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Ogoni languages

The Ogoni languages, or Kegboid languages, are the five languages of the Ogoni people of Rivers State, Nigeria.

They fall into two clusters, East and West, with a limited degree of mutual intelligibility between members of each cluster. The Ogoni think of the cluster members as separate languages.

The classification of the Ogoni languages is as follows:

Names and locations

Below is a list of language names, populations, and locations from Blench (2019).

See also

  • (Wiktionary)

Gidox edition.... 1. What “Proto-Ogoni” means Ogoni is a group of related languages (like Khana, Gokana, Eleme, Tai, etc.) Proto-Ogoni is the hypothetical parent language that existed hundreds or thousands of years ago It was never written down — it’s reconstructed by linguists 2. What “reconstruction” means Reconstruction is the method linguists use to rebuild old languages by comparing related modern languages. Example: If several Ogoni languages have similar words: Khana: kụ́m (fire) Gokana: kụ́m Eleme: kụ́b A linguist might reconstruct a Proto-Ogoni form like:

  • kụ́m (“fire”)

(The * means “reconstructed, not directly recorded”) 3. What Proto-Ogoni reconstructions include They can reconstruct: Words (vocabulary) Sounds (pronunciation system) Grammar (word order, verb forms, noun classes) Meaning changes over time 4. Why this matters Proto-Ogoni reconstructions help us: Understand Ogoni history and migration See how languages in the Niger Delta are related Preserve cultural heritage Compare Ogoni with other Niger-Congo languages

References