Mbukushu language
Mbukushu or Thimbukushu is a Bantu language spoken by 45,000 people along the Kavango East Region in Namibia, where it is a national language, and in Botswana, Angola and Zambia.
Mbukushu | |
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Thimbukushu | |
Native to | Namibia, Angola, Botswana, Zambia |
Region | Kavango East |
Native speakers | 95,000 (2020)[1] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | mhw |
Glottolog | mbuk1240 |
K.333[1] [2] |
In 2022 it was selected among a variety of Mother Tongue languages to be taught in Botswana Primary Schools in the year 2023.
Mbukushu is one of several Bantu languages of the Kavango which have click consonants; Mbukushu has three: tenuis c, voiced gc, and nasalized nc, as well as prenasalized ngc, which vary between speakers as dental, palatal, and postalveolar.[3] It also has a nasal glottal approximant.
References
- Mbukushu at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022)
- Jouni Filip Maho, 2009. New Updated Guthrie List Online
- Nurse, Derek; Philippson, Gérard (2003). The Bantu Languages. Routledge. p. 37. ISBN 0700711341.
External links
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Other Bantu languages | |
Khoisan | |
Sign languages | |
Immigrant languages |
Official language | |
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National languages | |
Non-official |
Indo-European | |
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Bantu | |
Khoisan | |
Immigrant languages |
Official language | |
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Regional languages | |
Indigenous languages | |
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Immigrant languages |
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Note: The Guthrie classification is geographic and its groupings do not imply a relationship between the languages within them. |
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