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Manza language

Ubangian language of the CAR From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Manza (Mānzā, Mandja) is a Ubangian language spoken by the Mandja people of the Central African Republic. It is closely related to Ngbaka and may be to some extent mutually intelligible.

Quick Facts Native to, Ethnicity ...
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Phonology

The phonology consists of the following:[2]

Consonants

More information Labial, Alveolar ...
  • Sounds /ɾ/ and /ⱱ/ are very rare in word-initial position.
  • /ⁿz/ can be heard in free variation as a prenasal affricate sound [ⁿd͡ʒ].
  • [l] is only heard in free variation of /j/.
  • /j/ can be heard as [ɲ] when preceding a nasal vowel.

Vowels

More information Front, Central ...
  • /a/ can have an allophone of [ɐ], when in complementary distribution.
More information Front, Central ...
  • The nasalization of /ɛ̃/ may also be heard more lower as [æ̃] in free variation.
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Writing system

Manza alphabet[3]
abbhddh eɛfggb hikkpl mmbnndndj ngbŋŋgŋmo ɔprst uvvbwy z

The tones are indicated on the letters using diacritics:

  • the middle tone is indicated using the umlaut: ä, ë, ɛ̈, ï, ö, ɔ̈, ü ;
  • the high tone is indicated using the circumflex accent: â, ê, ɛ̂, î, ô, ɔ̂, û.


References

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