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Close vowels in Fang

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 December 2009

Extract

One of the results of the sometime colonization of Africa was the concentration by linguists of various European countries on the languages of those African territories held under their suzerainty, and the neglect of languages spoken in areas ‘belonging to’ other European countries. Fang, spoken in parts of what are now Gabon and Cameroon, has not enjoyed a great deal of attention from English-speaking linguists and/or Africanists, though it holds considerable interest for both in the idiosyncrasies of the phonetic display relating to its phonological categories and configurations.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © School of Oriental and African Studies 1974

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References

Bates, G. L. 1926. Handbook of Bulu, Elat, Cameroun: Halsey Memorial Press.Google Scholar
Galley, S. [1964.] Dictionnaire fang-français et français-fang. Neuchatel: Henri Messeiller.Google Scholar
Guthrie, M. 1948. The classification of the Bantu languages. London: Oxford University Press for the International African Institute.Google Scholar
Guthrie, M. 1953. The Bantu languages of western equatorial Africa. (Handbook of African Languages.) London: Oxford University Press for the International African Institute.Google Scholar
Guthrie, M. 1969. ‘Features of verbal structure in S. W. Fang’, IJAL, XXXV, 4, 356–65.Google Scholar
Meinhof, C. 1932. Introduction to the phonology of the Bantu languages. Berlin: Dietrich Reimer, Ernst Vohsen.Google Scholar