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Vagla language
Gur language spoken in Ghana From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Vagla is a Gurunsi (Gur) language of Ghana with about 14,000 speakers. It is spoken in a number of communities around the western area of Northern Region, Ghana. Such communities includes: Bole, Sawla, Tuna, Soma, Gentilpe, and Nakwabi. The people who speak this language are known as Vaglas, one of the indigenous tribes around that part of the Northern Region, which were brought under the Gonja local administration system "Gonjaland" by British Colonial Rulers under their Centralised System of Governance.
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Phonology
Consonants
Vowels
Tones
Vagla has four tones: rising, falling, and two level tones. It also has downstep. Nasals and laterals can also carry tones.[4]
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Orthography
Vagla uses ⟨i⟩ to represent both /i/ and /ɪ/, and it uses ⟨u⟩ to represent /u/ and /ʊ/.[4]
Nasalization is represented by a following ⟨h⟩, e.g., sɛɛ 'to agree' and sɛɛh 'to carve'.[4]
Notes
References
Further reading
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