Adamaua languages
The Adamaua languages are a group of 80 to 90 languages spoken by a total of two million people along the Adamaua Plateau in Central Africa, Eastern Nigeria , Northern Cameroon , Northwest Central African Republic and Southern Chad .
The languages were classified along with the Ubangic languages by Joseph Greenberg as a branch of the Adamaua-Ubangi language group of the Niger-Congo language family . Many of the Adamaua languages are critically endangered as the governments of the individual states have continued to use the languages of the former colonial powers as the official and language of instruction; by far the largest of the nearly one hundred small Adamaua languages is Mumuye with 400,000 speakers. A group of isolated languages, including Laal and Jalaa, are found along the borders of the Adamaua area.
classification
Greenberg postulated the group as part of the Adamaua-Ubangic languages (then called Adamaua-Ost ), and divided them into 14 numbered groups. Group G3, Daka or Dakoide, are now known as a branch of the Benue-Congo languages . Relations with the other languages underwent a considerable revision. Boyd (1989) added the Day language and classified it as follows:
-
Leko – Nimbari (or Chamba – Mumuye)
- Duru : G4
- Leko : G2
- Mumuye – Yendang : G5
- Nimbari : G12
- Mbum Day
-
Waja-Jen
- Bikwin – Jen (or Jen): G9
- Tula – Wiyaa (or Waja): G1
- Bəna – Mboi (or Yungur): G7
- Baa (aka Kwa)
- Longuda : G10
- Nyimwom (or Kam: G8)
The Fali languages (G11) were excluded. Kleinewillinghöfer (1996) modified Waja-Jen by splitting Bikwin-Jen into two branches and classifying Baa as the primary branch of Adamaua. He did not notice the enclosure of the Fali.
languages
The current subdivision of the languages is as follows:
Leko-Nimbari
- Leko: Samba Leko (50 thousand), Mumbake (20 thousand), Wom (5 thousand), Kolbila (2.5 thousand), Nyong (30 thousand)
- Duru
Mbum Day
- Mbum
- Central: Kare (100 thousand), Pana (80 thousand), Karang (20 thousand), Nzambay (30 thousand); Kuo (15k)
- North: Tupuri (220 thousand), Mundang (200 thousand), Mambai (2.5 thousand); Mono (1,000), Dama, Ndai (almost †)
- South: Mbum (50k)
- Otherwise : Laka (Godogodo) (5 thousand), Dek, Pam; To ( ritual language )
- Bua: Bua (8 thousand), Fania (Mana), Gula Iro (4 thousand), Bon Gula (1 thousand), Zan Gula (4 thousand), Bolgo (2 thousand), Koke (600), Noy (almost †),
Niellim (5 thousand), Tunia (2 thousand) - Kim: Kim ('Masa') (15 thousand), Besme (1 thousand), Goundo (almost †)
- Day : Day (50 thousand)
Waja-Jen
- Waja-Cham
- Awak: Awak (6 th.), Kamo (20 th.)
- Waja-Tula: Waja (60 th.), Tula (30 th.), Bangwinji (6 th.)
- Cham-Mona: Dijim-Bwilim (Cham-Mwana) (25 thousand), Lotsu-Piri (15 thousand)
- Dadija: Dadija (30 thousand)
- Longuda ( 30k )
- Yungur-Mboi: Yungur (Bena) (100 thousand), Lala-Roba (50 thousand), Voro; Mboi (20k), Libo (Kaan) (10k)
- Jen-Munga: Bambuka (5 thousand), Loo (8 thousand), Burak (4 thousand), Jen (Dza) (6 thousand), Leelau (Munga) (5 thousand), Gwomo (5 thousand) ), Panyam (Mak), Maghdi (2 thousand), Mingang Doso (3 thousand), Kapawa (Tha) (1 thousand)
validity
Recently, Roger Blench (2008) has postulated that the Adamaua languages are a geographical grouping, not a language family , and incorporated their various branches into his proposal for the savannah language family . He kept the language groups Leko-Nimbari and Mbum- Day from Boyd and Kleinewillinghöfer, but gave them no special relationships with one another. The Waja-Jen branch was reduced to G7, G9, & G10; the Waja languages were designated as isolated along with the Kam. Fali was completely excluded from the savannah languages. The placement of the baa is not clear.
Isolated Adamaua Languages
The Oblo language of Cameroon is mutually referred to as a member of the Adamaua group, but its position within the Adamaua remains unclear. It has been speculated that the unclassified Laal language of Chad could be an Adamaua language; the Jalaa language of Nigeria is likely not Adamaua, but has strong Adamaua influences.
Web links
- List of Adamawa languages ( Memento from May 20, 2006 in the Internet Archive ) - Blench
- Tula-Wiyaa languages ( Memento from May 20, 2006 in the Internet Archive ) - Blench
- Leeko group ( Memento from May 20, 2006 in the Internet Archive ) - Blench
- The Perema (Wom) language of northeastern Nigeria: classification, phonology and noun morphology (PDF) ( Memento from August 5, 2003 in the Internet Archive ) by Roger M. Blench, 2000. Mallam Dendo, Cambridge.
- A rapid appraisal survey of Gbete (PDF) by Jason Diller & Kari Jordan-Diller, 2002. SIL Electronic Survey Reports SILESR 2002-050.
- A sociolinguistic survey of the Mambay language of Chad and Cameroon (PDF) by Cameron Hamm, 2002. SIL Electronic Survey Reports SILESR 2002-039.
- Rapid appraisal and lexicostatistical analysis surveys of Dama, Mono, Pam, Ndai and Oblo (PDF) by Michael & Charlene Ayotte, 2002. SIL Electronic Survey Reports SILESR 2002-048.
- Karang - SIL Cameroon
- SIL-Cameroon bibliography
- Vocabulaires comparés des instruments aratoires dans le Nord-Cameroun ( Memento of October 17, 2005 in the Internet Archive ) (PDF; 1.5 MB), Tourneaux