| Teke | |
|---|---|
| Ethnicity | Teke people | 
| Geographic distribution  | Central reaches of the Congo River and adjacent areas | 
| Linguistic classification | Niger–Congo? | 
| ISO 639-3 | tek | 
| Glottolog | kasa1251 | 
The Teke languages are a group of Bantu languages spoken by the Teke people in the western Congo and in Gabon. They are coded Zone B.70 in Guthrie's classification. According to Nurse & Philippson (2003), the Teke languages apart from West Teke form a valid node with Tende (part of B.80):[1]
- Tsege
 - Teghe (Tɛgɛ, North Teke)
 - Ngungwel (Ngungulu, NE Teke) – Central Teke (Njyunjyu/Ndzindziu, Boo/Boma/Eboo)
 - Tio (Bali) – East Teke (Mosieno, Ng'ee/Ŋee)
 - Kukwa (Kukuya, South Teke)
 - Fuumu (South Teke) – Wuumu (Wumbu)
 - Tiene (B.80)
 - Mfinu (B.80)
 - Mpuono (B.80)
 
Pacchiarotti et al. (2019) retain West Teke and include additional B.80 languages:[2]
- Teke (Kasai–Ngounie)
 
- Boma Nkuu
 - Wuumu-Mpuono
 - Mfinu
 - Kwa South: East Teke
 - Kwa–Kasai North
- Boma Yumu
 - Sakata
 - Tiinic: Boma Nord, Kempee, Tiene
 - Central Kasai–Ngounie
- Ngungwel, Central Teke (Teke-Eboo-Nzikou)
 - Interior Kasai–Ngounie
- Teke-Fuumu
 - Teke-Kukuya
 - Teke-Tyee
 - West Kasai–Ngounie
- Teke-Tsaayi
 - Mbere: Kaningi, Ndumu, Latege, Mbere-Mbamba, Tchitchege
 - Teke-Laali, Yaka, Njebi, Tsaangi, Duma, Wandji, Vili of Ngounie
 
 
 
 
 
Footnotes
- ↑ Nurse, Derek; Philippson, Gérard, eds. (2003). The Bantu languages. London: Routledge. ISBN 9780700711345.
 - ↑ Sara Pacchiarotti, Natalia Chousou-Polydouri & Koen Bostoen (2019) 'Untangling the West-Coastal Bantu mess: identification, geography and phylogeny of the Bantu B50–80 languages.' Africana Linguistica 21: 87–162.
 
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.