Tswa–Ronga languages
The Tswa–Ronga languages are a group of closely related Southern Bantu languages spoken in Southern Africa chiefly in southern Mozambique, northeastern South Africa and southeastern Zimbabwe.
Languages
The group is divided into three main languages:- Tswa–Ronga
- * Tswa : Hlengwe, Tshwa, Mandla, Ndxhonge, Nhayi. Partially intelligible with Ronga and Tsonga .
- * Ronga : Konde, Putru, Kalanga. Partially intelligible with Tsonga and Tswa .
- * Tsonga : Luleke, Gwamba, Changana, Hlave, Kande, N’walungu, Xonga, Jonga, Nkuna, Songa, Nhlanganu.
Writing system
The sintu writing system, Ditema tsa Dinoko, for Southern Bantu languages, is used to represent all Tswa-Ronga languages consistently under one orthography. This includes those marginal languages that have never been standardised in the Latin alphabet, such as the "East Sotho" varieties. For example, it contains a specific grapheme indicating retroflex or "cerebral" consonants, such as the retroflex ejective affricate occurring here in Pai:| English | place | - |
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