World Language Resources
World Language Resources
Super Bargains
$1 Clearance Items!!!
Adobe
Baûng ñaùnh maùy chöõ
Chuyeån-dòch
Computers / Notebooks
Du-lòch
ESL- Ngoân ngöõ thöù hai laø Anh-ngöõ
Games
Keyboard Stickers
Kieåm soaùt loåi chính taû
Lôùp-hoïc/Tröôøng-hoïc
Microsoft Office
Microsoft Windows
Phim-aûnh/Videos
Saùch thieáu-nhi
Software - Mac
Software - Windows
Thieáu-nhi
Töï-hoïc
Töï-ñieån
Töï-ñieån caàm tay
Windows 7
Word Processing
Vaø nhieàu nöõa...Vaø nhieàu nöõa...
Bemba ngoân-ngöõ
Software - Windows
AfroRoman for Windows
AfroRoman-for-Windows-Unicode-All-Sets-Together-AcholiAfroRoman-AfrikaansAfroRoman-690


Regular Price
$249.95

Add to CartBuy Product InfoInfo

AfroRoman in Unicode is available for both Windows and Macintosh and provides professional-quality, Unicode-encoded fonts in TrueType OpenType format in five typestyles (Times-, Helvetica-, Garamond-, Palatino-, and Zapf Chancery-styles),...
Saûn-phaåm  Phaàn giôùi-thieäu  Maãu cuûa moät baøi vaên  Chuyeån-dòch 

Saûn-phaåm




Phaàn giôùi-thieäu


Bemba is the most widely spoken language of Zambia. Its 2 million speakers live mainly in the northeastern part of the country. Bemba is one of the Bantu languages, most closely related to Luba, spoken in neighboring Zaire.

Bemba has 1,850,000 speakers in Zambia and Congo (Kinshasa).Taabwa, with 250,000 speakers in Congo may regarded as a northern dialect of Bemba. Lala and Bisa,with 350,000 speakers and Lamba with 175,000 are more distantly related to Bemba are also spoken in Zambia and Congo (Kinshasa).A third related group is formed by Tonga of Zambia.


Bemba ñöôïc xöû-duïng trong Zambia

Language Family
Family: Niger-Congo
Subgroup: Benue-Congo
Branch: Bantu


Baûn quyeàn © Kenneth Katzner, Nhöõng ngoân ngöõ treân theá-giôùi, xuaát baûn bôûi Routledge.


Maãu cuûa moät baøi vaên




Chuyeån-dòch


The number of languages spoken on the African continent is estimated to be between six and eight hundred. Until more information is available, and until a more precise criterion as to what constitutes a separate language is agreed upon, no exact number can be given. The figures quoted, however, clearly indicate the great linguistic diversity of Africa, particularly that portion which lies south of the Sahara.