las ISO 639

Lama Autonyms

Lama

  • Geography

    TG Widespread. Significant presence in Lomé.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Togo

las
Lamba, Losso
Lama
198,000 in Togo (Gblem-Poidi and Kantchoa 2012). Total users in all countries: 258,000.
Widespread. Significant presence in Lomé.
Benin, Togo
5 (Developing).
Niger-Congo, Atlantic-Congo, Volta-Congo, North, Gur, Central, Southern, Grusi, Eastern
Kande (Kante), Kadjala (Kadjalla), Defale. Reportedly similar to Tem [kdh] and Kabiye [kbp].
Home, neighborhood, work. Used by all. Positive attitudes. Also use Éwé [ewe]. Also use French [fra]. Also use Kabiyè [kbp]. Also use Tem [kdh]. Used as L2 by Miyobe [soy], Nawdm [nmz].
Literacy rate in L1: 1%–5%. Literacy rate in L2: 20%. Dictionary. Grammar. NT: 1993–1995.
Latin script [Latn].
Traditional religion.
OLAC resources in and about Lama
Lama
60,000 in Benin (2006 J. Leclerc).
Atacora department: Boukoumbé commune, northwest of Boukoumbé town, scattered villages; Donga department: Bassila and Djougou communes.
Kande (Kante), Kadjala (Kadjalla).
5 (Developing)
Also use French [fra].
Literacy rate in L1: 1%–5%.
Lama is name for the people and language. Losso refers to people on the Losso Plain who can either be Lama or Nawdm. Traditional religion, Christian.
View other languages of Benin
Lama
Several hundred or perhaps thousands in Ghana (1996).
Northern region: between Tamale and Yendi.
Kadjala (Kadjalla).
5 (Developing)
Non-indigenous.
View other languages of Ghana