Beboide languages

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The beboiden languages ( Beboid for short ) form a sub-unit of the southern bantoid languages , a branch of the Benue-Congo languages , which in turn belong to the Niger-Congo .

The 14 two languages ​​are spoken by around 50,000 people in western Cameroon . The most important language is the Noone with 25,000 speakers. The group is named after the Bebe language , which is spoken by 2,500 people in the Northwest Province.

Position of the Beboid within the Niger-Congo

  • Niger-Congo > Volta-Congo> Benue-Congo> East-Benue-Congo> Bantoid-Cross> Bantoid> South-Bantoid> Beboid

Classification of the two languages

Some researchers have combined Mbe and the Nyang languages with the two languages ​​to form a genetic unit of the Beboid Nyang languages .

See also

literature

  • Joseph Greenberg: The Languages ​​of Africa. Mouton, The Hague and Indiana University Center, Bloomington 1963.
  • Bernd Heine and others (ed.): The languages ​​of Africa. Buske, Hamburg 1981.
  • Bernd Heine and Derek Nurse (eds.): African Languages. An Introduction. Cambridge University Press 2000.
    In it: Kay Williamson and Roger Blench: Niger-Congo.
  • John Bendor-Samuel (Ed.): The Niger-Congo Languages: A Classification and Description of Africa's Largest Language Family. University Press of America, Lanham, New York, London 1989.
    Therein: John R. Watters and Jacqueline Leroy: Southern Bantoid.
  • Patrick Bennett and Jan Sterk: South Central Niger-Congo: A Reclassification. Studies in African Linguistics. 1977.

Web links