Eastern Mande languages

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eastern Mande
Eastern Eastern Mande
Geographic
distribution
Burkina Faso, Ghana, Benin, Nigeria
Linguistic classificationNiger–Congo
  • Mande
    • Southeastern Mande
      • Eastern Mande
Glottologeast2697

The Eastern Mande languages (called Eastern Eastern Mande by Kastenholz, and Niger–Volta by Schreiber[1]) are a branch of the Mande languages spoken in three areas: northwest Burkina Faso, the border region of northern Benin and Nigeria, and a single language (Bissa) spoken in Ghana.

Member languages[]

Classification[]

The following internal classification is from Dwyer (1989, 1996), as summarized in Williamson & Blench 2000.[2]

 East Mande 
 Samo–Busa 

Samo languages

Busa  languages 

BusaBoko

ShangaTyenga

Bissa

Vydrin (2009) places San (Samo) with Bisa.[3]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Schreiber, Henning. 2008. Eine historische Phonologie der Niger-Volta-Sprachen: Ein Beitrag zur Erforschung der Sprachgeschichte der östlichen Ost-Mandesprachen (Mande Languages and Linguistics 7). Cologne: Rüdiger Köppe.
  2. ^ Heine, Bernd; Nurse, Derek, eds. (2000). African languages : an introduction. Cambridge [England]: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521661781. OCLC 42810789.
  3. ^ Valentin, Vydrin. On the problem of the Proto-Mande homeland (PDF). OCLC 798912747.


Retrieved from ""