men ISO 639

Mɛnde, Mɛnde yia Autonyms

Mende

  • Geography

    SL Eastern province: Kailahun, Kenema, and Pujehun districts; Northern province: Bombali and Moyamba districts’ border areas; along the coast and south and east; Southern province: most of interior.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Sierra Leone

men
Boumpe, Hulo, “Kossa” (pej.), “Kosso” (pej.)
Mɛnde, Mɛnde yia
2,470,000 in Sierra Leone (2019). Total users in all countries: 2,511,600.
Eastern province: Kailahun, Kenema, and Pujehun districts; Northern province: Bombali and Moyamba districts’ border areas; along the coast and south and east; Southern province: most of interior.
Liberia, Sierra Leone
2 (Provincial). Statutory provincial working language in Eastern and Northern provinces; also in Southern province interior (2004, Local Government Act, Article 16(1)).
Niger-Congo, Mande, Western, Central-Southwestern, Southwestern, Mende-Loma, Mende-Bandi, Mende-Loko
Kpa, Ko, Wanjama (Waanjama), Sewawa. Lexical similarity: 92%–98% among dialects.
SOV; postpositions; definite article suffix; 24 consonant and 7 vowel phonemes; tonal (2 tones: high, low); word-initial consonant mutation.
Also use Krio [kri]. Used as L2 by Bom-Kim [bmf], Gola [gol], Northern Kissi [kqs], Vai [vai].
Taught in primary schools through grade 3. Taught as subject in secondary schools in grades 7–9. Dictionary. Grammar. Bible: 1959.
Latin script [Latn]. Mende Kikakui script [Mend], limited usage except for correspondence and record keeping, especially accounting.
Traditional religion, Christian, Muslim.
OLAC resources in and about Mende
Mende
41,600 in Liberia (2020).
Grand Cape Mount county: Porkpa district; Lofa county: Vahun district. Sierra Leone border area.
5 (Dispersed)
Also use Liberian English [lir]. Used as L2 by Vai [vai].
Muslim.
View other languages of Liberia