Twendi language
Twendi, or Cambap as it is also known, is a nearly extinct Mambiloid language of Cameroon. Speakers have largely shifted to the closely related language Kwanja, and Twendi has not been passed down to children for decades. The language is spoken in the villages of Cambap and Sanga on the Tikar Plain by no more than 30 people, the youngest of whom were born in the 1940s.[3]
Twendi | |
---|---|
Cambap | |
Native to | Cameroon |
Ethnicity | one thousand (1991)[1] |
Native speakers | 30 (2000)[1] |
Niger–Congo
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | twn |
Glottolog | twen1242 [2] |
Classification
Twendi is a Mambiloid language belonging to the Mambila group. Speakers consider Twendi to be a dialect of Kwanja, but lexical evidence from a variety of Mambiloid languages, especially Kabri, indicates its affinity to the Manmbila group.[4]
gollark: I assume that forklift certification requires you to be able to drive a forklift.
gollark: Don't you need to spend some time actually doing training?
gollark: I buy boxes of 50 identical pens periodically to keep them stocked.
gollark: This is obviously a much more important business priority for Samsung's semiconductor people than fixing their 3nm process and the yields on all their other recent ones.
gollark: That's not much of an explanation.
References
- Twendi at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
- Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Cambap-Langa". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
- Connell, B. (2002). Aspects of the phonetics of Cambap. Studies in African Linguistics, 31 (1 & 2)
- Blench, R. M. (1993). An outline classification of the Mambiloid languages. Journal of West African Languages, 23(1), 105-118.
External links
- Twendi at EndangeredLanguages.com
- Moribund languages of the Nigeria-Cameroon borderland
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