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  1. The Agaw, or Central Cushitic, languages are a small branch of Cushitic languages. They are spoken mainly in Ethiopia. Languages. Awngi (South Agaw) spoken southwest of Lake Tana, the largest, with over 350,000 speakers (Kunfal, spoken west of Lake Tana, is not well recorded but is probably a dialect of Awngi) Northern Agaw:

  2. ELP. Boon. Boon or Af-Boon is a nearly extinct Cushitic language spoken by 59 people (as of 2000) in Jilib District, Middle Jubba Region of southern Somalia. In recent decades they have shifted to the Maay dialect of Jilib. All speakers were reported in the 1980s to be older than 60. Their traditional occupations are as hunters, leatherworkers ...

  3. kamb1318. Kambaata is a Cushitic language. It is spoken in Southern Ethiopia by around 900,000 people. [2]

  4. Glottolog. east2653. The Macro-Somali or Somaloid languages, or (in the conception of Bernd Heine, who does not include Baiso [1] ), Sam languages, are a branch of the Lowland East Cushitic languages. They are spoken in Somalia, Djibouti, eastern Ethiopia, and northern Kenya. The most widely-spoken member is Somali.

  5. The sheer majority of Cushitic languages belong to one single subgroup: East Cushitic (EC). Its speech area extends from Eritrea with Saho to Mount Kenya with the extinct Yaaku language, and from the Indian Ocean with ‘Afar and Somali to the Sudanese-Ethiopian border with Dhaasanac (see Map 21.1).

  6. In Ethiopia, Saho is primarily spoken in the Tigray Region. It has about 250,000 speakers in total and four main dialects: [clarification needed] Northern dialect, mainly spoken by Casawurta, Tharuuca, Casabat Care, etc.; Central dialect is mainly spoken by Faqhat Xarak of Minifere; Southern dialect mainly spoken by Minifire, Xazo, Dabrti-meela ...