Asụsụ Bom

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Asụsụ Bom (nke ọzọ: Bome; Bomo) bụ asụsụ dị n'ihe ize ndụ nke Sierra Leone.[1] Ọ bụ nke alaka Mel nke Ezinaụlọ asụsụ Niger Congo ma nwee njikọ chiri anya na asụsụ Bullom So. Ọtụtụ ndị na-asụ ya na-asụsụ abụọ na Mende. Ojiji nke asụsụ Bom na-ebelata n'etiti ndị otu agbụrụ nke ndi ahụ.[2]

Ndị ọkà okwu[dezie | dezie ebe o si]

Ọnụ ọgụgụ ndị na-ekwu okwu sitere na iri Na ise ruo na 1669 (Nchịkọta ọnụ ọgụgụ 2015) maka Krim na iri abuo ruo narị ole na ole maka Bom.[3][4]

Nchịkọta[dezie | dezie ebe o si]

Bom bụ asụsụ Northern Bullom. Ndị na-ekwu okwu na-ewere asụsụ Krim (nke a makwaara dị ka Dilan Hassan) dị ka nke dị iche, ebe ndị na-ekwu ya nwere ọdịdị agbụrụ dị iche iche.[1][5]

Edensibia[dezie | dezie ebe o si]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Batibo (2005). Language decline and death in Africa: causes, consequences, and challenges. Multilingual Matters, 82–. ISBN 978-1-85359-808-1. Retrieved on 13 January 2011.  Kpọpụta njehie: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Batibo2005" defined multiple times with different content
  2. Akinsulure (1979). Languages and Language Problems in Sierra Leone: An Annotated Bibliography.. Njala University College Library.. 
  3. Sierra Leone 2015 Population and Housing Census national analytical report. Statistics Sierra Leone, October 2017, S. 89ff.
  4. Bom. UNESCO Atlas of the World Languages in Danger.
  5. Childs (2012). One or two? Bom and Kim, two highly endangered South Atlantic "languages" of Sierra Leone.