Benin Languages

Description
Benin is a diverse country linguistically. A total of 55 languages are spoken in Benin, with 50 being indigenous. Of those, French is the official language, and all the indigenous languages are considered national languages.

Of the Beninese languages, Fon, a Gbe language, and Yoruba are the most important in the south of the country. In the north there are half a dozen regionally important languages, including Bariba language, once counted as a Gur language and Fulfulde.

The multilingual character of Beninese society is characterized by the number of languages spoken, ethno-linguistic diversity, stratification of language use (whereby French is used officially and other languages used in other spheres of activity), and by the fact that many Beninese are polyglots. A polyglots is someone who has knowledge of several languages, consisting of the ability to understand, speak, read, or write these languages. French The only official language of Benin is French, according to title I, article I of the Constitution of Benin. According to Ethnologue, it is spoken by 3.8 million people (2016) out of more the total population of more than 10 million. For the majority of French speakers in Benin, it is the second language. For word list and help researching in Benin records, see:
 * French Genealogical Word List

Fon
Fon is the most widely spoken indigenous language, spoken by 24% of the population. To date, there are about 53 different dialects of the Fon language spoken throughout Benin.

Yoruba
Yoruba is classified among the Edekiri languages, which together with Itsekiri and the isolate Igala form the Yoruboid group of languages within the Volta–Niger branch of the Niger–Congo family. The linguistic unity of the Niger–Congo family dates to deep prehistory, estimates ranging around 15,000 years ago (the end of the Upper Paleolithic).In present-day Nigeria, it is estimated that there are over 40 million Yoruba primary and secondary language speakers as well as several other millions of speakers outside Nigeria, making it the most widely spoken African language outside Africa. Yoruba is a member of the Volta-Niger branch of the Niger-Congo family of languages. It is spoken by about 28 million people in southwest Nigeria, Benin, Togo, the UK, Brazil and the USA. It is one of the four official languages of Nigeria, along with English, Hausa and Igbo.

Yoruba first appeared in writing during the 19th century. The first Yoruba publications were a number of teaching booklets produced by John Raban in 1830-2. The person who made the biggest contribution to Yoruba literacy was Bishop Ajayi (Samual) Crowther (1806-1891), who studied many of the languages of Nigeria, including Yoruba, and wrote and translated in some of them. Crowther was also the first Christian bishop of West African origin. A Yoruba orthography appeared in about 1850, though it has undergone a number of changes since then.

Word List(s)
Yoruba My Languages is a great page to help you with word lists and to learn Yoruba vocabulary words from English to Yoruba. YouTube is a YouTube page with Yoruba Most Common Vocabulary 600 Words. Phonetics is a list of 148 words in English and the spelling and pronunciation in Yoruba.

Fon
The following information on Fon was found at Wikipedia. Fon has seven oral vowel phonemes and five nasal vowel phonemes. {| width=
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/p/ only occurs in linguistic mimesis and loanwords, though often it is replaced by /f/ in the latter, as in cɔ́fù 'shop'. Several of the voiced occlusives only occur before oral vowels, while the homorganic nasal stops only occur before nasal vowels, indicating that [b] [m] and [ɖ] [n] are allophones. [ɲ] is in free variation with [j̃]; Fongbe therefore can be argued to have no phonemic nasal consonants, a pattern rather common in West Africa.

The only consonant clusters in Fon have /l/ or /j/ as the second consonant; after (post)alveolars, /l/ is optionally realized as [ɾ]: klɔ́ 'to wash', wlí 'to catch', jlò [d͡ʒlò] ~ [d͡ʒɾò] 'to want'.

Tone

Fon has two phonemic tone (linguistics)s, high and low. High is realized as rising (low–high) after a voiced consonant. Basic disyllabic words have all four possibilities: high–high, high–low, low–high, and low–low.

In longer phonological words, such as verb and noun phrases, a high tone tends to persist until the final syllable; if that syllable has a phonemic low tone, it becomes falling (high–low). Low tones disappear between high tones, but their effect remains as a downstep. Rising tones (low–high) simplify to high after high (without triggering downstep) and to low before high.

Hwevísatɔ́, é ko hɔ asón we. "The fishmonger, she bought two crabs"

The Fon alphabet is based on the Latin alphabet, with the addition of the letters Ɖ/ɖ, Ɛ/ɛ, and Ɔ/ɔ, and the digraphs gb, hw, kp, ny, and xw.

Yoruba
You can hear the sounds of the Yoruba alphabet at: Yoruba Sounds

Yoruba alphabet

A a	B b	D d	E e	Ẹ ẹ	F f	G g	Gb gb	H h ah	bi	di	hay	hen	fi	gi	gbi! in [a]	[b]	[d]	[e]	[ɛ]	[f]	[g]	[g͡b]	[h] I i	J j	K k	L l	M m	N n	O o	Ọ ọ	P p he! ji	ki	li	mi	ni	oh	or! pi [i]	[ɟ]	[k]	[l]	[m]	[n]	[o]	[ɔ]	[k͡p] R r	S s	Ṣ ṣ	T t	U u	W w	Y y ri	si	shi	ti	uh! wi	yi [r]	[s]	[ʃ]	[t]	[u]	[w]	[j]

Nasal vowels (Awọn Fawẹli Aranmupe) an	ẹn	in	ọn	un [ã]	[ɛ̃]	[ĩ]	[ɔ̃]	[ũ]

Language Aids and Dictionaries
Fon
 * Parker, Philip M. Webster's Fon - English Thesaurus Dictionary. n.p.: ICON Group, 2008. Available at: WorldCat.
 * Restoration Healing FONGBE PRIMER: FUNCTIONAL FON LANGUAGE FOR OUR EVERYDAY WORLD
 * Glosbe is a free online translation dictionary.

Yoruba
 * Church Missionary Society. A dictionary of the Yoruba language. London: Oxford University Press, 1937. Available at: WorldCat.
 * YouTube is a YouTube page that teach's you How To Say Basic Words & Sentences In Yoruba Language.
 * Active Phohetic from UCLA has a Yoruba dictionary and many links to great books and pages for Yoruba.

Additional Resources
Fon
 * Lefebvre, Claire, and Anne-Marie Brousseau. A grammar of Fongbe. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, 2002. Available at: WorldCat.
 * Society of African Missions. Eléments de grammaire de la langue fon (Sud Bénin). Cotonou, République du Bénin: Société des missions africaines, 2012. Available at: WorldCat.
 * Chambers, D. O. A glossary of the Fon language. D.O. Chambers editor. Cotonou, Dahomey: n.p., 1968. Available at: WorldCat.
 * Mawouton, Justice-Amour. Practical Fon language in Benin. Porto Novo: Spei Ave Maria, 2008. Available at: WorldCat.
 * Duthie, Alan S, and Rudy K. Vlaardingerbroek. Bibliography of Gbe (Ewe, Gen, Aja, Xwala, Fon, Gun, etc.): publications on and in the language. Basel: Basler Afrika-Bibliographien, 1981. Available at: WorldCat.

Yoruba
 * Crowther, Samuel Adjai. A Vocabulary of the Yoruba Language &c. &c.. London: 2 pt. W.M. Watts, 1870. Available at: WorldCat.
 * Crowther, Samuel, and Owen Emeric Vidal. Vocabulary of the Yoruba Language. London: Seeleys, 1852. Available at: WorldCat.
 * Rowlands, E. C. Yoruba. London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1993. Available at: WorldCat.