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Cangin languages
Group of Senegambian languages spoken in Senegal From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Cangin (/ˈtʃæŋɪn/) languages are spoken by 200,000 people (as of 2007) in a small area east of Dakar, Senegal. They are the languages spoken by the Serer people who do not speak the Serer language (Serer-Sine). Because the people are ethnically Serer, the Cangin languages are commonly thought to be dialects of the Serer language. However, they are not closely related; Serer is closer to Fulani than it is to Cangin.
![]() | This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (March 2013) |
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Languages
The Cangin languages are:
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Lehar and Noon are particularly close, as are Ndut and Palor, though not quite to the point of easy intelligibility. Safen is transparently closer to Lehar–Noon than to Palor–Ndut.
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Reconstruction
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Merrill (2018: 451) reconstructs Proto-Cangin as follows.[1]
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See also
- Serer language
- List of Proto-Cangin reconstructions (Wiktionary)
Footnotes
References
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