Daka language


Daka is one of two languages spoken by the Chamba people in Nigeria, the other being Chamba Leko.

Varieties

Daka is a dialect cluster. The Chamba dialect is called Chamba Daka and constitutes 90% of speakers. Chamba Daka is also called Sámá Mūm.
Other dialects are Dirim, Lamja, Dengsa, and Tola. Dirim and Lamja–Dengsa–Tola have separate ISO coding, but Ethnologue notes that they are 'close to Samba Daka and may be a dialect' or 'may not be sufficiently distinct from Samba Daka to be a separate language', and actually lists Dirim as a dialect under Daka. Blench lists Dirim as coordinate with other Daka varieties: Nnakenyare, Mapeo, Jangani, Lamja, Dirim, suggesting that if Lamja and Dirim are considered separate languages, as in Ethnologue, then Samba Daka itself needs to be broken up into three additional languages.
Blench lists the following varieties as Samba Daka dialects.
placed Samba Daka within his Adamawa proposal, as group G3, but Bennett demonstrated to general satisfaction that it is a Benue–Congo language, though its placement within Benue–Congo is disputed. Blench considers it to be Bantoid. Boyd, however, considers Daka an isolate branch within Niger–Congo. Blench lists Taram as a separate, though closely related, language.