Kiga | ||||
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Rukiga | ||||
Spoken in | Uganda, Rwanda | |||
Ethnicity | Kiga, Twa | |||
Native speakers | 4,500,000 (date missing) | |||
Language family |
Niger–Congo
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Standard forms | ||||
Language codes | ||||
ISO 639-3 | cgg | |||
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Kiga (also called Rukiga, Ruchiga, or Chiga) is the native language of the people of Kiga people (Bakiga). Kiga is a very similar language to the Nkore language. It was first written in the second half of the nineteenth century.
Kiga is so similar to Nkore (84%–94% lexical similarity[1]) that some argue they are dialects of the same language, Although Rukiga is a more aggressive tone, a language called Nkore-Kiga by Charles Taylor.[2]
In common with other Bantu languages, Kiga has a noun class system in which prefixes on nouns mark membership of one of the noun genders. Pronouns, adjectives, and verbs reflect the noun gender of the nominal they refer to. Some examples of noun classes:
The sound [l] is not distinctive in Rukiga. The letter "r" is used instead.
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