Baïnounk Gubëeher
Classification: Niger-Congo
·threatened
Classification: Niger-Congo
·threatened
Niger-Congo, Atlantic-Congo, North Atlantic |
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Information from: “Baïnounk Languages” . Friederike Lüpke and Mathieu Gueye and Moustapha Sall (2006)
It is spoken in the village of Djibonker, 13km to the west of the regional capital Ziguinchor, on the road to Cape Skirring.
Information from: “Language and identity in flux: in search of Baïnounk” (155-174) . Lüpke, Friederike (2010)
"All Baïnounk varieties present strong a priori evidence for being endangered languages and have been analysed as such... it is impossible to predict the future of the languages in light of the limited information... Numbers of speakers and labels for Baïnounk varieties and assumptions on their
relatedness are inconclusive and differ widely according to the source."
Joola Fogny
Joola Kasa
Mandinka
Wolof
French
"The Baïnounk language area is characterised by a complex multilingual situation, and the different varieties are partly in contact with different languages. Depending on their location, rural speakers use two distinct varieties of the Atlantic language cluster Joola (Joola Fogny and Joola Kasa), sometimes additional Joola languages, and/or the Mande language Mandinka. All of them are also fluent to some extent in the national lingua franca Wolof, an Atlantic language, and many speak the official language French. In addition, a Portuguese-based Creole has left traces in the language. As a consequence, the Baïnounk communities exhibit extensive multilingualism as a systematic trait not just of individuals, but of entire speech communities... Interestingly though, speakers of Baïnounk are not generally multilingual in more than one Baïnounk variety."
Information from: “The Casamance as an Area of Intense Language Contact: The Case of Baïnounk Gubaher” . Alexander Cobbinah (2010)
"Baïnounk Gubaher is spoken by approximately 1,000 people in the village of Djibonker, just south of Ziguinchor, and by several hundred people of the diaspora communities in Dakar and Ziguinchor... The number of migrants from Djibonker and their descendants residing in Dakar has been given as around 400. Especially the first generation, who were born and raised in the village, still speak Gubaher, whereas in the subsequent generations it is often the case that the language is neither understood nor spoken."
Joola Banjal; Joola Kujirerai; Bayot; French; Wolof
In Djibonker, but probably also elsewhere among Baïnounk speakers, it is normal for children to master four
languages, and a repertoire of six to ten languages is nothing unusual for an adult person... French and Wolof are increasingly spoken and understood everywhere in Senegal... three of the languages spoken by the inhabitants of Djibonker are themselves only poorly described minority languages: Joola
Banjal (Sagna 2008; Tendeng 2007; Bassène 2006), Joola Kujirerai (no sources found) and Bayot (Diagne 2009)."
"Village of Djibonker, just south of Ziguinchor, and... diaspora communities in Dakar and Ziguinchor"