Kulango languages

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Kulango
Kulango–Lorhon
Geographic
distribution:
Ivory Coast, Ghana, Burkina Faso
Linguistic classification: Niger–Congo
Glottolog: kula1283[1]

The Kulango or Kulango–Lorhon languages are spoken principally in Ivory Coast. They were once classified as part of an expanded Gur (Voltaic) family, and are part of the Savannas proposal.

The languages distinguished by Ethnologue are

  • Bondoukou Kulango (100,000 speakers in Ivory Coast and Ghana),
  • Bouna Kulango (160,000 speakers in Ivory Coast and Ghana),
  • Lomakka (AKA Loma; 8000 speakers),
  • Téén (AKA Lorhon, Loghon; 8000 speakers in Ivory Coast and Burkina Faso,

which are not mutually intelligible. According to Ethnologue, Lomakka is closer to Bondoukou Kulango than Téén is, and Téén is closer to Lomakka and Bouna Kulango than it is to Bondoukou Kulango.

References

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