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    • Three sub-branches

      • Within Nilotic, linguist Rainer Vossen distinguishes three sub-branches. These have been designated "Western," "Eastern," and "Southern."
      darkwing.uoregon.edu › ~dlpayne › Nilotic
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  2. Nilo-Saharan languages, a group of languages that form one of the four language stocks or families on the African continent, the others being Afro-Asiatic, Khoisan, and Niger-Congo. The Nilo-Saharan languages are presumed to be descended from a common ancestral language and, therefore, to be genetically related.

  3. The Nilotic languages are spoken by some 14 million people ( see Nilotes), including the Dinka, Nuer, Luo, Turkana, Kalenjin, and Maasai. Nilo-Saharan languages, Group of perhaps 115 African languages spoken by more than 27 million people from Mali to Ethiopia and from southernmost Egypt to Tanzania.

  4. This chapter introduces the expanse of the Nilo-Saharan region, the language family that spread across Central and Eastern Africa. It lists the range of languages and language groups within the region such as Kunama, Eastern Sudanic, Nara, Berta, Nilotic, and Surmic.

  5. How many languages are there in the Nilo-Saharan language family and how many people speak these languages? Learn more about its structure and dialects.

  6. Jan 1, 2016 · Nilo-Saharan as a phylum was first established by Greenberg (1963), but scholars still. disagree about the inclusion or exclusion of specific groups that Greenberg claimed to be. part of this ...

  7. This family formed the core of the Nilo-Saharan phylum as postulated by Greenberg in his The Languages of Africa, where a number of groups were added which had been treated as isolated units in his earlier classificatory work: Songhay, Eastern Saharan (now called Saharan), Maban and Mimi, Nyangian (now called Kuliak or Rub), Temainian ...

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