Bankan Tey Dogon
Bankan Tey Dogon, at first called Walo-Kumbe Dogon after the two main villages it is spoken in, also known as Walo and Walonkore, is a divergent, recently described Dogon language spoken in Mali. It was first reported online by Roger Blench,[2] who reports that it is "clearly related to Nanga", which is only known from one report from 1953.
Bankan Tey | |
---|---|
Walo-Kumbe | |
Region | Mali |
Native speakers | (1,300 cited 1998 census)[1] |
Niger–Congo?
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | dbw |
Glottolog | bank1259 |
ELP | Bankan Tey |
A third village investigated at the time, Been, speaks a related but lexically distinct form, Ben Tey Dogon.
References
- Bankan Tey at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
- "DOGON LANGUAGES". Archived from the original on 2013-06-15.
Sources
- Blench, Roger (2005). "A survey of Dogon languages in Mali: Overview". OGMIOS: Newsletter of Foundation for Endangered Languages. 3.02 (26): 14–15. Retrieved 2011-06-30..
- Hochstetler, J. Lee; Durieux, J.A.; E.I.K. Durieux-Boon (2004). Sociolinguistic Survey of the Dogon Language Area (PDF). SIL International. Retrieved 2011-06-30.
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