Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Information on the eastern Sudanic region is found in ancient Egyptian writings.
Most speak one of the Sudanic languages.
Their fleeing was due to internal conflicts between the tribes from the crumbling Sudanic empire.
The Sudanic empires also became centers of Islamic learning.
The languages spoken by modern Nubians are based on ancient Sudanic dialects.
Until the 15th century these small states were on the periphery of the major Sudanic empires of the era.
The Songhai are found primarily throughout Mali in the Western sudanic region (not the country).
The hand weapons of the Sudanic cavalry were the sword, lance, battle-axe and broad-bladed spear.
Mangbutu is a Central Sudanic language of northeastern Congo.
A few Central Sudanic groups remain such as the Mari and the Moru.
The Efé, who speak the language of a neighboring Sudanic people, Lese.
The Roman conquest of Egypt put it on a collision course with the Sudanic powers of the southern regions.
As the only ethnic group in the province to speak a Central Sudanic language, the Ngambay make up the third linguistic group.
Interactions with neighboring Sudanic empires, traders, and nomads from other parts of Africa also left impressions upon the Berber people.
Around 2000, the term "Western Sudanic Arabic" was proposed by a specialist in the language, Jonathan Owens.
Westermann, in his classification of the then Sudanic languages, adopted the grouping but called it Togorestsprachen.
Ghana, the earliest of the Sudanic empires, flourished in present-day eastern Mauritania from the fourth to the thirteenth century.
It is a Central Sudanic language spoken in Chad and formerly in Darfur, Sudan.
Efik and Yoruba were two such languages of the Sudanic language group; almost unused languages now, I'd say. "
Dara, also known as Gbaya-Dara, is a Central Sudanic language of South Sudan.
Westermann, a pupil of Meinhof, set out to establish the internal classification of the then Sudanic languages.
Their Nubian language is an Eastern Sudanic language, part of the Nilo-Saharan phylum.
Culturally, it was a meeting place for a variety of people: Eritrean, Ethiopian, Egyptian, Sudanic, Arabic, and Indian.
Moru is a Central Sudanic language spoken in South Sudan by the Moru people.
The Mandé, under the leadership of the legendary Sundiata, founded the second great Sudanic kingdom, Mali.