Gvoko language
      
Gvoko (also known as Gevoko, Ghboko, Gavoko, Kuvoko, Ngossi, Ngoshi, Ngoshe-Ndhang, Ngweshe-Ndaghan, Ngoshe Sama, Nggweshe) is an Afro-Asiatic language spoken in Borno State, Nigeria and Far North Province, Cameroon.[1]
Notes
- 1 2  Gvoko at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
 - ↑  Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2013). "Gvoko". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. 
 
 
 | 
|---|
  |  | Official languages |  | 
|---|
  |  | Major languages |  | 
|---|
  |  | Indigenous languages |  | 
|---|
  |   |  
  | 
 | 
|---|
  |  | Official languages |  | 
|---|
  |  | National languages |  | 
|---|
  |  | Recognised languages |  | 
|---|
  |  | Indigenous languages |  Indigenous languages  (ordered by state) | 
|---|
  |   |  
  |  
  | 
|---|
  |  | Sign languages |  | 
|---|
  |  | Scripts |  | 
|---|
 
  | 
 | 
|---|
  |  | Tera |  | 
|---|
  |  | Bura–Higi |  | 
|---|
  |  Wandala (Mandara) |  | 
|---|
  |  | Mafa | | Northeast |  | 
|---|
  |  | South (A) |  | 
|---|
  |  | South (B) |  | 
|---|
  |  | South (C) |  | 
|---|
  |  | South (D) |  | 
|---|
  |  | Other |  | 
|---|
 
  | 
|---|
  |  | Daba |  | 
|---|
  |  Bata (Gbwata) |  | 
|---|
  |  Mandage (Kotoko) |  | 
|---|
  |  | East–Central |  | 
|---|
  |  | Other |  | 
|---|
  |   |  
  |