| Kutin | |
|---|---|
| Peere | |
| Region | Cameroon |
Native speakers | (15,000 in Cameroon cited 1993)[1] and a few inNigeria |
Niger–Congo?
| |
| Dialects |
|
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | pfe |
| Glottolog | peer1241 |
Kutin is a member of theDuru branch ofSavanna languages. Most Nigerian speakers moved to Cameroon when theGashaka-Gumti National Park was established.
The dialects of Paara (Kutin) are as follows.[2]
Paara (Páárá) is spoken in the northwestern part ofTignère commune (Faro and Deo departments, Adamaoua Region), between the aforementioned town and the Nigerian border by about 15,000 speakers.[2]
Paara Muura, by far the most important variety, is the most northerly dialect (Mayo Baléo commune, Faro and Deo departments, Adamaoua Region), along withGadjiwan and Aimé, northwest of Tignère.[2]
Zongbi is spoken southeast of Tignère near Djombi,Ngaoundéré commune,Vina department, Adamaoua Region.[2]
Dan Muura is an isolated dialect in the northeast of Banyo (Banyo commune,Mayo-Banyo department, Adamaoua Region).[2]
Blench (2004) considers the three varieties, Peere, Potopo (Kotopo), and Patapori, to be separate languages.