Ngizim language
Ngizim (also known as Ngizmawa, Ngezzim, Ngódṣin) is a Chadic language spoken by the Ngizim people in Yobe State, Nigeria.[1]
Notes
- 1 2 Ngizim at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
- ↑ Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2013). "Ngizim". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
Further reading
- Mohammed Alhaji Adamu, Usman Babayo Garba Potiskum, 2009, Ngizim–English–Hausa Dictionary, Yobe Language Research Project.
- Russell G. Schuh. 1972. "Aspects of Ngizim Syntax," University of California, Los Angeles PhD dissertation.
- Russell G. Schuh. 1977. "Bade/Ngizim determiner system," Afroasiatic Linguistics 4:1-74.
- Russell G. Schuh. 1981. A Dictionary of Ngizim. University of California Publications in Linguistics 99. Berkeley: University of California Press.
|
|---|
| | Official languages | |
|---|
| | National languages | |
|---|
| | Recognised languages | |
|---|
| | Indigenous languages | Indigenous languages (ordered by state) |
|---|
| |
|
|
|---|
| | Sign languages | |
|---|
| | Scripts | |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| | Hausa | |
|---|
| | Bole–Angas | |
|---|
| | Bade–Warji | |
|---|
| | Barawa | |
|---|
| | Other | |
|---|
| |
|