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Hunde language

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The Great Lakes Bantu languages , also known as Lacustrine Bantu and Bantu zone J , are a group of Bantu languages of East Africa. They were recognized as a group by the Tervuren team, who posited them as an additional zone (zone J) to Guthrie's largely geographic classification of Bantu.

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3-689: Hunde ( Kihunde ; also Luhunde , Kobi , Rukobi ) is a Great Lakes Bantu language spoken by the Hunde people or Bahunde in Nord-Kivu province in the Democratic Republic of the Congo . It is primarily spoken in the territories of Masisi , Walikale , Nyiragongo , Rutshuru and Kalahe . This Democratic Republic of the Congo -related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This Bantu language -related article

6-510: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Great Lakes Bantu language By 500BC, proto-Great Lakes Bantu speakers initially settled between Lakes Kivu and Rweru in Rwanda, before rapidly spreading as far east as Kenya. The languages are, according to Bastin, Coupez, & Mann (1999), with Sumbwa added per Nurse (2003): The codes in parentheses are Guthrie's original geographic classification. Maho (2009) adds Yaka . Kobo

9-919: Was recognized later. It's said to be about equidistant between Nande and Hunde, so it's not clear where it should be in the tree above. Glottolog (2022) separates Nyole in Uganda (and its dialects: Hadyo or Luhadyo , Menya , Sabi or Lusabi , and Wesa or Luwesa ) from the E30 group (Masaba-Luhya) into an unclassified subgroup within a "Greater Luyia" group containing the Logoo-Kuria (E40) group. Beside this, it does not consider this older geographic classification relevant for its ongoing classification based on more recent linguistic studies, and uses four different subgroups (Greater Luhya, West Nyanza , East Nyanza, and Western Lakes Bantu), keeping Gungu (E10) separate from them. This Bantu language -related article

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