Aweer | |
---|---|
Boni | |
Native to | Kenya |
Region | Coast Province, North-Eastern Province |
Ethnicity | Aweer |
Native speakers | 7,600 (2009 census)[1] |
Dialects |
|
Latin | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | bob |
Glottolog | awee1242 |
ELP | Aweer |
Linguasphere | 14-GAF-a |
![]() Area where the Eastern Omo-Tana languages (minus Bayso and Rendille) are spoken |
Aweer (Aweera), also known as Boni (Bon, Bonta), is a Cushitic language of Eastern Kenya. The Aweer people, known by the arguably derogatory exonym Boni, are historically a hunter-gatherer people, traditionally subsisting on hunting, gathering, and collecting honey.[2][3] Their ancestral lands range along the Kenyan coast from the Lamu and Ijara Districts into Southern Somalia's Badaade District.[4][5]
According to Ethnologue, there are around 8,000 speakers of Aweer. Aweer has similarities with the Garre language,[6][7][8] however, its speakers are distinct in culture and appearance from Garre speakers.[9]