Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Northwest Bantu

 
Wikipedia: Northwest Bantu
Northwest Bantu
Forest Bantu
Geographic
distribution:
Cameroon, Gabon, Republic of the Congo, DR Congo
Genetic
classification
:
Niger-Congo
 Atlantic-Congo
  Benue-Congo
   Bantoid
    Southern Bantoid
     Bantu
      Northwest Bantu
Subdivisions:
≈ zones A–C

The Northwest Bantu or Forest Bantu languages are those Narrow Bantu languages which fall outside Central or Savannah Bantu. They are both the most divergent and the most diverse group of Bantu languages. One salient distinction between the two groups is their mirror-image tone systems: where Northwest Bantu has a high tone in a word, Central generally has a low tone in that word's cognate, and vice versa.

Conceptions of Northwest Bantu generally include zones A, A and B, or A through C in Guthrie's geographic classification. The exact extent of Northwest Bantu depends on the author; most Bantuists include zone A or zones A and B, others add zones C, D10, D30, H10, H40, D21–23, and some of the D40 languages. Some go so far as to include Mamfe and Grassfields Bantu.[1]

Other than the H40 language Kongo, which is not frequently included, the numerically most important Northwest Bantu language is the zone-A Beti dialect cluster, consisting of Fang, Ewondo, Bulu, and other varieties spoken by two million people. These are mutually intelligible, but considered separate languages because the people are ethnically distinct. Another important language is the zone-C Tetela language, with close to a million speakers.

References

  1. ^ Derek Nurse, 2008, Tense and Aspect in Bantu



Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Northwest Bantu" Read more