Northeast Bantu languages
The Northeast Bantu languages are a group of Bantu languages spoken in East Africa. In Guthrie's geographic classification, they fall within Bantu zones E50 plus E46 (Sonjo), E60 plus E74a (Taita), F21–22, J, G60, plus Northeast Coast Bantu (of zones E & G).[1] Some of these languages (F21, most of E50, and some of J) share a phonological innovation called Dahl's law that is unlikely to be borrowed as a productive process, though individual words reflecting Dahl's law have been borrowed into neighboring languages.
Northeast Bantu | |
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Northeast Savanna Bantu | |
Geographic distribution | Tanzania, Kenya |
Linguistic classification | Niger–Congo
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Glottolog | nort3203 nyat1247 (Nyaturu–Nilamba) |
The languages, or clusters, are:
- Kikuyu–Kamba AKA Thagiicu (primarily E50):
- Chaga–Taita
- Taita (Dawida; E70) – Sagalla
- Chaga languages (E60)
- Northeast Coast Bantu (G10-G40): Swahili (E70), etc.
- Takama: Sukuma–Nyamwezi, Kimbu (F20), Iramba–Isanzu, Nyaturu (Rimi) (F30), ?Holoholo–Tumbwe–Lumbwe (D20)
- Great Lakes Bantu (zone J): Rwanda-Rundi, Ganda, etc.
- Bena–Kinga (G60): Sangu, Hehe, Bena, Pangwa, Kinga, Wanji, Kisi, ?Manda (N10)
Notes
- Derek Nurse, 2003, The Bantu 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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