Á̱nietza̱fan (a̱lyem)

a̱lyem Naijeriya

A̱lyem Á̱nietza̱fan ka, (Á̱nietza̱fan: Nkarigwe, Rigwe), yet a̱lyem Pi̱lato Naijeriya kya nang Á̱nietza̱fan ba lyiat ma̱ ba̱t di̱ fam Sot A̱gwomna̱ti Mali Basa, mami Si̱tet Pi̱lato a̱ni.[1][2]

Á̱nietza̱fan
a̱lyem, modern language
A̱byinNaijeriya Jhyuk
Indigenous toFam A̱keangtung Mundundung, Si̱tet Ka̱duna, Si̱tet Pi̱lato Jhyuk
Ethnologue language status6a Vigorous Jhyuk

A̱lyem Á̱nietza̱fan ka byia̱ a̱gba̱ndang fonoloji ji̱ fwuop fufwuop a̱ni.[3]

Ya̱fang

jhyuk
  1. "Irigwe (African people)" (di̱n Shong). Library of Congress.
  2. "Rigwe". Ethnologue. SIL International.
  3. Blench, Roger M. 2018. Nominal affixes and number marking in the Plateau languages of Central Nigeria. In John R. Watters (ed.), East Benue-Congo: Nouns, pronouns, and verbs, 107–172. Berlin: Language Science Press. DOI 10.5281/zenodo.1314325.

A̱ka̱fwuop nta

jhyuk


Lilyem Naijeriya
A̱doA̱ghwangkpangA̱kpeyeA̱kum-a̱cyiA̱mangfwuoÁ̱niet-a̱tyinÁ̱nietnswakÁ̱niet-tswaywanÁ̱nietza̱fanBishyiBokyiByootCeDaaFa̱taaGa̱raIbibyoIdomaIgwongIshanIshekiriIsokoIzereIzonJhyuoJukumKpatKutyepKuuKuutKyibakuMadaMumuyeMwagha̱vwutNupeSunkurumTsamyia̱TyapTyenUroboZiyaniet