Kofa
[también conocido como Kota, Gbwata, Batta]Clasificación: Afro-Asiatic
·susceptible de extinción
Clasificación: Afro-Asiatic
·susceptible de extinción
La información está incompleta “Language shift from mother tongue towards Fulfulde in Adamawa State, Nigeria: causes and consequences” (296-225) . Fakuade, Gbenga and Gambo, Matudi and Bashir, Abdullahi (2003)
"[This research] give[s] clear indications that there is a shift from the mother tongue towards Fulfulde in the study area... Fulfulde has intruded into more and more domains of life and assumed more and more functions among the different ethnic groups in the study area. Other languages are less and less used and are finally threatened as the languages of the home."
100% of Bata-speaking respondents reported speaking Bata with their parents, their children, and in their immediate community.
Hausa
Fulfulde
100% of Bata-speaking respondents reported using only Fulfulde and Hausa with friends, "when discussing serious issues," as trade languages, and as the expected languages of wider communication.
Adamawa State, Nigeria
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Isbn | Series | Month | Edition | Num | Year | Title | Booktitle | Pages | Note | Editor | Howpublished | Publisher | Journal | Volume | Address | Institution | Chapter | Translator | School | Url | Author | Free Text Citation | Copied From | Older Adults | Ethnic Population | Young Adults | Private Comment | Speaker Number Text | Date Of Info | Speaker Number | Public Comment | Semi Speakers | Elders | Second Language Speakers | Domains Other Langs | Other Languages Used | Private Comment | Government Support | Speaker Attitude | Public Comment | Institutional Support | Number Speaker Other Languages | Endangerment Level | Transmission | Private Comment | Public Comment | Domains Of Use | Speaker Number Trends | Private Comment | Public Comment | Places | Description | Coordinates |
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FUENTE: “Language shift from mother tongue towards Fulfulde in Adamawa State, Nigeria: causes and consequences” (296-225) . Fakuade, Gbenga and Gambo, Matudi and Bashir, Abdullahi (2003) |
3 | 2003 | Language shift from mother tongue towards Fulfulde in Adamawa State, Nigeria: causes and consequences | 296-225 | Anthropological linguistics | 45 | Fakuade, Gbenga and Gambo, Matudi and Bashir, Abdullahi | Fakuade, Gbenga, Matudi Gambo and Abdullahi Bashir. 2003. "Language Shift From Mother Tongue Towards Fulfulde in Adamawa State, Nigeria: Causes and Consequences." In Anthropological linguistics, 45 , no. 3: 296-225. | EBALL | "[This research] give[s] clear indications that there is a shift from the mother tongue towards Fulfulde in the study area... Fulfulde has intruded into more and more domains of life and assumed more and more functions among the different ethnic groups in the study area. Other languages are less and less used and are finally threatened as the languages of the home." | Trade, with friends, wider communication | Hausa, Fulfulde | 100% of Bata-speaking respondents reported using only Fulfulde and Hausa with friends, "when discussing serious issues," as trade languages, and as the expected languages of wider communication. | Almost all | Vulnerable (60 percent certain, based on the evidence available) | 10 | 100% of Bata-speaking respondents reported speaking Bata with their parents, their children, and in their immediate community. | 13 | Nigeria | Adamawa State, Nigeria | 8.917634, 12.518005;9.562834, 12.141151;9.459222, 12.427483 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
16 | 2009 | Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009) | M. Paul Lewis | SIL International | Dallas, TX | http://www.ethnologue.com/ | Lewis, M. Paul (ed.). 2009. Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16 edn. http://www.ethnologue.com/home.asp. (15 February, 2011.) | ll_pub | 1,100 | 2003 | 1000-9999 | Threatened (20 percent certain, based on the evidence available) |