Mfinu | |
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Native to | DR Congo |
Native speakers | 8,400 (2002) [1] |
Niger–Congo
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | zmf |
Glottolog | mfin1238 [2] |
B.83 [3] |
Mfinu is a Bantu language of the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Malcolm Guthrie was a professor of Bantu languages at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) in London. He is known primarily for his classification of Bantu languages, Guthrie 1971. The classification, though based more on geography than linguistic relatedness, is nonetheless the most widely used. Together with the Belgian linguist Achille Émile Meeussen (1912–1978), he is regarded as one of the two leading Bantu specialists of the second half of the 20th century.
Daniel P. Biebuyck is an authority on central African art with contributions to contextual African art studies, oral literature, and the sociopolitical structure of numerous groups in DRC.
The Boma–Dzing languages are a clade of Bantu languages coded Zone B.80 in Guthrie's classification. According to Nurse & Philippson (2003), some of Guthrie's B.80 are related to the Teke languages (B.70), and some Yansi varieties belong with the Yaka languages (H.30), but the rest form a valid node. They are:
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