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Gen language - Wikipedia Jump to content

Gen language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gen
Mina, Popo
gɛn
Native toBenin, Togo[1]
Native speakers
620,000 (2019–2021)[1]
Official status
Recognised minority
language in
Language codes
ISO 639-3gej
Glottologgenn1243

Gen (also called Gɛ̃, Gɛn gbe, Gebe, Guin, Mina, Mina-Gen, and Popo) is a Gbe language spoken in the southeast of Togo in the Maritime Region. Like the other Gbe languages, Gen is a tonal language. It was misidentified as the 'Arda' language isolate of South America.[2]

History

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The Gen language is spoken by the Gen-Mina people, who originated from Accra and Elmina in Ghana. The Mina from Elmina migrated because of the Denkyira wars of aggression, while the Gen [fr] came over from Accra after their defeat in the Akwamu wars. The two groups intermingled with the indigenous Ewe, resulting in their Ewe dialect having words borrowed from Fanti, Ga-Adangbe and various European languages.[citation needed]

The Gen language is mutually intelligible with Ewe and is considered to be one of the many dialects of Ewe.[citation needed]

There were 476,000 Gen-speakers in Togo in 2019, and 144,000 in Benin in 2021.[1]

Phonology

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Vowels

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The vowels of Mina (Gen) are as follows:[3]

a ã e ɛ ẽ i ĩ o ɔ õ u ũ


Orthography

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The orthography is defined in the Alphabet des langues nationales of Benin. In the 1990 edition, Gen shared its alphabet with Waci.[4] In the 2008 edition, Gen has its own alphabet (without F with hook ⟨ƒ⟩).

Alphabet[5]
Uppercase A B C D Ɖ E Ɛ F G GB Ɣ H X I J K KP L M N NY Ŋ Ɔ P S T U Ʋ V W Y Z
Lowercase a b c d ɖ e ɛ f g gb ɣ h x i j k kp l m n ny ŋ ɔ p s t u ʋ v w y z

Nasalisation is indicated with a n after the vowel (⟨an ɔn ɛn in un⟩).

References

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  1. ^ a b c Gen at Ethnologue (26th ed., 2023) Closed access icon
  2. ^ Campbell, L. (2024). "Phantom, False, and Spurious Languages of South America". The Indigenous Languages of the Americas: History and Classification. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-767346-1. Retrieved 2025-03-01.
  3. ^ Ako, Léopold (1969). Grammaire Mina: complète (in French).
  4. ^ Centre national de linguistique appliquée (CENALA) (1990). Alphabet des langues nationales (2 ed.). Cotonou: CENALA. hdl:10625/6700.
  5. ^ Centre national de linguistique appliquée (CENALA) (2008). Alphabet des langues nationales béninoises (6 ed.). Cotonou: CENALA avec le concours de l'Initiative francophone pour la formation à distance des maîtres (IFADEM).

Sources

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  • Kangni, Atah-Ekoué (1989) La syntaxe du Gẽ: étude syntaxique d'un parler Gbe: le Gẽ du Sud-Togo. Frankfurt: Peter Lang.