Ndali language
Ndali, or Chindali, is a Bantu language spoken by an increasing population in southern Tanzania of 150,000 (1987) and in northern Malawi by 70,000 (2003).
Ndali | |
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Chindali | |
Native to | Tanzania, Malawi |
Ethnicity | Ndali |
Native speakers | (220,000 cited 1987–2003)[1] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | ndh |
Glottolog | ndal1241 |
M.301 [2] |
Sukwa, or Chisukwa, spoken in the Misuku Hills of northern Malawi, is closely related to Ndali, and both languages are fairly close to Lambya.[3]
For further information see Kershner (2001).[4]
References
- Ndali at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
- Jouni Filip Maho, 2009. New Updated Guthrie List Online
- The University of Malawi Language Mapping Survey for Northern Malawi (2006), p. 16.
- Kershner, Tiffany (2001). "Imperfectivity in Chisukwa" in Explorations in African Linguistics: From Lamso to Sesotho, eds. Robert Botne and Rose Vondrasek, Bloomington: Indiana University Working Papers in Linguistics, pp. 37–52.
External links
- Language Mapping Survey for Northern Malawi. University of Malawi Centre for Language Studies, 2006. Contains comparative vocabulary and a short text (the Tortoise and the Hare) in Chindali and other languages.
- Language Map of Northern Malawi
- Paper by Martin Walsh and Imani Swilla on South-West Tanzanian languages (2002)
Languages of Malawi | |
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Official languages | |
Regional languages |
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Note: The Guthrie classification is geographic and its groupings do not imply a relationship between the languages within them. |
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