Hone (a̱lyem)

a̱lyem Ji̱kunoyit Naijeriya
               

Á̱ lyuut ati̱kut wuni di̱n Tyap Maba̱ta̱do ja (Maba̱ta̱do)

Hone ji yet a̱lyem Ji̱kunoyit kya nang á̱ lyiat mi̱ Sí̱tet Gombe ma̱ng Ta̱raba, Naijeriya. Ku ni̱ vwan á̱nietlyiat zwá-a̱lyiat a̱feang ba, Pindiga ma̱ng Gwana, ba̱ fi̱k a̱ghyang.[1] A̱lyem ka yet kap sot-lilyem Wapan hu hwa.[2]

Hone
a̱lyem, modern language
TafaLilyem Ji̱kunoyit Jhyuk
A̱byinNaijeriya Jhyuk
Yet byin-a̱byinFam A̱keangtung Mundundung, Si̱tet Gwombe, Si̱tet Ta̱raba Jhyuk
Ethnologue language status7 Shifting Jhyuk

A̱ lyiat Hone ji mi̱ SsA̱M A̱ko, Biliri, Shonggwom, ma̱ng Ka̱ri̱m-Lamido. Ethnologue (jhyuk 22) tyia̱ lilyem nang:

  • A̱baka̱keang Futuk, Ka̱li̱ta̱ngga, Ka̱shere, Pindiga, ma̱ng Tumu (zwa-a̱lyiat Pindiga)
  • A̱baka̱keang A̱ndamin, Di̱gare, Di̱zi, Gobirawa, Gwana, Jukon, Kasan Dare, Ka̱ta̱gum, Kona Kuka, ma̱ng Kwaya (zwa-a̱lyiat Gwana)

Ya̱fang

jhyuk
  1. "Hõne". Ethnologue (18 ed.). 2015. Retrieved Zwat Nyaai 14, 2025.
  2. Blench, Roger (2019). An Atlas of Nigerian Languages (4 ed.). Cambridge: Kay Williamson Educational Foundation.