fab ISO 639

Fa d’Ambu Autonyms

Fa d’Ambu

  • Geography

    GQ Annobón province, isolated from mainland by 360 km of ocean; Bioko Norte province: Malabo; a few on continental Equatorial Guinea.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Equatorial Guinea

fab
Annobonense, Annobonese, Annobonés, Fa d’Ambô
Fa d’Ambu
6,000 in Equatorial Guinea (2017 S. Smith). No monolinguals. Total users in all countries: 6,600.
Annobón province, isolated from mainland by 360 km of ocean; Bioko Norte province: Malabo; a few on continental Equatorial Guinea.
Equatorial Guinea and Gabon, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon and São Tomé e Príncipe
6a (Vigorous).
Creole, Portuguese based
Different from Equatorial Guinean Pidgin [fpe] and Crioulo [pov] of Guinea-Bissau and Kabuverdianu. Little variation between Annobonese in Annobón and Malabo. Lexical similarity: 63% with Sãotomense [cri]. 10% of the lexicon comes from Spanish [spa].
Possible vowel length; vowel harmony; tone sandhi.
Vigorous use in Annobón and Malabo. All domains except government and education where Spanish [spa] is used. Used by all. Positive attitudes. Most also use Spanish [spa]. Many on Bioko learn it, but less so on Annobón; women on Annobón seem uncomfortable using it. Many also use Equatorial Guinean Pidgin [fpe], especially those who live on Bioko island. A few also use Fang [fan]. Also use Portuguese [por], as a liturgical language by local Catholics.
Literacy rate in L1: Very low. Literacy rate in L2: 95% in Spanish [spa]. Grammar. Bible portions: 2009.
Latin script [Latn], used since 2008.
Famed swimmers, fishermen, and whalers. Christian.
OLAC resources in and about Fa d’Ambu