Ewondo language
Ewondo or Kolo is the language of the Ewondo people (more precisely Beti be Kolo or simply Kolo-Beti) of Cameroon. The language had 577,700 native speakers in 1982. Ewondo is a trade language. Dialects include Badjia (Bakjo), Bafeuk, Bamvele (Mvele, Yezum, Yesoum), Bane, Beti, Enoah, Evouzok, Fong, Mbida-Bani, Mvete, Mvog-Niengue, Omvang, Yabekolo (Yebekolo), Yabeka, and Yabekanga. Ewondo speakers live primarily in Cameroon's Centre Region and the northern part of the Océan division in the South Region.
Ewondo is a Bantu language. It is a dialect of the Beti language (Yaunde-Fang), and is intelligible with Bulu, Eton, and Fang.
In 2011 there was a concern among Cameroonian linguists that the language was being displaced in the country by French.[4]
See also
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| | Official languages | |
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| | Major languages | |
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| | Indigenous languages | |
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| | Zones A – B |
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| | Zone A | | A10 | |
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| | A20 | |
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| | A30 | |
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| | A40 | |
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| | A50 | |
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| | A60 | |
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| | A70 | |
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| | A80 | |
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| | A90 | |
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| | Zone B | |
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| | | Zones C – D |
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| | Zone C | |
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| | Zone D | | D10 | |
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| | D20 | |
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| | D30 | |
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| | [J]D40 | |
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| | [J]D50 | |
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| | [J]D60 | |
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| | | Zones E – H |
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| | Zone E | | [J]E10 | |
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| | [J]E20 | |
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| | [J]E30 | |
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| | [J]E40 | |
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| | E50 | |
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| | E60 | |
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| | E70 | |
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| | Zone F | |
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| | Zone G | |
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| | Zone H | |
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| | | Zones J – M |
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| | Zone J* | | [J]D40 | |
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| | [J]D50 | |
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| | [J]D60 | |
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| | [J]E10 | |
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| | [J]E20 | |
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| | [J]E30 | |
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| | [J]E40 | |
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| | [J]F20 | |
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| | Zone K | |
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| | Zone L | |
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| | Zone M | |
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| | Note: The Guthrie classification is geographic and its groupings do not imply a relationship between the languages within them. |
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