Nawdm is a Gur language of Togo and Ghana. There are approximately 190,000 speakers in Togo and 8,000 in Ghana.
According to the most recent classifications of Bendor-Samuel in 1989 and those of Heine and Nurse in 2004, Nawdm belongs to the Yom–Nawdm group of the Oti-Volta subfamily of the central Gur or Voltaic languages, the Gur family itself being a branch of the Niger–Congo languages. These classifications are based on the work of historical and comparative linguistics of Gabriel Manessy who demonstrated that Nawdm was not, as some had initially believed, a dialect of Mooré, but a language which, while certainly being related to Mooré, however, belongs to another linguistic sub-group.
The term Losso is a vague local designation, never employed by linguists, referring to both the Nawdm and Lamba people.
+ Nawdm alphabet | A | B | D | E | Ɛ | F | G | Gw | Gb | H | Ĥ | I | J | K | Kw | Kp | L | M | N | Ny | Ŋ | Ŋm | O | Ɔ | R | S | T | U | V | W | Y |
a | b | d | e | ɛ | f | g | gw | gb | h | ɦ | i | j | k | kw | kp | l | m | n | ny | ŋ | ŋm | o | ɔ | r | s | t | u | v | w | y |
To distinguish a sequence of two consonants and a consonant represented by two letters, the diaeresis is used on the first letters of the sequence of two consonants, for example: the sequence of consonants (g̈w, g̈b, n̈y, ŋ̈m).
The uppercase letter Ĥ corresponds to the lowercase letter ɦ (the usual correspondence is Ĥĥ and Ɦɦ). This transcribes the glottal stop.
The high tone is denoted by the acute accent and the low tone is denoted by the grave accent, although in usual writing, the tone is only written in pronouns.
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