Gokana language
Gokana (Gòkánà) is an Ogoni language spoken by some 130,000 people in Rivers State, Nigeria.
Gokana | |
---|---|
Native to | Nigeria |
Region | Gokana, Rivers State |
Native speakers | (100,000 cited 1989)[1] |
Niger–Congo
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | gkn |
Glottolog | goka1239 [2] |
Writing system
Uppercase letters | A | B | D | E | Ẹ | F | G | Gb | Gy | I | K | Kp | Ky | L | M | N | Ng | Nv | Ny | O | Ọ | P | S | T | V | Z |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lowercase letters | a | b | d | e | ẹ | f | g | gb | gy | i | k | kp | ky | l | m | n | ng | nv | ny | o | ọ | p | s | t | v | z |
Nasal vowels are indicated by a tilde and tones are indicated by an acute or grave accent:
- The high tone is indicated by an acute accent : á, ã́, é, ẹ́, ẽ́, í, ĩ́, ó, ọ́, ṍ, ú, ṹ, ḿ ;
- The low tone is indicated by a grave accent : à, ã̀, è, ẹ̀, ẽ̀, ì, ĩ̀, ò, ọ̀, õ̀, ù, ũ̀, m̀ ;
- The middle tone is indicated with no diacritic.
gollark: <@151391317740486657> ACTUALLY THINK PLEASE
gollark: But concurrent lua with side effects everywhere and overuse of debug? It'll be impossible.
gollark: But concurrency will improve potatOS's speed *and* make it 4050‰ harder to reason about!
gollark: With use of concurrency it may become as much as potato % faster.
gollark: PotatOS Tetrahedron is coming soon and will streamline the potatOS code to make it easier and cooler.
References
- Gokana at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
- Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Gokana". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
- "A global linguistic database:Gokana" Tower of Babel Project
- Brosnahan, L. F. (1964) "Outlines of the Phonology of the Gokana Dialect of Ogoni" Journal of West African Languages 1(1): pp. 43–48
- Brosnahan, L. F. (1967) "A Word List of the Gokana Dialect of Ogoni" Journal of West African Languages 4(2): pp. 43–52
- Hyman, Larry M. and Comrie, B. (1981) "Logophoric Reference in Gokana" Journal of African Languages and Linguistics (Leiden) 3(1): pp. 19–37
- Hyman, Larry M. (1982) "The representation of nasality in Gokana" In Hulst, Harry, van der and Smith, Norval (eds.) (1982) The Structure of Phonological Representations part, 1 Foris Publishing, Dordrecht, Holland, ISBN 90-70176-53-X
- Yan Huang (2003) "Switch-reference in Amele and logophoric verbal suffix in Gokana: a generalized neo-Gricean pragmatic analysis" In Georgiafentis, M.; Haeberli, E, and Varlokosta, S. (eds.) (2003) Reading Working Papers in Linguistics Volume 7, pp. 53–76, School of Linguistics and Applied Language Studies, University of Reading, Reading, UK
- Bond, Oliver and Anderson, Gregory D. S. (2005) "Divergent Structure in Ogonoid Languages" In (2005) Proceedings of the Berkeley Linguistic Society Volume 31, Berkeley Linguistic Society, Berkeley, California
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.