Ngombe language

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Ngombe
Lingombe
Native toDR Congo
Native speakers
(150,000 cited 1971)[1]
Niger–Congo?
Language codes
ISO 639-3ngc
Glottologngom1268
C.41[2]
Bantu language spoken by about 150,000 people in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. In general, native speakers live on either side of the Congo River, and its many tributaries; more specifically, Équateur Province, Mongala District and in areas neighboring it (Sud Ubangi and Équateur districts). Ngombe is written in Latin script.[3]

The deities of the Ngombe include the supreme creator Akongo and the ancestor goddess Mbokomu.[4]

Ngombe includes several dialects in addition to Ngombe proper (Ŋgɔmbɛ). These are Wiindza-Baali, Doko (Dɔkɔ), and Binja (also rendered Binza, Libindja, or Libinja). The latter is not the same as the

Orientale Province and Aketi Territory, and shares about three-quarters of its linguistic characteristics with standard Ngombe.[3] Maho (2009) lists Doko
as a distinct language in a separate group.

References