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Yemba language
Grassfields language spoken in Cameroon From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Yɛmba or Yemba, also Yémba or Bamiléké Dschang, is a major Bamileke language in West Region of Cameroon. It was approximately spoken by 500,000 or so people in the country in 2023.[1]
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Despite originally being exclusively a spoken language, Yemba writing was developed by Maurice Tadadjeu (co-creator of the General Alphabet of Cameroon Languages) and Steven Bird. Their team developed a small Yemba–French Dictionary covering French translations of over 3,000 Yemba words and expressions.[2] The Mmuock dialect also has a proposed orthography.
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Phonology
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Consonants
- Sounds /t͡ʃ ʃ ʒ/ are included as phonemes in some analyses. In most analyses, they are considered as allophones of /t͡s s z/.
- Sounds [p l ɣ] are consonant alternation sounds between the following consonants /b d ɡ/.
- Alternation sounds of /j w/ are labialized and palatalized sounds [ɡʲ ɡʷ].
- Graphemes of the alterations and allophones [t͡ʃ ʃ ʒ p l] are noted in the Yemba alphabet as c sh j p l.
- An /r/ sound can also be included in the current language, and written in the Yemba alphabet as r.
- The prosodies of palatalization and labialization [ʲ ʷ], are written orthographically with lowercase graphemes y w.
- A grapheme for aspiration [ʰ] among consonants is written as h.
Vowels
- /ʉ/ is included as a phoneme in some analyses. In more abstract analyses, it is considered as a palatalization of /u/.
- Vowel length is distinguished using double vowel sounds (ex. aa [aː])
Tone
Three tones are marked as high [á], mid [ā], or low [à]. Low tones are unmarked when written.[3]
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References
External links
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