (1963)[5] for El-Fogaha. Both articles report that the language was spoken only by a handful of old people at the time, so it is generally presumed to be extinct.
Aikhenvald & Militarev (1984) and Blench (2006) consider Sokna and Fezzan to be separate languages. Blench lists Tmessa and Al-Foqaha as dialects of Fezzan.
^Blažek, Václav (1999). Numerals: Comparative-etymological Analyses of Numeral Systems and Their Implications : Saharan, Nubian, Egyptian, Berber, Kartvelian, Uralic, Altaic and Indo-European Languages. Spisy Masarykovy univerzity v Brně, Filozofická fakulta. Vol. 322.
ISBN9788021020702.
^Sarnelli, Tommaso (1924–1925). "Il dialetto berbero di Sokna: Materiali lessicali, testi manoscritti in caratteri arabi, con trascrizione e traduzione". Supplemento All'Africa Italiana (in Italian).
^Paradisi, Umberto (1963). "Il linguaggio berbero di El-Fogaha (Fezzan)". Istituto Orientale di Napoli. XIII: 93–126.