According to title II, article 11 of the Constitution, all communities comprising the Béninese nation shall enjoy the freedom to use their spoken and written languages and to develop their own culture while respecting those of others, and the State must promote the development of national languages of intercommunication.
Fon is the most widely spoken indigenous language, spoken by 24% of the population. It is the first language of more than 17% of
Benin's population. The language is mainly spoken in the
Atlantique,
Littoral,
Collines and
Zou Departments. Other important languages are
Yoruba,
Bariba,
Mina,
Dendi,
Mokole,
Yom, and
Aja. In the capital of
Porto Novo, the two main ethnolinguistic groups are
Yoruba and
Gun-Gbe, with the smaller population of Wemi,
Seto, Tori, Xwala,
Defi, and
Tofin speakers. Yoruba newspapers from neighboring
Nigeria are popular. •
Anii, also called Gisida, Basila, Bassila, Baseca, "Winji-Winji", "Ouinji-Ouinji", or Akpe, is a vulnerable Kwa language, estimated to be <25,000 native speakers worldwide as of 1996 to as much as 50,000 as of 2003-2007. It contains the dialects and variants Ananjubi, Balanka, Akpe, Gikolodjya, Gilempla, Gisème and Giseda. •
Gwamhi-Wuri, also known as Lyase, Lyase-Ne, Gwamhyə-Wuri-Mba, Gwamfi, or "Banganci", is a vulnerable
Kainji language with anywhere from 1,838 to 16,000 native speakers worldwide as of 2000. It contains the dialects and variants Wuri, Gwamhyə and Mba. •
Miyobe, also known as Soruba, Mi yɔbɛ, Bijobe, Biyobe, Sorouba, Solla, Uyobe, Meyobe, Kayobe, Kuyobe, Sola, Solamba, or Kyobe, is a threatened
Gur language with 8,700 native speakers worldwide, 7,000 of them in Benin as of 1991. •
Notre, also dubbed Nõtre, Bulba, Nootre, Burusa, or Boulba, is a vulnerable Gur language estimated to number anywhere from 1,500 to 2,368 speakers, as of 2002 and 1996, respectively. •
Tchumbuli, also known as Basa, Tshummbuli, Chombulon, or Tchombolo, is a severely endangered Kwa language, with anywhere from 1,838 to 2,500 speakers. Dialects and variants include Cobecha and Tchumbuli.
Orthographies The orthographies of the national languages of Benin are codified and periodically updated by the Ministry of Literacy and Promotion of National Languages (Ministère de l’Alphabétisation et de la Promotion des langues nationales) and the National Center for Applied Linguistics (Centre national de linguistique appliquée). A common alphabet for the national languages of Benin is based on the Latin alphabet, with the addition of the letters
Ɓ ɓ,
Ɖ ɖ,
Ɗ ɗ,
Ɛ ɛ,
Ǝ ǝ,
Ƒ ƒ,
Ɣ ɣ,
Ɩ ɩ,
Ŋ ŋ,
Ɔ ɔ,
Ʊ ʊ,
Ʋ ʋ,
Ƴ ƴ, and
Ʒ ʒ. Diacritical marks are used for marking tone and nasalization: The
Gbékoun script was invented as an indigenous alternative to the Latin orthographies. ==Foreign languages==