Kadugli, also Katcha-Kadugli-Miri or Central Kadu, is a Kadu language or dialect cluster spoken in Kordofan. Stevenson treats the varieties as dialects of one language, and they share a single ISO code, though Schadeberg (1989) treats them as separate languages.
Kadugli | |
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Central Kadu | |
Native to | Sudan |
Region | Kordofan |
Ethnicity | Kadugli, Katcha, Damba, Tumma |
Native speakers | 75,000 (2004)[1] |
Language family | Kadu
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Dialects |
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Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | xtc |
Glottolog | katc1249 |
There are five commonly cited varieties. Three of them are rather divergent, on the verge of being distinct languages:
However, they share a single orthography and use the same literacy materials (Ethnologue).
Of the two other commonly cited varieties, Damba is somewhat closer to Kadugli, while Tumma appears to be a (sub)dialect of Katcha.
Villages in which the dialects are spoken according to the 22nd edition of Ethnologue:
Languages of Sudan | |||||||
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Official languages | |||||||
Indigenous languages |
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Immigrant languages | |||||||
Other languages |
Kordofanian languages (geographic) | |||||||
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Talodi–Heiban |
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Katla-Rashad |
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Kadu |
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Lafofa |
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