Makaa–Njem languages
Bantu language group spoken in Cameroon
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Makaa–Njem languages are a group of Bantu languages spoken in Cameroon, the Central African Republic, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon and the Republic of the Congo. They are coded Zone A.80 in Guthrie's classification.
Geographic
distributionSouthern Cameroon and neighbouring areas
distributionSouthern Cameroon and neighbouring areas
Subdivisions
- Mvumboic (Kwasio)
- Pomo–Bomwali
| Makaa–Njem | |
|---|---|
| Geographic distribution | Southern Cameroon and neighbouring areas |
| Linguistic classification | Niger–Congo? |
| Subdivisions |
|
| Language codes | |
| Glottolog | maka1323 |
The Makaa–Njem languages (excluding Kako) | |
According to Nurse & Philippson (2003), adding the Kako languages (Guthrie's A.90) forms a valid node, called Pomo–Bomwali (Kairn Klieman 1997).
Languages
Kako
The Guthrie Kako (A.90) languages are:
- Kwakum
- Pol
- Pomo-Kweso (Pomo, Kweso)
- Kako.
Makaa–Njem
The Guthrie Makaa–Njem (A.80) languages are:
| Language name | Primary location | Secondary location(s) | Ethnic group(s) | No. speakers[1] | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bekwel | Congo | Cameroon, Gabon | Bekwel | 12,060 | Close to Nkonabeeb and Koonzime. Cameroonian speakers also use Mpongmpong.[2] |
| Bomwali | Congo | Cameroon | Bomwali | 39,280 | |
| Byep | Cameroon | None | Maka | 9,500 | Also called North Makaa, though not intelligible with Makaa.[3] |
| Kol | Cameroon | Gabon | Bekol | 12,000 | Speakers use Makaa or Koonzime as well.[4] |
| Koonzime | Cameroon | None | Badwe'e, Nzime | 30,000 | Badwe'e speak Koozime dialect; Nzime speak Koonzime dialect. Used as a second language by many Baka.[5] |
| Makaa | Cameroon | None | Maka | 80,000 | Related to Byep (North Makaa) and Kol, although unintelligible with them.[6] |
| Mpiemo | Central African Republic | Cameroon, Congo | Mbimu | 29,000 | |
| Mpumpong | Cameroon | None | Nkonabeeb | 45,000 | |
| Ngumba (Kwasio) | Cameroon | Equatorial Guinea | Mabi, Ngumba, Bujeba, Gyele (Koya, Kola) | 22,000 | The Gyele are Pygmies |
| Njyem | Cameroon | Congo | Njyem | 7,000 | Spoken by many Baka as a second language.[7] |
| Swo | Cameroon | None | Swo | 9,000 | High level of influence from Beti.[8] |
| Ukhwejo | Central African Republic | None | Benkonjo | 2,000 |
Maho (2009) adds Shiwe (Oshieba) of central Gabon.
Glottolog classifies the languages as follows:[9]
- Makaa–Kako (A.80-90) languages:
- Kako (or Mkako, Nkoxo, Dikaka, Yaka)
- Kwakum (or Kpakum, Pakum, Bakum, Abakum, Abakoum, Akpwakum)
- Pol (or Pol, Pori, Pul) (Azom, Polri Kinda)
- Pomo-Kweso (Pomo, Kweso)
- Makaa–Njem (A.80) languages
- Bomwali (or Bomali, Boumoali, Bumali, Lino, Sangasanga)
- Yambe
- Mpoic languages:
- Mpongmpong (or Mpumpong, Pongpong, Mpompo, Mpopo, Mbombo, Bombo)
- Bekwil (or Bekwie, Bekwel, Bakwil, Bakwele, Okpele)
- Njemic languages:
- Mpiemo–Ukhwejo languages:
- Western A80 languages:
- Mvumboic languages:
- Gyele (or Guiele, Giele, Gieli, Gyeli, Bogyeli, Bondjiel, Bajeli, Babinga, Bakola, Bakuele, Bekoe, Likoya)
- Kwasio (or Kwassio, Bisio, Bissio, Bisiwo, Bujeba, Mabi, Mabea, Ngumba, Mgoumba, Ngoumba, Mvumbo)
- Shiwe (or Shiwa, Chiwa, Oshieba, Ossyeba)
- Makaaic languages:
- Mvumboic languages: