Karko (language)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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 )

See also

Web links