Kom language (Cameroon)

[2] Kom uses a 29-character Latin-script orthography based on the General Alphabet of Cameroon Languages.

The digraphs ae and oe are also written as ligatures æ and œ, respectively.

The orthography is mostly phonemic, although the characters ae, oe, ue, and ’ represent allophonic variations: the three vowel digraphs are the product of vowel coalescence, and the apostrophe represents the glottal stop, a syllable-final variant of /k/.

Although Kom has eight phonetic tones,[3] only two are marked in writing: the low tone [˨] is written with a grave accent (◌̀) over the vowel (e.g. kàe [kæ̀] "four"), and the high-low falling tone [˦˨] is written with a circumflex (◌̂) over the vowel (e.g. kâf [kâf] "armpit").

This article about Grassfields Bantu languages is a stub.