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Bangubangu language

Bantu dialect cluster of DR Congo From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Bangubangu is a Bantu dialect cluster spoken by the Bangubangu people of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

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Bangubangu is classified as JD.62[3] in the updated Guthrie system (NUGL, 2009). This places it firmly in Zone J, which is part of the Eastern Bantu branch. It’s a part of the Shi-Havu-Lega-Bangubangu cluster (sometimes called JD50–JD60 in Maho’s RefLex system), alongside closely related languages like Shi (JD53), Havu (JD52), and Lega (JD58). The dialects are about 80% similar, apart from Hombo which is only 70% similar to the main dialect. It is possible that they are all distinct languages. Christine Ahmed (1995) classifies the small "Bangubangu of Mutingua" in with the Luban languages; this is presumably a Hombo dialect.

One of the earliest scholars to study Bangubangu was A. E. Meeussen, who wrote a brief description of the grammar of the language as a result of a visit to the area in 1951.[4]

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