It is spoken by 26,000 people in the Central Province of Cameroon, in the Lekie division and in the Mbam and Kim division, along the Sanaga river.
[3] The dialects are Kombe (Tukombe), Cenga (Tocenga), Tsinga (Tutsingo), Bundum, Njo (Tonjo), Ngoro (Tu Ngoro), Mbere (Tumvele)[3] and possibly Leti/Mengisa[4] and Mbwasa.
[5] As in most Bantu languages, the noun consists of a class prefix and a stem.
Verbs are conjugated for the noun class of the subject and object.
This article about Southern Bantoid languages is a stub.