Gciriku language
Gciriku or Dciriku (Diriku) or Dirico (in Angola), also known as Manyo or Rumanyo, is a Bantu language spoken by 305,000 people along the Okavango River in Namibia, where it is a national language, in Botswana, and in Angola. It was first known in the west via the Vagciriku, who had migrated from the main Vamanyo area and spoke Rugciriku, a dialect of Rumanyo. The name Gciriku (Dciriku, Diriku) remains common in the literature, but within Namibia the name Rumanyo has been revived.[4] The Mbogedu dialect is extinct; Maho (2009) lists it as a distinct language, and notes that the names 'Manyo' and 'Rumanyo' are inappropriate for it.
It is one of several Bantu languages of the Okavango which have click consonants, as in [ ǀɛ́ǀˀà] "bed", [mùǀûkò] "flower", and [kàǀûrù] "tortoise". These clicks, of which there are half a dozen (c, gc, ch, and prenasalized nc and nch), are generally all pronounced with a dental articulation, but there is broad variation between speakers. They are especially common in place names and in words for features of the landscape, reflecting their source in an as-yet unidentified Khoisan language. Many of the click words in Gciriku, including those in native Bantu vocabulary, are shared with Kwangali, Mbukushu, and Fwe.
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| | Official language | |
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| | National 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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