Vere language

The Vere language (Verre, Were), also known as Kobo or Mom Jango, is a member of the Duru branch of Savanna languages. It is spoken across the northern NigerianCameroonian border.

Vere
Mom Jango
Regionnorthern Nigeria and Cameroon
Native speakers
110,000 (2000)[1]
Dialects
  • Mom Jango
  • Momi
Language codes
ISO 639-3ver
Glottologmomj1237  Mom Jango
nort3260  Northern Alantika
vere1252  Vere Kaadam (Momi)

Dialects

Dialects are Mom Jango and Momi (also known as Ziri). These are divergent enough they probably constitute distinct languages. Kleinewillinghöfer (2012) distinguishes three Vere languages:

  • Mom Jango
  • Northern Alantika Vere
  • Vere Kaadam (Momi)

Distribution

Jango is spoken in the villages of Mayo Ini, Nassarwo Koma, Jumɓaare, Mantunaa, Soncha (Choncha), Bambu, DanWumba, Tɛkɛrɛ, Korkai, Gawì, Zaari, Gerta, Kaau Pindu, Garau, Giwaare, Jagu suwa, Vam guiti, Gogura, Tondiire, and Layinde.[2]

References

  1. Vere at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  2. Kleinewillinghöfer, Ulrich (2015). Notes on Jango (Mom Jango).


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