Karko (language)
| Karko | ||
|---|---|---|
| 
 Spoken in  | 
Nuba Mountains ( Sudan ) | |
| speaker | 12,986 (1984) | |
| Linguistic  classification  | 
||
| Official status | ||
| Official language in | nowhere official language | |
| Language codes | ||
| ISO 639 -1 | 
 -  | 
|
| ISO 639 -2 | 
 nub  | 
|
| ISO 639-3 | 
 kko  | 
|
Karko (also called Garko or Kithonirishe ) is the language of the Karko people who live in the Nuba Mountains in Sudan and are among the peoples known as " Nuba ".
Many Karko now also use the Arabic language .
Language policy
Mende Nazer , who claims to be a Karko Nuba, reports in her autobiography Sklavin that the Karko children were forbidden to use their language in school in the 1980s; instead they should have spoken Arabic and the students had been given Arabic names instead of their own.
Examples
| Karko | German | 
|---|---|
| end | gazelle | 
| major | Granary | 
| kooktane | Corn | 
| hawaja | Whiter | 
| Are kukure, are konduk dukre | "The rain is coming, too much rain"  (song that is sung at the beginning of the rainy season)  | 
(from Mende Nazer , slave girl )