It is spoken in northeast Liberia, where it is known as Glio, and in western Ivory Coast, where it is known as Oubi or Ubi.
It has a lexical similarity of 0.75 with the Glaro-Twabo language.
[1] In 1991, Glio was spoken by 3,500 people in Liberia and 2,500 Oubi speakers in Ivory Coast.
You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.This Liberia-related article is a stub.
You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.This Ivory Coast-related article is a stub.