From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bayot
Native to Senegal, Guinea-Bissau
Region Ziguinchor, Cacheu
Native speakers
35,000 (2021–2022) [1]
Dialects
  • Essin
  • Kugere
Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-3 bda
Glottolog bayo1262
ELP Bayot

Bayot is a language of southern Senegal, southwest of Ziguinchor in a group of villages near Nyassia, and in northwestern Guinea-Bissau, along the Senegalese border, and in the Gambia.

The Kugere and Kuxinge (Essin) dialects of Senegal and the Arame (Edamme) and Gubaare dialects of Guinea-Bissau are distinct enough to be sometimes considered different languages.

Bayot is the most divergent of the Jola languages, in the Senegambian branch of the Niger–Congo language family.

Bayot is grammatically Jola, apart from a non-Jola pronominal system. However, perhaps half its vocabulary is non-Jola and even non-Atlantic. It may therefore be a language isolate with substantial Jola borrowing ( relexification). In any case, Bayot is clearly distinct from (other) Jola languages.

References

  1. ^ Bayot at Ethnologue (27th ed., 2024) Closed access icon

External links



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bayot
Native to Senegal, Guinea-Bissau
Region Ziguinchor, Cacheu
Native speakers
35,000 (2021–2022) [1]
Dialects
  • Essin
  • Kugere
Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-3 bda
Glottolog bayo1262
ELP Bayot

Bayot is a language of southern Senegal, southwest of Ziguinchor in a group of villages near Nyassia, and in northwestern Guinea-Bissau, along the Senegalese border, and in the Gambia.

The Kugere and Kuxinge (Essin) dialects of Senegal and the Arame (Edamme) and Gubaare dialects of Guinea-Bissau are distinct enough to be sometimes considered different languages.

Bayot is the most divergent of the Jola languages, in the Senegambian branch of the Niger–Congo language family.

Bayot is grammatically Jola, apart from a non-Jola pronominal system. However, perhaps half its vocabulary is non-Jola and even non-Atlantic. It may therefore be a language isolate with substantial Jola borrowing ( relexification). In any case, Bayot is clearly distinct from (other) Jola languages.

References

  1. ^ Bayot at Ethnologue (27th ed., 2024) Closed access icon

External links




Videos

Youtube | Vimeo | Bing

Websites

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Encyclopedia

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Facebook