Kwah language

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Kwah_language an entity of type: Thing

Baa, auch bekannt als Kwa, Kwah, ist eine isolierte Niger-Kongo-Sprache. Die Sprache ist sprachwissenschaftlich noch wenig erforscht und ist gerade dabei, auszusterben, da ihre Sprecher immer mehr das Englische übernehmen. rdf:langString
Kwah (Kwa), also known as Baa (Bàː), is a Niger–Congo language of uncertain affiliation; the more it has been studied, the more divergent it appears. Joseph Greenberg counted it as one of the Bambukic languages of the Adamawa family. Boyd (1989) assigned it its own branch within Waja–Jen. Kleinewillinghöfer (1996) removed it from Waja–Jen as an independent branch of Adamawa. When Blench (2008) broke up Adamawa, Kwah became a provisional independent branch of his larger Savannas family. Baa traditional religion has two main deities, Gbandima and Kassimin. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Baa (Sprache)
rdf:langString Kwah language
rdf:langString Kwah
xsd:integer 31536653
xsd:integer 1046418273
rdf:langString Baa
xsd:integer 1992
rdf:langString
rdf:langString nyaa Báà
rdf:langString Báà
rdf:langString e18
rdf:langString Numan LGA, Adamawa State
xsd:integer 7000
rdf:langString Baa, auch bekannt als Kwa, Kwah, ist eine isolierte Niger-Kongo-Sprache. Die Sprache ist sprachwissenschaftlich noch wenig erforscht und ist gerade dabei, auszusterben, da ihre Sprecher immer mehr das Englische übernehmen.
rdf:langString Kwah (Kwa), also known as Baa (Bàː), is a Niger–Congo language of uncertain affiliation; the more it has been studied, the more divergent it appears. Joseph Greenberg counted it as one of the Bambukic languages of the Adamawa family. Boyd (1989) assigned it its own branch within Waja–Jen. Kleinewillinghöfer (1996) removed it from Waja–Jen as an independent branch of Adamawa. When Blench (2008) broke up Adamawa, Kwah became a provisional independent branch of his larger Savannas family. Blench (2019) lists the locations of Baa as Gyakan and Kwa towns (located near Munga) in Numan LGA, Adamawa State, Nigeria. One Baa-speaking person (singular) is raBáà (sg.), and more than one would be Báà (pl.); the language is referred to by speakers as nyaa Báà. The Baa varieties in each of the two towns differ primarily in phonology. Baa traditional religion has two main deities, Gbandima and Kassimin.
rdf:langString Kwa
rdf:langString Gyakan
rdf:langString Niger-Congo
rdf:langString kwaa1262
rdf:langString Baa
rdf:langString kwb
rdf:langString nyaa Báà
rdf:langString raBáà
rdf:langString Báà
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3172

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