leo ISO 639

Leti

  • Geography

    CM Centre region: Lekié division, Sa’a subdivision, Nkolebassimbi and Nkolndzomo villages; Mbam-and-Inoubou division, north of Sanaga river.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Cameroon

leo
Mengisa-Leti, Mengissa, Tiki, Tungidjo, Tungijo
Some L1 speakers (2014 SIL).
Centre region: Lekié division, Sa’a subdivision, Nkolebassimbi and Nkolndzomo villages; Mbam-and-Inoubou division, north of Sanaga river.
Southern Cameroon
7 (Shifting).
Niger-Congo, Atlantic-Congo, Volta-Congo, Benue-Congo, Bantoid, Southern, Narrow Bantu, Northwest, A, Sanaga (A.601)
Leti is closely related to and may be a dialect of Tuki [bag] (2014 SIL). Lexical similarity: 82%–84% with Tuki [bag], 23% with Ewondo [ewo], Eton [eto], and Mengisa [mct].
The Mengisa people reportedly speak 2 languages: Mengisa [mct], and Leti. However the linguistic context is rather complex and a very thorough sociolinguistic survey needs to be done. Most of the Mengisa people speak Mengisa; a percentage of them use Leti as a ‘secret language´, so that their Ekwondo and Eton neighbors cannot understand them. There is also a smaller population of the Mengisa who speak Leti as their mother tongue (2014 SIL). Shifting to Eton [etn]. Most also use French [fra]. Also use Mengisa [mct]. Also use Tuki [bag]. Used as L2 by Mengisa [mct].
Literacy rate in L2: High in French [fra].
Unwritten [Qaax].
Ethnically, Leti speakers consider themselves Mengissa people, even though their language is very different from Mengisa [mct], the other language spoken by their ethnic group.
OLAC resources in and about Leti