Dendi language

Dendi is a Songhay language used as a trade language across northern Benin (along the Niger River. It forms a dialect cluster with Zarma and Koyraboro Senni but it is heavily influenced by Bariba.

Dendi
RegionBenin
Native speakers
270,000 (2000-2018)[1]
Official status
Recognised minority
language in
Language codes
ISO 639-3ddn
Glottologdend1243
Location of Songhay languages[2]

Northwest Songhay:

  Tagdal

Eastern Songhay:

  Dendi

Dendi has been described as a four-tone language.[3]

Distribution

Dendi is mainly spoken in Northern Benin, but also in other parts of Benin, and neighbouring countries. The Dendi people are the main group in the Departments of Alibori, Borgou, Donga, and Atakora.

In Nigeria, the Dendi people are found in Bordering States (Kebbi, Kwara, Niger, and Sokoto), and in other parts of Nigeria. They are usually referred by the Hausa name Dendawa (which is also used for the Songhai people).

Writing system

Dendi alphabet [4]
Uppercase ABCDE ƐFGGgH IJKKpL MNNYŊŊw/Ŋm OƆPRS TWYZ
Minuscules abcde ɛfggbh ijkkpl mnnyŋŋw/ŋm oɔprs twyz

The grave accent, the acute accent and the macron are used on vowels to indicate tones.[5]

References

  1. Dendi at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022) closed access
  2. This map is based on classification from Glottolog and data from Ethnologue.
  3. Joe Salmons, Accentual change and language contact: Comparative survey and a case study of early Northern Europe
  4. CENALA 1990.
  5. CENALA 2008.

Bibliography

  • Centre national de linguistique appliquée (CENALA) (1990), Alphabet des langues nationales (2 ed.), Cotonou: CENALA
  • Centre national de linguistique appliquée (CENALA) (2008), Alphabet des langues nationales béninoises (in French) (6 ed.), Cotonou: CENALA avec le concours de l’Initiative francophone pour la formation à distance des maîtres (IFADEM)
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