Kanuri language
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Kanuri | ||
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Spoken in: | Nigeria, Niger, Chad, Cameroon | |
Region: | West Africa | |
Total speakers: | 4 million | |
Language family: | Nilo-Saharan Saharan Western Kanuri |
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Language codes | ||
ISO 639-1: | kr | |
ISO 639-2: | kau | |
ISO 639-3: | variously: kau — Kanuri (generic) knc — Central Kanuri kby — Manga Kanuri krt — Tumari Kanuri bms — Bilma Kanuri kbl — Kanembu |
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Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. See IPA chart for English for an English-based pronunciation key. |
Kanuri is a dialect continuum spoken by approximately 4 million people in Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Cameroon, as well as small minorities in southern Libya and by a diaspora in Sudan. It belongs to the Western Saharan subphylum of Nilo-Saharan. Kanuri is the language associated with the Kanem and Bornu empires which dominated the Lake Chad region for a thousand years.
The basic word order of Kanuri sentences is Subject Object Verb. It is typologically unusual in simultaneously having postpositions and post-nominal modifiers - for example, "Bintu's pot" would be expressed as nje Bintu-be, "pot Bintu-of".
Kanuri has three tones: high, low, and falling. It has an extensive system of consonant weakening (for example, sa- "they" + -buna "have eaten" > za-wuna "they have eaten".
Traditionally a local lingua franca, its usage has declined in recent decades.
Most first-language speakers speak Hausa or Arabic as a second language.
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[edit] Geographic distribution
Kanuri is spoken mainly in lowlands of the Lake Chad basin, with speakers in Cameroon, Chad, Niger, Nigeria and Sudan.
[edit] Dialects or languages
The Ethnologue divides Kanuri into the following languages, while many linguists (eg Cyffer 1998) regard them as dialects of a single language:
- Central Kanuri
- Manga Kanuri
- Tumari Kanuri
- Kanembu
SIL considers "Kanuri" a "macrolanguage" grouping the first three.
[edit] Written Kanuri
Kanuri has been written using the Ajami Arabic script, mainly in religious or court contexts, for at least four hundred years[1]. More recently, it is also sometimes written in a modified Latin script.
[edit] Alphabet
a b c d e ǝ f g h i j k l m n ny o p r ɍ s sh t u w y z
[edit] External links
[edit] Sources
- Ethnologue report for Kanuri
- Norbert Cyffer, A Sketch of Kanuri. Rudiger Koppe Verlag: Koln 1998.
- Documentation for ISO 639 identifier: kau