Resultado da Busca
Iorubá ou ioruba (èdè Yorùbá), [1] por vezes referida como yorubá ou yoruba [2] é um idioma da família linguística nígero-congolesa falado secularmente pelos iorubás em diversos países ao sul do Saara, principalmente na Nigéria e por minorias em Benim, Togo e Serra Leoa, dentro de um contínuo cultural-linguístico composto por 50 ...
- 49
- 49
- Sem regulador oficial
- Alfabeto latino
Als Yoruba oder Joruba (Eigenbezeichnung: èdè Yorùbá, d. h. ‚die Yoruba-Sprache‘) bezeichnet man ein Dialektkontinuum in Westafrika mit mehr als 30 Millionen Sprechern. Auch die geschriebene Standardsprache wird so genannt. Die zu den Niger-Kongo-Sprachen gehörende Yoruba-Sprache ist die Sprache der Yoruba.
- über 30 Millionen
The number of Yoruba speakers is roughly 45 million, plus about 2 million second-language speakers. [1] As a pluricentric language, it is primarily spoken in a dialectal area spanning Nigeria, Benin, and Togo with smaller migrated communities in Côte d'Ivoire, Sierra Leone and The Gambia .
The Yoruba people (US: / ˈ j ɒr ə b ə / YORR-ə-bə, UK: / ˈ j ɒr ʊ b ə / YORR-uub-ə; Yoruba: Ìran Yorùbá, Ọmọ Odùduwà, Ọmọ Káàárọ̀-oòjíire) are a West African ethnic group who mainly inhabit parts of Nigeria, Benin, and Togo.
- 4,020 (2021)
- 39,500,000 (2015)
- 26,305 (2021)
- ≥ 37,000,000
Mulher iorubá com criança. "Nagôs" ou Anagôs era a designação dada aos negros escravizados e vendidos na antiga Costa dos Escravos e que falavam o iorubá. [ 22] . Os iorubás são um povo do sudoeste da Nigéria, no Benim (antiga República do Daomé) e no Togo. [ 17]
The Yoruba language is a Niger-Congo language spoken in West Africa. The number of speakers of Yoruba was thought to be 20 million in the 1990s. It is one of the languages in Nigeria, Benin, and Togo and in communities in other parts of Africa, Europe and the Americas .
Yoruba at a glance. Native name: Èdè Yorùbá [e˩de˩ joru˩ba˥] Language family: Niger–Congo, Atlantic–Congo, Volta-Congo, Volta–Niger, Yoruboid, Edekiri. Number of speakers: c. 43 million. Spoken in: Nigeria, Ghana, Benin, Togo, Côte d'Ivoire, Niger. First written: 17th century AD.