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  1. The Awngi language, in older publications also called Awiya (an inappropriate ethnonym), is a Central Cushitic language spoken by the Awi people, living in Central Gojjam in northwestern Ethiopia.

    • 490,000 (2007 census)
  2. La clasificación usual de las lenguas cusitas centrales es la siguiente: 1 . Awngi, hablado al sureste del lago Tana, con mucho la lengua agaw más hablada, con unos 350 000 hablantes. Blin (agaw norteño) hablado en Eritrea alrededor de la localidad de Keren por unas 70 mil personas.

    • 550 mil (2011)
    • Este de África
  3. Awngi (South Agaw) spoken southwest of Lake Tana, much the largest, with over 350,000 speakers (Kunfal, spoken west of Lake Tana, is poorly recorded but most likely a dialect of Awngi) Northern Agaw: Bilen–Xamtanga: Bilen (North) spoken (70,000 speakers) in Eritrea around the town of Keren and eastern Sudan around the town of Kassala

  4. Awngi (አውጚ) Awngi is spoken by about 400,000 people in northwestern Ethiopia. It is a Central Cushitic language and the majority of speakers can be found in the Agew Awi Zone of the Amhara Region, and there are also Awngi speakers in parts of the Metekel Zone of the Benishangul-Gumuz Region.

  5. 27 de abr. de 2023 · This chapter deals with Awngi—a language of the Central Cushitic, or Agaw, group. Awngi is mainly spoken in northwestern Ethiopia in the Awi Zone of the Amhara Regional State and in some villages of the Benishangul-Gumuz Regional State.

  6. Awngi language. The Awngi language, in older publications also called Awiya (an inappropriate ethnonym), is a Central Cushitic language spoken by the Awi people, living in Central Gojjam in northwestern Ethiopia. Most speakers of the language live in the Agew Awi Zone of the Amhara Region, but there are also communities speaking the language in ...

  7. Abstract. This study presents the phonology of Awngi, a major Central Cushitic language spoken in Northern Ethiopia. Awngi has six vowels, one of which an almost predictable epenthetic vowel /ɨ/, and twenty-nine consonants, of which five are labialized and two are post-stopped fricatives. Two tone levels are also contrastive in the language.