Demographics
Ega is spoken in 21 villages near Gly in Diès Canton, Gôh-Djiboua District,Documentation
A language documentation fieldwork project on Ega was conducted by a team from Universität Bielefeld, Germany (Dafydd Gibbon) and Université Houphouet Boigny, Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire (Firmin Ahoua) from 2000 to 2003 in cooperation with York University, Canada (Bruce Connell).Gibbon, Dafydd and Bow, Catherine and Bird, Steven and Hughes, Baden. 2004. Securing interpretability: the case of Ega language documentation. P''roceedings of the 4th International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation'', LREC 2004, Evaluation and Language resources Distribution Agency (ELRA). pp.1369-1372.Classification
Ega appears to be a divergent Western Kwa language within the Niger–Congo language family spoken inCultural and economic context
Like other Western Kwa languages, traditional story-telling among the Ega people has a fairly strict schedule: after an introduction by the narrator, a well-defined role in the village, the narration proceeds, punctuated by responder's interjection ɛsɛ and interspersed with song interludes with the call and response structure of work songs. The economy of the Ega community is partly horticultural, partly dependent on plantation work. Hunting is practised with nets which are used to enclose an area of several hundred square meters, within which small game such as agouti (''Thryonomys swinderianus'') are cornered by a group of beaters. The nets resemble the local canoe trawling nets used on the southern Côte d'Ivoire coast about 100km further south, and possibly indicate a history of coastal migration.Phonology
Ega has twenty-seven consonants. Its stops have a three-way contrast between voiceless, voiced, and implosive. There are nine vowels, with ATR contrast: /i̙/, /i̘/, /u̙/, /u̘/, /e̙/, /e̘/, /o̙/, /o̘/, and /a/. There are three tones: high, mid, and low.References
*Blench, Roger. 2004