Kimba language

Kimba (Tsikimba; or the Kambari II languages) is a Kainji language cluster of Nigeria spoken by the Kambari people. As of 2004, there were 100,000 native speakers.

Kimba
Tsikimba
Native toNigeria
RegionNiger State
EthnicityKambari
Native speakers
100,000 (2004)[1]
Dialects
  • Kimba
  • Agaushi
  • Ngwunci
Language codes
ISO 639-3kdl
Glottologtsik1238[2]
Kimba
PeopleAkimba
LanguageTsɨkimba
Gaushi
PeopleAgaushi
LanguageTsɨgaushi
Wənci
PersonMawunci
PeopleŊwənci
LanguageTsuwənci

Languages

There are three languages: Kimba, Gaushi (Agaushi) and Wənci (Ngwunci). Blench considers Gaushi and Wənci (Ngwunci) to be distinct languages.[3]

The Kimba language has three dialects: Auna, Yumu and Wara.

The Ashɛ (Gaushi, Agaushi) language is spoken in Garafini, southwest of Lake Kainji.

The Ngwunci language has two dialects: Agwara (tsu-saweni) and Rofia (tsu-ɓʷəshi).[4]


gollark: it sets everything on fire.
gollark: ClF3 is some sort of horribly cursed chemical.
gollark: I'm hollark. I *would* be gollark, but I won the letter h in a giveaway some months ago.
gollark: I am NOT being sponsored by ANY pizza companies to display subliminal pizza advertising OF ANY KIND.
gollark: ÆÆÆÆÆÆÆ it's not pizza it's hyperbolic geometry.

References

  1. Kimba at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  2. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Tsikimba". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
  3. Roger Blench, 2010. The Kambari languages
  4. Blench, Roger (2012). "The Kainji languages of northwestern and central Nigeria" (PDF). Cambridge: Kay Williamson Educational Foundation.


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