Krongo language

Krongo, also spelled Korongo or Kurungu and known as Dimodongo, Kadumodi, or Tabanya after local towns, is a Kadu language spoken in the South West of the Nuba Mountains[2] in South Kordofan, Sudan.

Ethnologue lists Angolo, Tabanya, and Toroji in Krongo hills; and Buram, Damaguto, Dar, Dimadragu, and Dimodongo villages.

[2] According to research from 1985, Krongo speakers are usually farmers and live off of cultivating crops like sorghum, beans, sesame, peanuts and corn as well as keeping animals like cattle, sheep, pigs, goats and chickens.

[4] According to the survey, there is a high rate of illiteracy among the people in the Krongo region.

Many of the younger children don´t know Arabic yet – 90.3% of the people claimed to have learned it after their early childhood.

In front of /i/ and /ɪ/, it is optional for the velar plosives within a morpheme, but in the initial position they cannot be fully palatalized.

Apart from the subject and the direct object, all nominal phrases are being marked with a case prefix according to the verb.