Bade Language: Difference between revisions
m I added a few helpful comments |
Davonmccurry (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 15: | Line 15: | ||
Lópke, F. (2009). At the margin: African endangered languages in the context of global endangerment discourses. African Research And Documentation, (109), 15-41. |
Lópke, F. (2009). At the margin: African endangered languages in the context of global endangerment discourses. African Research And Documentation, (109), 15-41. |
||
NOVAK, A. (2008). |
NOVAK, A. (2008). Who Speaks? Who listens?: The Problem of Address in Two Nigerian Trauma Novels. Studies in the Novel, 40(1/2), 31-51. |
||
Schuh, R. G. (1997). Changes in obstruent voicing in Bade/Ngizim. ''Los Angeles: University of California, Los Angeles, MS''. |
Schuh, R. G. (1997). Changes in obstruent voicing in Bade/Ngizim. ''Los Angeles: University of California, Los Angeles, MS''. |
Revision as of 18:17, 7 April 2017
Endangered Language Project
Bade Language
Bade is a language, spoken in Nigeria. Similar to many other Western African languages, Bade is a vulnerable language at great risk of extinction {{Citation Needed}}. With 250,000 speakers, the language and the culture of the Bade people have suffered over the last several years. As the language continues to fade, the culture and historic value associated with the language perishes as well. The local dialect is shifting from Bade to Hausa. Across West Africa, the impact on local communities through the loss of the indigenous tongue will be significant. (Maybe be a short explanation warranting why?)
References (It should state References and not Bibliography)
Blench, R. (2007). Endangered languages in West Africa. Language diversity endangered, 181, 140.
Conrad Max Benedict, B. (1993). Democratisation of Language Use in Public Domains in Nigeria. The Journal of Modern African Studies, (4). 639.
Essegbey, J., & Henderson, B. (2010). Documenting Endangered Languages in Africa [Special Issue]. Journal Of West African Languages, 37(1), 1-139.
Lópke, F. (2009). At the margin: African endangered languages in the context of global endangerment discourses. African Research And Documentation, (109), 15-41.
NOVAK, A. (2008). Who Speaks? Who listens?: The Problem of Address in Two Nigerian Trauma Novels. Studies in the Novel, 40(1/2), 31-51.
Schuh, R. G. (1997). Changes in obstruent voicing in Bade/Ngizim. Los Angeles: University of California, Los Angeles, MS.
Schuh, R. G. (2003). The linguistic influence of Kanuri on Bade and Ngizim. Maiduguri Journal of Linguistic and Literary Studies (MAJOLLS), 5, 55-89.
Schuh, Russell. (2009). Yobe Languages Research Project. http://aflang.humnet.ucla.edu/Ngizim/ngizim.html
Storch, Anne. (2014). Fading delimitations: multilingual settlements in a convergence area: case studies from Nigeria. (n.d). Topics in interdisciplinary African studies.
Whalen, D. H., & Simons, G. F. (2012). Endangered Language Families. Language: Journal Of The Linguistic Society Of America, 88(1), 155-173.
Ethnologue. (n.d.). Bade.
This is a user sandbox of Bade Language. You can use it for testing or practicing edits. This is not the sandbox where you should draft your assigned article for a dashboard.wikiedu.org course. To find the right sandbox for your assignment, visit your Dashboard course page and follow the Sandbox Draft link for your assigned article in the My Articles section. |
This template should only be used in the user namespace.This template should only be used in the user namespace.