Basa-Benue language
The Basa language, disambiguated as Basa-Benue, and also called Abacha, Abatsa, ru-Basa, Rubassa, is a Kainji language spoken in central Nigeria, in the vicinity of Bassa, Ankpa, Nasarawa, Gurara, Kwali and Makurdi.[1] Blench (2008) notes that Basa-Makurdi, Basa-Gurara and Basa-Kwali are separate varieties from Basa-Kwomu or Basa-Komo of Bassa, Ankpa and Nasarawa Local Government Areas and other Bassa speakers are Bassa Nge (also known as Bassa Nupe.
Basa | |
---|---|
Basa-Benue | |
ru-basa | |
Native to | Nigeria |
Region | Benue River |
Native speakers | 300,000 (2020)[1] |
Dialects |
|
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | bzw |
Glottolog | basa1282 |
Basa[2] | |
---|---|
Person | bu-Basa |
People | a-Basa |
Language | ru-Basa |
Basa speakers also often speak the Igala language, the Ebira language or the Nupe language.[1]
Dialects and distribution
- Basa-Kwomu (Basa-Komo) dialect spoken in the states of Kogi and Nasarawa in Bassa, Ankpa and Nasarawa Local Government Areas.
- Basa-Makurdi dialect spoken in the state of Benue in Makurdi Local Government Area.
- Basa-Gurara dialect spoken in the state of Niger in Gurara Local Government Area
- Basa-Kwali dialect spoken in the Federal Capital Territory in Kwali Local Government Area.
- Bassa Nge (Bassa Nupe) dialect spoken in Kogi State and Niger State by the Bassa Nge people who also speak the Tako dialect of the Nupe language.
References
- Basa at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022)
- Blench, Roger (2019). An Atlas of Nigerian Languages (4th ed.). Cambridge: Kay Williamson Educational Foundation.
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