Languages
- Aguna
- Aja
- American Sign Language
- Anii
- Anufo
- Baatonum
- Biali
- Boko
- Dendi
- Ditammari
- Ede Cabe
- Ede Ica
- Ede Idaca
- Ede Ije
- Ede Nago, Kura
- Fon
- Foodo
- French
- Fulfulde, Borgu
- Fulfulde, Western Niger
- Gbe, Ayizo
- Gbe, Ci
- Gbe, Defi
- Gbe, Eastern Xwla
- Gbe, Gbesi
- Gbe, Kotafon
- Gbe, Maxi
- Gbe, Saxwe
- Gbe, Tofin
- Gbe, Waci
- Gbe, Weme
- Gbe, Western Xwla
- Gbe, Xwela
- Gen
- Gourmanchéma
- Gun
- Hausa
- Ifè
- Kabiyè
- Kyanga
- Lama
- Lukpa
- Mbelime
- Miyobe
- Mokole
- Mòoré
- Nago, Northern
- Nago, Southern
- Nateni
- Ngangam
- Notre
- Tchumbuli
- Tem
- Waama
- Yom
- Yoruba
Scripture Status
- no Scripture
- Bible
- New Testament
- Portions
Hausa
- Alternate names: Abakwariga, Habe, Haoussa, Hausawa, Kado, Mgbakpa Also: in Burkina Faso -- Haoussa; in Cameroon -- Haoussa, Hawsa; in Niger -- Haoussa, Hausawa, Haussa; in Togo -- Haoussa, Haussa
- Scriptures published: Bible (1932--2004) New Testament (1880--1965) Portions (1857--1988)
- Literacy: No information available.
- Primary country: Nigeria
- Region: Sokoto, Kaduna, Katsina, Kano, Bauchi, Jigawa, Zamfara, Kebbi, and Gombe states
- Also used in: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Congo, Eritrea, Germany, Ghana, Niger, Sudan, Togo
- Religion: Muslim, traditional religion, Christian
- Status: De facto provincial language in Nigeria
- Number of users: 24,988,000 (18,500,000 in Nigeria (1991 SIL); 500 in Burkina Faso (Vanderaa 1991); 23,500 in Cameroon (1982 SIL); 5,460,000 in Niger (2006); )
(data from Ethnologue and other sources)
Online Resources
|