Lau Laka language explained

Lau Laka
Nativename:Laka
States:Nigeria
Region:Lau LGA, Taraba State
Speakers:?
Familycolor:Nilo-Saharan
Fam2:Central Sudanic
Fam3:Bongo–Bagirmi
Fam4:Sara–Bagirmi
Fam5:Sara languages
Fam6:West
Iso3:lak
Iso3comment:(deprecated)[1]
Glotto:laka1252
Glottorefname:Laka of Lau (Nigeria)
Ietf:ksp-NG

Laka or Lau is a Central Sudanic language spoken in Nigeria. It is most closely related to Kabba Laka of Chad. The Hausa refer to the Laka people of Lau as Lakawa. The language was only recently documented in the mid-2010s, and had been previously misclassified as a Mbum language along with Lau.[2]

Distribution

Laka speakers live in Laka ward of Lau LGA (Hausa: Angawan Lakawa; formerly Garin Lakawa ‘Laka town’), Taraba State, eastern Nigeria.[3] They live alongside the Win Lau (or Lau proper; formerly Lau Habe), who are Jukunoid speakers.[4]

Lexical comparison

The following table compares Laka (Lau) and Laka (Chad), both of which are Central Sudanic languages, with Lau proper, a Jukunoid language.[3]

English Laka (Lau) Laka (Chad) Lau proper
animal /dā/ nɛ̃́wkũ̂
cow mã̀ŋgɨ̄ /màngɨ̄/ nâw
chicken kũ̄nʤá /kūnʤá/ zǟw
man ʤĩ̀ŋgàw /ʤìngàw/ jĩ̂nə̀nwò
medicine kũ̀mā /kùmā/ gâj

Notes and References

  1. Still misclassified in Ethnologue (22nd ed.) and Glottolog 4.1.
  2. Book: Blench, Roger. An Atlas of Nigerian Languages. Kay Williamson Educational Foundation. 2019. 4th. Cambridge.
  3. Idiatov, Dmitry, Mark Van de Velde, Tope Olagunju and Bitrus Andrew. 2017. Results of the first AdaGram survey in Adamawa and Taraba States, Nigeria. 47th Colloquium on African Languages and Linguistics (CALL) (Leiden, Netherlands).
  4. The Central Sudanic languages in the context of Nilo-Saharan: a new overview. Roger. Blench. Academia.edu. 25 August 2018.