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Beti - Béti

Ewondo, Fang, Bulu, Bebel, Bebil, Eton, Mengisa

1. Classification / Classification

Beti is a language cluster including several interintelligible languages: Ewondo, Fang, Bulu, Bebel, Bebil, Eton, and Mengisa.

Ethnologue lists the classification as: Niger-Congo, Atlantic-Congo, Volta-Congo, Benue-Congo, Bantoid, Southern, Narrow Bantu, Northwest, A, Yaunde-Fang (A.70)


2. Where Spoken / Localisation géographique

Ewondo, Bulu, and Eton are spoken in southern Cameroon (Ewondo: parts of Center province and South province; Bulu: parts of South, Center, and East provinces; Eton: part of Center province). (Ethnologue)

Fang is spoken in Equatorial Guinea, Cameroon, and Gabon. Some speakers in Congo and São Tomé e Príncipe.


3. Number of Speakers / Nombre de locuteurs

According to Ethnologue:

  • Beti: 2,000,000. Population includes Fang, Ewondo, Bulu, Mengisa, etc.
    • Ewondo: 577,700 in Cameroon (1982 SIL).
    • Fang
      • 258,722 in Equatorial Guinea (2000 WCD)
      • 110,552 in Cameroon (2000 WCD)
      • 61,504 in Gabon (2000 WCD)
      • 6,037 in Congo (2000 WCD). Few speakers in Congo
      • Population total all countries: 450,586
    • Bulu:
      • 174,000 in Cameroon (1982 SIL).
      • 800,000 second-language speakers (1991 UBS)
    • Bebele: 24,000 in Cameroon (1971 Welmers)
    • Bebil: 6,000 in Cameroon (1991 SIL)
    • Eton: 52,000 in Cameroon (1982 SIL)
    • Mengisa: 20,000 in Cameroon (1979 SIL)

Wikipedia cites a figure of 858,000 first-language speakers of Fang.


4. Dialect Survey / Enquête de dialecte

According to Ethnologue Beti "consists of a set of 'languages' (Bebele, Bebil, Bulu, Eton, Ewondo, Fang, Mengisa) which are partially intelligible but ethnically distinct." These and their dialects are as follows:

  • Ewondo
    • Badjia (Bakjo)
    • Bafeuk
    • Bamvele (Mvele, Yezum, Yesoum)
    • Bane
    • Beti
    • Fong
    • Mbida-Bani
    • Mvete
    • Mvog-Niengue
    • Omvang
    • Yabekolo (Yebekolo)
    • Yabeka
    • Yabekanga
    • Enoah
    • Evouzok
  • Fang
    • Make
    • Ntum (Ntumu, Ntoumou)
    • Fang (Okak)
    • Mvae (Mvan, Mvay)
    • Ogowe
  • Bulu
    • Yelinda
    • Yembana
    • Yengono
    • Zaman
    • Bene
  • Bebele
    • Eki
    • Manyok
  • Bebil
  • Eton
    • Essele
    • Mvog-Namve
    • Mvo-Nangkok
    • Beyidzolo
  • Mengisa (May be intelligible with Ewondo. The Mangisa people are reported to speak 2 languages: Mengisa Njowi, spoken daily and Leti, a secret language of tradition)

5. Usage / Utilisation

Notes from Ethnologue:

  • Beti is a trade language
  • Ewondo is a trade language
  • Literacy rate among Ewondo and Fang speakers in Cameroon:
    • L1: ?
    • L2: 15% to 25%
  • (Bulu) Language of wider communication. ... Formerly used for education, religion, and commerce, but now in decline as language of wider communication.

6. Orthography / Orthographe

6.1 Status / Statut

Latin-based orthographies. There is apparently some use of diacritics and extended characters (see 6.2, below). Seeking better information.

6.2 Sample Alphabet / Alphabet exemple

Alphabets as reported by Hartell (1993) and presented in Systèmes alphabétiques:

"Language Museum" samples (NB- these may not be standard or official orthographies):


7. Use in ICT / Utilisation dans les TIC

7.1 Fonts / Polices

7.2 Keyboard layouts / Dispositions de clavier

7.3 Content on computers & internet / Contenu en informatique et sur l'Internet

AKŌK MEMVENDE ENYIŃ A MENGAN BOD (Universal Declaration of Human Rights - Béti Version) http://www.unhchr.ch/udhr/lang/btb.htm

7.4 Localized software / Logiciels localisés

Not aware of any.

7.5 Language codes / Codes de langue

Beti

  • ISO 639-1: -
  • ISO 639-2: -
  • ISO 639-3: btb

Ewondo

  • ISO 639-1: -
  • ISO 639-2: ewo
  • ISO 639-3: ewo

Fang

  • ISO 639-1: -
  • ISO 639-2: fan
  • ISO 639-3: fan

Bulu

  • ISO 639-3: bum

Bebele

  • ISO 639-3: beb

Bebil

  • ISO 639-3: bxp

Eton

  • ISO 639-3: eto

Mengisa

  • ISO 639-3: mct

7.6 Locales / Paramètres régionaux

7.7 Other / Autre


8. Localisation resources / Ressources pour localisation

8.1 Individuals (experts) / Individuelles (experts)

8.2 Institutions / Institutions

8.3 On the internet / Sur la toile


9. Comments / Remarques

Is Beti a "language" that can be localised for?

Beti may be a good candidate to have new ISO 639-1 & 2 codes.


10. References / Références

Chanard, Christian (2006), Systèmes alphabétiques des langues africaines, LLACAN, CNRS, http://sumale.vjf.cnrs.fr/phono/

Hartell, Rhonda L., ed. (1993), The Alphabets of Africa. Dakar: UNESCO and SIL. (The French edition, published the same year, is entitled Alphabets de Langues Africaines).

SIL International, Ethnologue: Languages of the World, "Bebele," http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=beb

______, "Bebil," http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=bxp

______, "Beti," http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=btb

______, "Bulu," http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=bum

______, "Eton," http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=eto

______, "Ewondo," http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=ewo

______, "Fang," http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=fan

______, "Mengisa," http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=mct

SIL International, "ISO 639 Code Tables," http://www.sil.org/iso639-3/codes.asp

U.S. Library of Congress, "ISO 639.2: Codes for the Representation of Names of Languages: Alpha-3 codes arranged alphabetically by the English name of language," http://www.loc.gov/standards/iso639-2/php/English_list.php

Wikipedia, "Beti-Pahuin," http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beti-Pahuin

______, "Fang language," http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fang_language


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Page last modified on 2009-12-10 11:09