ttj ISO 639

Rutooro Autonyms

Tooro

  • Geography

    UG Bundibugyo, Kabarole, Kamwenge, Kasese, Kibaale, Kyegegwa, Kyenjojo, and Ntoroko districts; West, south and southeast of Lake Albert.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Uganda

ttj
Orutoro, Rutoro, Toro
Rutooro
846,000 (2014 census), increasing. Census based on tribal affiliation. 811,000 Tooro, 35,000 Tuku (2014 census).
Bundibugyo, Kabarole, Kamwenge, Kasese, Kibaale, Kyegegwa, Kyenjojo, and Ntoroko districts; West, south and southeast of Lake Albert.
Uganda
4 (Educational). De facto language of provincial identity in Kabarole and Kabale districts.
Niger-Congo, Atlantic-Congo, Volta-Congo, Benue-Congo, Bantoid, Southern, Narrow Bantu, Central, J, Nyoro-Ganda (E.12)
Tuku, Rutuku. Hema [nix] (Nyoro-Toro) in Democratic Republic of the Congo is slightly different. Tuku dialect is most likely a separate language. Lexical similarity: 78%–93% with Nyoro [nyo].
Vigorous. Home, market, work. Used by all. Positive attitudes. Most also use English [eng]. Most also use Nyoro [nyo]. Used as L2 by Amba [rwm], Konzo [koo], Nyoro [nyo], Talinga-Bwisi [tlj].
Taught in primary schools through grade 3. Taught as subject in some secondary schools, as Runyakitaara, sharing materials with Chiga [cgg], Nyankore [nyn], and Nyoro [nyo]. Literature. Radio. Videos. Dictionary. Texts. Bible: 1912.
Latin script [Latn], used since 1978.
Standardized form of the western languages (Nyankore-Chiga and Nyoro-Tooro) is called Runyakitara, and is taught at the University and used in internet browsing, but is a hybrid language. Christian, Muslim, traditional religion.
OLAC resources in and about Tooro