Kaba language

Bongo–Bagirmi language of Chad and the CAR From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kaba proper is a Bongo–Bagirmi language of Chad and the Central African Republic. It is one of several local languages that go by the names Kaba and Sara. There are three ISO codes, which Ethnologue acknowledges may be the same thing.

Native speakers
(53,000 cited 1993–1996)[1]
DialectsDunje (Dendje), Mbanga (Banga), Na (Náà), Tie (Tiye)
Quick facts Native to, Native speakers ...
Kaba
Sara Kaba
Native toCentral African Republic, Chad
Native speakers
(53,000 cited 1993–1996)[1]
DialectsDunje (Dendje), Mbanga (Banga), Na (Náà), Tie (Tiye)
Language codes
ISO 639-3Variously:
kwv  Kaba Náà
sbz  Sara Kaba (Ta Sara)
ksp  Kaba
Glottologsara1348  adds Deme
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Phonology

More information Labial, Alveolar ...
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  • /k/ can often be heard as a uvular plosive [q].
  • /k/ can also often be pronounced as a fricative /x/ by some speakers.
  • /ɗ/ is often interchangeable with [r], but is pronounced [ɗ] in careful speech, except word-finally, where it is pronounced [r].
  • /tʃ/ is only found in one word.
More information Front, Central ...
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  • Vowel length is often not regarded to be phonemic, but it is a contrastive feature in the verbal morphology.

Kaba has three tones: high, low, and mid.[2]

See also

References

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