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Languages of Tanzania
Closed Adjective Classes and Primary Adjectives in African Languages Guillaume Segerer
Music of Ghana and Tanzania
1 Parameters of Morpho-Syntactic Variation
Vidunda (G38) As an Endangered Language?
Élémentsde Description Du Langi Langue Bantu F.33 De Tanzanie
An Analysis of the Verbal Marker Tsa in Luguru
The Languages of Tanzania There Are About 112 Indi,Enous African Languages in Tanzania (Grimes 1992)
The Classification of the Bantu Languages of Tanzania
Participation and Language Use
Additive and Substitutive Borrowing Against Semantic Broadening and Narrowing in the Names of Architectural Structures in Tanzanian Bantu Languages
Ikoma Vowel Harmony: Phonetics and Phonology
CHAPTER 2 from Hinterland to Motherland: the Northeast-Coastal Culture Zone
The Spread of Kiswahili Lexis Into the Interior Bantu: the Case of Names of New World Cereals and Tubers in Tanzanian Bantu
Thesis Hum 2003 Nkhoma Darc
Title an Account of Intercultural Contact in Nyakyusa
Book Reviews JALL 23–1 95 Kulikoyela Kahigi, Yared Kihore
Some Salient Features of Southern Cushitic (Common West Rift)
Title: Digital Archiving of Data from Undocumented Languages Mentor: Deo Ngonyani
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Assessment of Kivunjo As Second Language Learners' Competence
1 Lexical Borrowing in Africa with Special Attention to Outcomes of Languages in Contacts in Tanzania Amani Lusekelo Department
A Sandawe Dialect Survey
Fipa: a first Look at Dialectal Variation and Syntactic Variation Linguistisches Kolloquium, Humboldt Universität Zu Berlin 11 May 2010
Kotok- Into a Negative Marker in Manda (Bantu N.11)
Lexical-Semantic and Morpho-Syntactic Properties of English Loanwords in Sukuma
Societies, Religion, and History: Chapter 1
Dialect Variation in a Minority Language: the Case of Bena
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Swahili Vs. English in Tanzania and the Political Discourse
1 Parameters of Morpho-Syntactic Variation
Languages of the World
The Linguistic Situation in Tanzania
Contact-Induced Language Divergence and Convergence in Tanzania: Forming New Varieties As Language Maintenance
Central, East, and Southern African Languages Nancy C. Kula (University of Essex) and Lutz Marten (SOAS)
New Perspectives on the Genetic Classification of Manda (Bantu N.11)
Lessons from a Dialect Survey of Bena: Analysing Wordlists
The Linguistic Landscape of Urban Tanzania: an Account of the Language of Billboards and Shop-Signs in District Headquarters
Border-Straddling Speech Communities: Linguistic and Educational Challenges Facing the Nyanja-Chewa-Mang’Anja Cluster of Southeastern Africa
Linguistic Variation and the Dynamics of Language Documentation: Editing in ‘Pure’ Kagulu1
A Coastal Tanzanian Language (P10)
Researching and Documenting the Languages of Tanzania
Adaptation of Sukuma Loanwords in the Western Dialects of Datooga (Taturu) and Its Dialectological Implications
Influences of English and Kiswahili on Kibena Meaning Extension Through Language Contact
The ALT Grammar Watch 1
African Language Resource Handbook: a Resource Handbook of the Eighty-Two Highest Priority African Languages
Tanzania) — Language Contexts
New Updated Guthrie List, a Referential Classification of the Bantu Languages
The “Languages of Tanzania” Project: Background, Resources and Perspectives
The Influence of Non-Linguistic Factors on the Usage of the Pre-Prefix in Luguru
A Comparative Analysis of Kiswahili and Echijita Noun Classes