Cutchi-Swahili
Kutchi-Swahili, or Cutchi-Swahili, is a Swahili-based creole spoken among the Indian population of East Africa. It is the native language of some Gujarati families from Zanzibar that have settled in the larger cities of mainland Tanzania and Kenya, and is used as a second language by others of the Indian community. It is derived from the Kutchi language of the Kutch district in Gujarat.
Kutchi-Swahili | |
---|---|
Asian Swahili | |
Native to | Tanzania, Kenya |
Region | Zanzibar, larger cities |
Native speakers | 45,000 (2002)[1] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | ccl |
Glottolog | cutc1238 |
G40A,B [2] |
Maho (2009) assigns different codes to Kutchi-Swahili and Asian Swahili (Kibabu),[2] and Ethnologue also notes that these may not be the same.[1]
References
- Kutchi-Swahili at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
- Jouni Filip Maho, 2009. New Updated Guthrie List Online
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