Yɛmba or Yemba, also Yémba or Bamiléké Dschang, is a major Bamileke language in West Region of Cameroon. It was approximately spoken by 500,000 or so people in the country in 2023.[1]
A machine backwards transformation of the dictionary was performed by independent scientists who created the French translation of Yemba words. The resulting dictionary was extended with French synonyms from the French version of the WordNet database. Furthermore, over 6,000 English, German, Czech, Spanish, Italian and Chinese words and expressions were translated into Yemba. A major outcome of this project is a collaborative online platform for extending Yemba translations and promoting the learning of the Yemba language.
[3]
/ʉ/ is included as a phoneme in some analyses. In more abstract analyses, it is considered as a palatalization of /u/.
Vowel length is distinguished using double vowel sounds (ex. aa [aː])
Tone
Three tones are marked as high [á], mid [ā], or low [à]. Low tones are unmarked when written.[4]
Orthography
Alphabet
The Yemba alphabet consists of 32 letters, including letters from the Latin alphabet as well as special graphemes.
Yemba alphabet
Uppercase
A
B
C
D
E
Ə
Ɛ
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
Ŋ
O
Ɔ
P
Pf
S
Sh
T
Ts
U
Ʉ
V
W
Y
Z
'
Lowercase
a
b
c
d
e
ə
ɛ
f
g
h
I
j
k
l
m
n
ŋ
o
ɔ
p
pf
s
sh
t
ts
u
ʉ
v
w
y
z
'
Although the letter "r" is not included in the Yemba alphabet, it is noteworthy that it appears in a few words, such as "mbrɛ", which means "bread". These instances are primarily words of foreign origin. Furthermore, the word "mbrɛ" can also be written as "mblɛ", just like "Rosi", meaning Russia, can be spelled "Losi". This situation raises the issue of standardizing loanwords that contain letters foreign to the Yemba language, so that these words adhere to the orthographic criteria of the language.