Gaa na ọdịnaya

Ogba Asụsụ

Shí Wikipedia, njikotá édémédé nke onyobulạ
Ogba Asụsụ
Ogba
Spoken in: Rivers, Delta and Imo States, Nigeria
Total speakers: 334,000
Language family: Nnijer–Kongo
 Atlantic–Congo
  Volta-Congo
   Volta–Niger
    Templeeti:Sm
     Igboid
      Nuclear Igboid
       Ogba
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2:
ISO 639-3: ogc

Ogba (nakwa Olu Ogba, mobu onu Ogbah ) bu asusu Igboid nke ndi Ogba nke Naijiria na-asu nke kachasi na steeti River. Ha bụ akụkụ ọchịchị Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni dị na Rivers steeti . [1] [2] A na-akpọ eze ahụ Eze-ọgba wee mee ka ndọrọndọrọ ọchịchị gbanwee aha ya dịka 'Oba' dịka ndị Benin si na-ekwu nke ha. Kwa afọ ha na-eme mmemme 'Egwu ogba'. Ememme kachasị na ala Egi.

Usoro edemede

[dezie | dezie ebe o si]
mkpụrụedemede Ogba
Akwa ukwu
A B Ch D E E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U otu V W Y Z
Lowercase
a b ch d e f g h i j k l m n o p r s t u v w y z

A na-ejikwa ụfọdụ digraph na trigraphs.

A na-eji ụda olu egosipụta ụda olu ndị a:

  • a na-egosipụta ụda dị elu site na enweghị onye na-asụ ụda: ⟨ a, e, ẹ, i, ị, o, ọ, u, ụ ⟩
  • a na-egosipụta ụda dị ala na ụda ili: ⟨ à, è, ẹ̀, ì, ị̀, ò, ọ̀, ù, ụ̀ ⟩
  • a na-egosi ụda ọdịda na ụda sekọmfleksị: ⟨ â, ê, ệ, î, ị̂, ô, ộ, û, ụ̂ ⟩ ;
  • a na-egosi ebe mgbada na macron: ⟨ ā, ē, ẹ̄, ī, ị̄, ō, ọ̄, ū, ⟩ .

fonology

[dezie | dezie ebe o si]
Udaume Ogbah [3]
N'ihu Azu
Mechie i ɪ ʊu
N'etiti etiti e o
Oghere-etiti ɔ
Mepee a


Ntụaka

[dezie | dezie ebe o si]
  1. Ọgba Language Committee (August 11, 2013). A DICTIONARY OF ỌGBÀ, AN IGBOID LANGUAGE OF SOUTHERN NIGERIA. www.rogerblench.info. Roger Blench, Kay Williamson Educational Foundation, Cambridge, UK. Retrieved on April 21, 2016.
  2. The Ogbah Language (2008-12-26). Archived from the original on March 15, 2012. Retrieved on 2008-12-26.
  3. Harley (2024). "Vowel systems in Nigerian Languages", Pushing the boundaries: Selected papers from the 51-52 Annual Conference on African Linguistics. Berlin: Language Science Press. DOI:10.5281/zenodo.14017793. 

Templeeti:Volta-Niger languages