Doyayo language

Doyayo (ethnonym: Dowayo) is a language of the Duru branch of Adamawa languages spoken in Cameroon.

Doyayo
Dowayo
RegionCameroon
Native speakers
(18,000 cited 1985)[1]
Dialects
  • Sewe
Language codes
ISO 639-3dow
Glottologdoya1240[2]
PersonDoo²waa²³yɔ¹
LanguageDoo²³ya̰a̰¹yɔ¹

Doyayo (Doo²³ya̰a̰¹yɔ¹ 'man's mouth'; alternatively Doo²waa²³ya̰a̰¹yɔ¹ 'man's child's mouth') is spoken by the Dowayo (or Doo²waa²³yɔ¹ 'man's child') ethnic group.

Dialects

Doyayo dialects are:[3]

  • Markɛ (spoken in the northwestern plains)
  • Tɛ̰ɛ̰rɛ of Poli
  • Southern Tɛ̰ɛ̰rɛ (spoken in the mountains to the south)
  • Sewe (Séwé)

(Note that there are two distinct Tɛ̰ɛ̰rɛ dialects.)

Blench (2004) considers the Sewe dialect to be a separate language, no more closely related to Dowayo than to Koma and Vere.

References

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