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Gun language

Iwde to Wikipedia

Gun (Gun: gungbe) ko ɗemngal nder fedde ɗemɗe Gbe. Ko leñol Ogu en kaalata ɗe e nder leydi Benin, kam e nder fuɗnaange-rewo leydi Najeriya.[2] Gun ina jeyaa e dental ɗemɗe Fon nder nder ɗemɗe Gbe Fuɗnaange ; ina ɓadii ɗemɗe Fon goɗɗe, haa teeŋti noon e mbaydiiji mum Agbome e Kpase, kam e ɗemɗe Maxi e Weme (Ouémé). Ina huutoree e won e duɗe e nder departemaa Ouémé to leydi Benin.[3]

Gun woni ɗemngal ɗiɗaɓal ɓurngal haaleede e leydi Bene. Ɓuri haaleede ko to fuɗnaange leydi ndii, to Porto-Novo, to Semè-Kpodji, to Bonou, to Adjarra, to Avrankou, to Dangbo, to Akpro-Misérété, to Cotonou, e gure goɗɗe ɗe Ogu en koɗi. Kadi ko yimɓe seeɗa Ogu en kaaldata e ɗemngal ngal to fuɗnaange-rewo leydi Najeriya saraaji keerol leydi Benin, haa teeŋti e Badagry, Maun, Tube.

Fonoloji Konnguɗi Labiyo Bilabial- dental laminal- alveolaar (Caggal-) alveolaar Palatal Labial- velar Velar Uvular Glotal Nofru m ~ b n ~ ɖ (ɲ) Plosiif/ Afrikaat daande d d͡ʒ ɡ͡b ɡ daande alaa (p) t t͡ʃ k͡p k Daande frikatiif f ~ ɸ s (ʃ) x x ~ χ ~ h daande v ~ β z (ʒ) ɣw ɣ ~ ʁ Ko ɓadii l ~ l̃ j [j̃] w [w̃]. Tiriil (r ~ r̃) Tappu (ɾ) Plosifs daande /b, ɖ/ ina mbayloo e nofru daande [m, n] tan ko adii alkule nofru, kono; ko ɗum waɗi kelme ñamlaaɗe ɓurɗe ɓooyde, /b, ɖ/ kadi ina keewi waasde waylude so ina ardii alkule nofru. E nder daande /x ~ χ ~ h/, /ɣ ~ ʁ/; /f ~ ɸ/, /v ~ β/; /tʃ ~ ʃ/, /dʒ ~ ʒ/; ɗiin sawtaaji ko teskuyaaji tiiɗɗi e sawtawol gootol sabu mbayliigu ɗemngal, wonaa no foneeji ceertuɗi nii. /p/ ɓuri wonde ko fonetik sabu kelme ñamlaaɗe e kelme ideofonik. /ɖ/ ina nanee no tappirde [ɾ] so tawii ko e mbaydi hakkunde daande, rewi heen ko daande haaldude. /j/ so tawii ko adii nde alkule nofru ina mbaawi naneede ko wayi no [ɲ] walla [j̃] e nder mbayliigu mbelngu. /l, w/ ina nanndiree [l̃, w̃] so tawii ko adii alkule nofru. /l/ ina faamniree kadi no trill [r] nii so tawii ko caggal alkule laminal, palato-alveolaaji, e alkule palatal. Ina waawi kadi nasal no [r̃] so tawii ko adii alkule nasal e nder oon nokku.[4]Vowels Front Central Back Close i ĩ u ũ Close-mid e o Open-mid ɛ ɛ̃ ɔ ɔ̃ Open a ã Orthography The language has been written with three orthographies, all of them based on the Latin alphabet. In Nigeria, it has been written with an orthography similar to that of Yoruba and some other languages of Nigeria, and using the dot below diacritic to indicate sounds.[clarification needed] In Benin, another orthography was developed for publishing a Bible translation in 1923, and it was updated in 1975, and is now used for teaching literacy in some schools in Benin; it is similar to the orthography of Fon, using letters such as ⟨ɛ⟩ and ⟨ɔ⟩.[5] There are proposals to unify the orthographies, for example the one made by Hounkpati Capo in 1990.[4]

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