Gwandara language

Gwandara is a West Chadic language, and the closest relative of Hausa. Its several dialects are spoken in northern Nigeria, predominantly in the north central region of Nigeria by about 30,000 people. They are found in large numbers in a resettlement town of New Karshi, Karu LGA, Nasarawa State. New Karshi has a Gwandara first class emir Muhammadu Bako III (PhD).

Gwandara
Native toNigeria
Native speakers
30,000[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3gwn
Glottologgwan1268[2]
Linguasphere18-HAA-a

The Nimbia dialect has a duodecimal numeral system (they count in base 12), whereas other dialects, such as Karshi below, have decimal systems:[3]

123456789teneleventwelve
Nimbia dabiugufurubiyarshidebo'otagertanrangwomkwadatuni
Karshi dabiukuhurubiyarishidabakwetakushitaragomgom sha dagom sha bi

It is thought that Nimbia, which is isolated from the rest of Gwandara, acquired its duodecimal system from neighboring East Kainji languages. It is duodecimal even to powers of base twelve:

tuni mbe da13(dozen and one)
gume bi24(two dozen)
gume bi ni da25(two dozen and one)
gume kwada ni kwada143(eleven dozen and eleven)
wo144(gross)
wo bi288(two gross)

References

  1. Gwandara at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  2. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Gwandara". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
  3. Matsushita, 'Decimal vs. Duodecimal'
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