9 langues concernées

22 titres trouvés

[22008]   [Anonymous] (19--) : English-Kisukuma dictionary
[22009]   [Anonymous] (19--) : Kisukuma-English dictionary
[22010]   [Anonymous] (19--) : A kiSukuma-English dictionary
[22013]   [Anonymous] (19--) : Grammar of the Kisukuma language
[22183]   [Anonymous] (1969) : KiSukuma language course
[1773]   Batibo, Herman M. (1981) : Some hypotheses on the origin of tonal displacement in Kisukuma: a study based on comparative Bantu tonology
[5676]   Downey, [Miss] (1---) : KiSukuma grammar, with a suggested seven-vowel orthography for kiSukuma
[8679]   Herroelen, P. (1957) : Commentaires sur “Quelques noms vernaculaires d’animaux très communes au Congo belge en dialectes du groupe lingala et en kisuku” [von C. Lemmens et J. Pouchet]
[8684]   Hess, Charles (1---) : Fragments of Kisukuma-English dictionary
[10846]   Kindija, Kulwa Abel (2003) : The syllable representation in Kisukuma: the case of the Jidakama dialect
[11250]   Könen, Fr. M. (19--) : New KiSukuma grammar
[11946]   Lemmens, C. & J. Pouchet (1955) : Quelques noms vernaculaires d’animaux très commun au Congo belge en dialectes du groupe lingala et en kisuku
[12269]   Loenen, [Reverend] M. (19--) : KiSukuma-English dictionary
[13113]   Masele, Balla F. Y. P. (1996) : Homorganic voiceless nasals in Kisukuma
[13114]   Masele, Balla F. Y. P. (1996) : Tense and aspect in Jinakiiya, Kimunasukuma and Kidakama dialects of the Kisukuma-Kinyamwezi languages
[13115]   Masele, Balla F. Y. P. (2000) : Nominal tone in Jinakiiya dialect, Kisukuma
[13116]   Masele, Balla F. Y. P. (2001) : The linguistic history of SiSuumbwa, KiSukuma and KiNyamweezi in Bantu Zone F
[13204]   Matondo, Masangu (2000) : Verb-stem reduplication and tones in Kisukuma
[13205]   Matondo, Masangu (2001) : The interaction of high tones and verb-stem reduplication in Kisukuma
[24685]   Matondo, Masangu (2006) : Tonal Transfer in Kisukuma
[25315]   Matondo, Masangu (2003) : Tone and Prosodic Morphology in Kisukuma
[14547]   Mulinda, M. F. (1997) : An evaluation of the degree of similarity between five Bantu languages: Kihaya, Kihehe, Kinyakyusa, Kishambaa and Kisukuma