| Tuwat | |
|---|---|
| Touat | |
| Native to | Algeria | 
| Region | Tuat | 
| Native speakers | (undated figure of "dying out")[1] | 
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | grr(included) | 
| Glottolog | toua1238 | 
Tuwat (Touat, Tuat) is a Zenati Berber language. It is spoken by Zenata Berbers in a number of villages in the Tuat region of southern Algeria; notably Tamentit (where it was already practically extinct by 1985[2]) and Tittaf, located south of the Gurara Berber speech area. Ethnologue considers them a single language, "Zenati", but Blench (2006) classifies Gurara as a dialect of Mzab–Wargla and Tuwat as a dialect of the Riff cluster.
References
- ↑  Tuwat at Ethnologue (17th ed., 2013)  
- ↑ Anonymous, "Le dernier document en berbère de Tamentit", Awal 1 (1985)
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