Northwest Kainji languages

Northwest Kainji
Lela, Duka
Geographic
distribution
Nigeria
Linguistic classificationNiger–Congo?
Glottologduka1247

The six Northwest Kainji languages, also known as the Lela languages or the Duka languages, are spoken near Kainji Lake on the Niger River in Nigeria. They are distinguishable from other Kainji languages by the reduction of their noun-class prefixes to single consonants.[1]

Classification

Blench (2018)

Northwest Kainji classification by Blench (2018):[2]

  • Northwest Kainji
    • ? Damakawa
      • cLela
      • Hun-Saare
      • Ma'in, Wurə-Gwamhyə-Mba

The position of Damakawa is uncertain.

Blench (2010)

In Blench (2010), Lela (C'lela and Ribah) is divergent from the other languages, though poorly attested Damakawa has similarities.[1]

  • Northwest Kainji

References

  1. ^ a b Roger Blench, 2010, The Northwest Kainji languages
  2. ^ Blench, Roger M. 2018. Nominal affixing in the Kainji languages of northwestern and central Nigeria. In John R. Watters (ed.), East Benue-Congo: Nouns, pronouns, and verbs, 59–106. Berlin: Language Science Press. doi:10.5281/zenodo.1314323
  • v
  • t
  • e
JukunoidKainji
Kambari
Basa
Kamuku
Shiroro
Northwest
Lakes
East
Northern
Kauru
Shammo
Other
Plateau
Tarokoid
South
Alumic
Ninzic
East
Central
Beromic
Yukubenic
Ndunic
others

This article about Kainji languages is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e