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Nilo-Saharan languages


 

The Nilo-Saharan languages are a group of African languages spoken mainly in the upper parts of the Chari and Nile rivers, including Nubia. Roughly 11 million people spoke Nilo-Saharan languages as of 1987, according to Merritt Ruhlen's estimate. The family is internally extremely diverse - far more so than Indo-European, or even Niger-Congo - and is rather controversial; few historical linguists have attempted work on the family as a whole, and several have denied its validity. Particularly controversial is the inclusion of Songhay.

Related Topics:
African languages - Chari - Nile - Nubia - Merritt Ruhlen - Indo-European - Niger-Congo - Songhay

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According to Joseph Greenberg (The Languages of Africa) as initially modified by Lionel Bender (and adopted by the Ethnologue), they are classified into the following branches:

Related Topics:
Joseph Greenberg - The Languages of Africa - Lionel Bender - Ethnologue

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