- Elgon languages
The Elgon languages are languages of the Southern Nilotic Kalenjin family spoken in the
Mount Elgon area in westernKenya and easternUganda . According to theEthnologue , there are two main Elgon languages: Kupsabiny (spoken by about 120 000 people) andSabaot (spoken by about 134 000 people). Sabaot is a common name assumed by various related peoples, including the Kony, Pok, and Bong'om (after whom theWest ernKenya n town ofBungoma is named), whose respective languages are considered separate languages by Rottland (1982).The
Terik people , living east of Lake Victoria wedged in between the Nandi,Luo andLuyia , spoke or speak a dialect closely related to Pok and Bong'om. According to their own oral history they are "people of Mount Elgon"; this is confirmed by Bong'om traditions that "the people who later called themselves Terik were still Bong'om when they left Elgon and moved away in a southern direction" (Roeder 1986:142). Recently many of them have assimilated to neighbouring Nandi, leading to a decline in the use of theTerik language in favor of Nandi.External links
* [http://www.ethnologue.com/show_family.asp?subid=2229 The Elgon languages on Ethnologue] .
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