Kenyang (Nyang, Banyang, Manyang) is the most spoken language of the Mamfe language group . It is spoken in the Manyu and Meme departments of the Southwest Region of Cameroon . Kenyang speakers in Cameroon are known as Bayangi (Bayangui) people and are called Bayangi (Bayangui).
3-610: There are three main dialects of Kenyang: Lower Kenyang, spoken in Eyumojock and Mamfe Central subdivisions, Upper Kenyang, spoken in Upper Bayang subdivision and Kitwii, spoken in Meme department. The Upper Kenyang and Lower Kenyang dialects are more closely related to each other than to Kitwii. Variant names of Kitwii include, Kicwe, Twii, Bakoni, Northern Balong, Upper Balong and Manyeman. The phonemes of Kenyang are listed in
6-539: A nasal consonant, or when preceding a nasal consonant. For example, [ŋá̰] ('to chew'). /ɛ/ is realized as a close-mid central vowel in closed syllables: [tə̀t̚] ('to wipe'). This article about Southern Bantoid languages is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Eyumojock Eyumojock is a town and commune in Cameroon , and the sub-divisional headquarters of the Eyumojock sub-division in
9-576: The tables below, with their orthographic representation written in angled brackets: The voiceless stops /p t k/ are realized as unreleased word-finally: [sə̀p̚] ('to descend'), [tə̀t̚] ('to wipe') and [kɔ̀k̚] ('to grind'). Before front vowels, /t/ and /d/ are in free variation between being dental and interdental: [t̪í] ('to sell') and [ǹd̪ɛ́] ('coat'). Elsewhere /t/ and /d/ are alveolar. /m/ is realized as labiodental [ɱ] before /f/: [ɱ̀fó̰ŋ] ('buffalo'). All vowels in Kenyang become nasalized when following
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