Gbeya language
Gbeya (Gbɛ́yá, Gbaya-Bossangoa) is a Gbaya language of the Central African Republic. Ethnologue reports it may be mutually intelligible with Bozom.[2]
Gbeya | |
---|---|
Native to | Central African Republic |
Native speakers | (ca. 250,000 cited 1996–2005)[1] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | Either:gbp – Gbaya-Bossangoasqm – Suma |
Glottolog | gbey1244 |
Suma (Súmā) is a language variety closely related to Gbeya.[3]
Phonology
References
- Gbaya-Bossangoa at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
Suma at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) - Samarin, William J. (1966). The Gbeya language: Grammar, texts, and vocabularies (PDF). ASIN B000S2UYWE. hdl:1807/67174. OCLC 897343. Book reviewed in both Courtenay, Karen (1 January 1968). "Review of The Gbeya Language: Grammar, Texts, and Vocabularies". Language. 44 (2): 420–423. doi:10.2307/411642. hdl:1807/67174. JSTOR 411642, and Crabb, David W. (1969). ": The Gbeya Language: Grammar, Texts, and Vocabularies . William J. Samarin". American Anthropologist. 71 (2): 365–366. doi:10.1525/aa.1969.71.2.02a00600.
- Suma materials from Raymond Boyd
- Samarin, William J. (1966). The Gbeya Language Grammar, Texts, and Vocabularies (PDF). University of California Press Berkeley and Los Angeles.
External links
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