Ogoni languages

Ogoni
Kegboid
Geographic
distribution
SE Nigeria
EthnicityOgoni people
Linguistic classificationNiger–Congo?
Subdivisions
  • East
  • West
Language codes
Glottologogon1240

The Ogoni languages, or Kegboid languages, are the five languages of the Ogoni people of Rivers State, Nigeria.

They fall into two clusters, East and West, with a limited degree of mutual intelligibility between members of each cluster. The Ogoni think of the cluster members as separate languages.

The classification of the Ogoni languages is as follows:

  • East: Khana and Tẹẹ, with around 1,800,000 speakers between them, and Gokana, with about 250,000.
  • West: Eleme, with about 90,000 speakers, and Baan, with around 50,500.

Names and locations

Below is a list of language names, populations, and locations from Blench (2019).[1]


Language Branch Dialects Alternate spellings Own name for language Endonym(s) Other names (location-based) Other names for language Exonym(s) Speakers Location(s)
Gokana Kegboid 54,000 (1973 SIL) Rivers State, Gokana–Tai–Eleme LGA
Khana Kegboid Yeghe, Nyokhana, Ken–Khana, Boúe, Kaa Khana Ogoni (ethnic and political term includes Gokana) 76,713 (1926 Talbot);[2] 90,000 (SIL) Rivers State, Khana/Oyigbo and Gokana–Tai–Eleme LGAs
Eleme West 55,000 (1987 UBS) Rivers State, Gokana–Tai–Eleme LGA
Tẹẹ West Tai Tèẹ̀ ̣ Tèẹ̀ ̣ 313,000 (2006) Rivers State, Tèẹ̀ ̣Local Government Area (TALGA)
Baan Ka-Ban, Kesari Ban–Ogoi Goi, Ogoi Fewer than 5,000 (1990) Rivers State, Gokana–Tai–Eleme LGA, Ban–Ogoi plus villages

See also

Gidox edition.... 1. What “Proto-Ogoni” means Ogoni is a group of related languages (like Khana, Gokana, Eleme, Tai, etc.) Proto-Ogoni is the hypothetical parent language that existed hundreds or thousands of years ago It was never written down — it’s reconstructed by linguists 2. What “reconstruction” means Reconstruction is the method linguists use to rebuild old languages by comparing related modern languages. Example: If several Ogoni languages have similar words: Khana: kụ́m (fire) Gokana: kụ́m Eleme: kụ́b A linguist might reconstruct a Proto-Ogoni form like:

  • kụ́m (“fire”)

(The * means “reconstructed, not directly recorded”) 3. What Proto-Ogoni reconstructions include They can reconstruct: Words (vocabulary) Sounds (pronunciation system) Grammar (word order, verb forms, noun classes) Meaning changes over time 4. Why this matters Proto-Ogoni reconstructions help us: Understand Ogoni history and migration See how languages in the Niger Delta are related Preserve cultural heritage Compare Ogoni with other Niger-Congo languages

References

  1. ^ Blench, Roger (2019). An Atlas of Nigerian Languages (4th ed.). Cambridge: Kay Williamson Educational Foundation.
  2. ^ Talbot, P. Amaury 1926. The peoples of Southern Nigeria. A sketch of the history, ethnology and languages with an abstract of the 1923 census. 4 vols. London.

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