The Mbum–Day languages are a subgroup of the old Adamawa languages family (G6, G13, G14, & Day), provisionally now a branch of the Savanna languages. These languages are spoken in southern Chad, northwestern Central African Republic, northern Cameroon, and eastern Nigeria.
Mbum–Day | |
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Geographic distribution | southern Chad, northwestern CAR, northern Cameroon, eastern Nigeria |
Linguistic classification | Niger–Congo?
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Subdivisions | |
Glottolog | mbum1256 |
Blench (2006) groups the Mbum (G6), Bua (G13), Kim (G14), and Day languages together within part of a larger Gur–Adamawa language continuum.[1]
The Kim, Mbum, and Day are also grouped together in an automated computational analysis (ASJP 4) by Müller et al. (2013)[2]
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Waja–Kam | |||||||||||||
Leko–Nimbari |
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Bambukic |
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Mbum–Day |
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Others |
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