Ebrié, or Cama (Caman, Kyama, Tchaman, Tsama, Tyama), is spoken by the Tchaman people in Ivory Coast and Ghana.
Instead, the nasal vowels cause the voiced lenis consonant series [ɓ, ɗ, j, w] to assimilate into [m, n, ɲ, ŋʷ].
[2] The noun class prefixes in Ebrié distinguish between certain homophones and between singular and plural forms.
cámã́the Ebriés+ ńcã̀language→ cámã́ǹcã̀Ebrié languagecámã́ + ńcã̀ → cámã́ǹcã̀{the Ebriés} {} language {} {Ebrié language}átɛ̃̀fire+ ńtʰùsand→ ńtɛ̃̀ǹtʰùash[4] átɛ̃̀ + ńtʰù → ńtɛ̃̀ǹtʰùfire {} sand {} ashNouns can be made plural through the use of nominal prefixes or plural suffixes.
The singular subject pronouns merge with the TAM markers, resulting in morphophonemic changes.