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The Manding languages are a fairly mutually intelligible group of dialects or languages in West Africa, belonging to the Mande languages. Their best-known members are Bambara (the most widely spoken language in Mali), Mandinka (the main language of Gambia), Maninka (or Malinké, a major language of Guinea), and Dioula (Dyula or Jula) (an important language of the northern Côte d'Ivoire and western Burkina Faso.) Smaller languages/dialects belonging to the group include Khassonké or Xaasongaxango.
[edit] Subdivisions of Manding language groupThe Manding tongues, and what distinguishes one from the rest and relationship among all of them are matters that continue to be researched. In addition, the nomenclature - being a mixture of indigenous terms and words applied by English and French speakers since before colonization - makes the picture complex and even confusing. SIL identifies five groups, Manding-East, Manding-West, Bohon, Jahanka and Sininkere. [1] The ISO 639-3 draft defines (among others) one language as macrolanguage: Mandingo [man], with the seven individual languages coming from both the first two groups:
[edit] Manding-West
[edit] Manding-East
see also: Maninka language [edit] Writing Manding languagesThe Manding languages have a strong oral tradition, but also have written forms - adaptations of Arabic and Latin alphabets, and at least two indigenous scripts.
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