Table of Contents
Where did the Niger-Congo language family originate from?
West Africa
Origin. The language family most likely originated in or near the area where these languages were spoken prior to Bantu expansion (i.e. West Africa or Central Africa).
Is Mande Niger a Congo?
The Mande languages show lexical similarities with the Atlantic–Congo language family, and the two have been classified together as a Niger–Congo language family since the 1950s. However, the Mande languages lack the noun-class morphology that is the primary identifying feature of the Atlantic–Congo languages.
What percent of the world speaks a Niger-Congo language?
There are over 6900 languages currently spoken in the world….Language families by speakers.
Language family | Approx. # of speakers | \% of world population |
---|---|---|
1. Indo-European | 2.562 billion | 44.78\% |
2. Sino-Tibetan | 1.276 billion | 22.28\% |
3. Niger-Congo | 358 million | 6.26\% |
4. Afro-Asiatic | 340 million | 5.93\% |
Where are Nilo-Saharan languages spoken?
The Nilo-Saharan languages are a proposed family of African languages spoken by some 50–60 million people, mainly in the upper parts of the Chari and Nile rivers, including historic Nubia, north of where the two tributaries of the Nile meet.
How old is the Niger-Congo language family?
The earliest evidence of a Niger-Congo language dates back to Portuguese records of the 16th century. However, few grammars were published prior to the 19th century although the first known grammar of an African language (Kongo) was written by an Italian missionary in 1659.
What language families are only in Japan and Korea?
Japonic languages
Japonic | |
---|---|
Japanese–Ryukyuan | |
Geographic distribution | Japan, possibly formerly on the Korean Peninsula |
Linguistic classification | One of the world’s primary language families |
Proto-language | Proto-Japonic |
Is Niger a language?
French
Niger/Official languages
Is Arabic a Nilo-Saharan language?
A number of Nilo-Saharan languages became endangered in the 20th century because their speakers adopted other, more prestigious and more widely used languages such as Arabic and Swahili. This is particularly true of languages spoken by fewer than 1,000 speakers.
Is Arabic a Nilo-Saharan language group?
Gule (or Anej), a Komuz language of Sudan, is now extinct, and the people speak Arabic. The majority of the more than 100 Nilo-Saharan languages nevertheless thrive as oral, and sometimes as written, means of communication.
Are the Niger-Congo languages related?
Niger-Congo languages, a family of languages of Africa, which in terms of the number of languages spoken, their geographic extent, and the number of speakers is by far the largest language family in Africa.
Is Swahili tonal?
Swahili is one of the few African languages that doesn’t have a system of tones. Swahili is part of the Bantu language group; within this group, Swahili and its dialects are the only languages that don’t use tones.