Afade (language)
| Afade, Mandagué | ||
|---|---|---|
|
Spoken in |
Cameroon , Nigeria | |
| speaker | 5000 | |
| Linguistic classification |
|
|
| Official status | ||
| Official language in | - | |
| Language codes | ||
| ISO 639 -1 |
- |
|
| ISO 639 -2 |
- |
|
| ISO 639-3 |
eel |
|
Afade (also called Afadeh or Mandagué ) is a Chadian language that is spoken in the Extrême-Nord region in Cameroon and in Nigeria in the Local Government Area Ngala . The center of the language is the small town of Afade ; it is also spoken in the vicinity of this and in 12 villages in neighboring Nigeria.
It is one of the Kotoko languages and is closely related to Malgbe , Maslam and Mpade . Ethnologue lists the language as "6b (endangered)", according to Henry Tourneux in 2004, 5000 people still spoke the language. However, many people now speak Shuwa Arabic , which is increasingly displacing the native languages and dialects as the lingua franca .
The language is written in Latin script.
Individual evidence
- ↑ Afade | Ethnologue Source: Ethnologue (English), accessed on February 9, 2016