Jiiddu language
Jiiddu | |
---|---|
Native to | Somalia |
Region | Southwestern (Qoryoley, Kurtunwarey and Sablaale) |
Native speakers | 100,000 (2019)[1] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | jii |
Glottolog | jiid1238 |
Jiiddu (also known as Jiddu or Af-Jiiddu) is an Afro-Asiatic language spoken by the Jiiddu Tribe of the Digil, a Somali clan inhabiting southern Somalia. It is part of the family's Cushitic branch, and has an estimated 100,000 speakers mainly residing in the Lower Shabeelle, Bay and Middle Jubba regions.[2]
Typically classified as part of the Digil group of languages, Jiiddu has a different phonology and sentence structure from Somali. However, it more closely resembles Somali than Baiso. It also possibly shares commonalities with the Hadiyya, Gedeo, Alaba-Kabeena, Konso and Kambaata languages spoken in southern Ethiopia.[3]
There is Jiddu Dictionary wrote by Prof. Saalim Aliyow ibrow. The current sultan of Jiddo is called Warsame Alio Ibrow.
Notes[]
- ^ Jiiddu at Ethnologue (19th ed., 2016)
- ^ Raymond G. Gordon Jr., ed. 2005. Ethnologue: Languages of the World. 15th edition. Dallas: Summer Institute of Linguistics.
- ^ Ethnologue - Jiiddu language
- East Cushitic languages
- Languages of Somalia
- Afroasiatic language stubs
- Somalia stubs