| Urhobo | |
|---|---|
| Native to | Nigeria |
| Region | Delta and Bayelsa State |
| Ethnicity | Urhobo people |
|
Native speakers
|
550,000 (1993) |
|
Niger–Congo
|
|
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | |
| Glottolog | urho1239 |
Urhobo is one of the Edoid languages and is spoken by the Urhobo people of southern Nigeria.
Urhobo has a rather reduced system, compared to proto-Edoid, of seven vowels; these form two harmonic sets, /i e a o u/ and /i ɛ a ɔ u/.
It has a conservative consonant inventory for an Edoid language. It maintains three nasals, and only five oral consonants, /ɺ, l, ʋ, j, w/, have nasal allophones before nasal vowels.
Temu: A substance or person reaching a position or status respectively.
Urhobo dictionaries have been compiled by Ukere, Osubele, Ebireri Okrokoto of Urhobo Language Institute, and Julius Arerierian. A multilingual dictionary of English, Okpe, Urhobo and Uvwie was compiled by Akpobọmẹ Diffrẹ-Odiete with funding from Foundation for Endangered Languages.