Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jul 12, 2026

Ngwe language

Ngwe is a Bamileke language spoken predominantly in Lebialem, Cameroon. As of 2001, Ngwe had 73,200 speakers, which was an increase from the numbers of previous censuses. Its closest relatives are Yemba and Ngiemboon.

Last revised
Jul 12, 2026
Read time
≈ 1 min
Length
194 w
Citations
5
Source
Ngwe
Native toCameroon
Native speakers
(73,000 cited 2001)1
Language codes
ISO 639-3nwe
Glottologngwe1238

Ngwe (Ŋwɛh, Nweh) is a Bamileke language spoken predominantly in Lebialem, Cameroon. As of 2001, Ngwe had 73,200 speakers, which was an increase from the numbers of previous censuses. Its closest relatives are Yemba and Ngiemboon.

Writing system

Ngwe Alphabet 2
a b c d e ə ɛ f g gh ' h i j k kh l
m n ŋ o ɔ p pf r s t ts u ʉ v w y z

Phonology

Vowels

It has at least thirteen vowels, /i y e ɛ æ ɐ ɑ ɔ o u ɯ ɤ ʌ/.3 /ɤ ʌ/ are centralised.3 /y/ sounds somewhat like [ø] or [œ] and has a tongue position similar to that of /ɑ/, but with the jaw raised and the lips very close together.3

References

References

  1. Ngwe at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. The Languages of Cameroon Series. sfn error: no target: CITEREFThe_Languages_of_Cameroon_Series (help)
  3. Ladefoged, Peter. A Phonetic Study of West African Languages: An Auditory-instrumental Survey. Cambridge University Press, 1968, pp. 33–36.
External links