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The Midob people or Meidob are an ethnic group from the Meidob Hills region in Darfur, Sudan. They speak Midob, one of the Nubian languages (part of the larger family of Nilo-Saharan languages). The population of this ethnic group is estimated at 99,000. [1] The Midob's roots are claimed to go back to Meroitic Kingdom (Kingdom of Kush) in
The Hill Nubian languages are generally classified as being in the Central branch of the Nubian languages, one of three branches of the Nubian languages, the other two being Northern (), consisting of Nobiin, and Western (), consisting of Midob.
Midob (also spelt Meidob) is a Nubian language spoken by the Midob people of North Darfur region of Sudan. As a Nubian language, it is part of the wider Nilo-Saharan language family. Apart from in their homeland of Malha, North Darfur, Midob speakers also live in the Khartoum area (primarily in Omdurman and the Gezira region) and Jezirat Aba. [2]
Red Sea University: Port Sudan: Public Riyadh International College: Khartoum: Private Hayatt university College: Khartoum: Private Sudan International University: Khartoum: Private Sharq El Neal College: Khartoum: Private Sudan University of Science and Technology: Khartoum and other locations: Public University of Bakht Al-Ruda: Al-Dewaym ...
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Asmaa M. I. Ahmed, "Suggestions for Writing Modern Nubian Languages", and Muhammad J. A. Hashim, "Competing Orthographies for Writing Nobiin Nubian", in Occasional Papers in the Study of Sudanese Languages No.9, SIL/Sudan, Entebbe, 2004. Ayoub, A. (1968). The Verbal System in a Dialect of Nubian.
University of Bakhtalruda; University of Dongola; University of Gadarif; University of Garden City; University of Kassala; Faculty of Medicine, University of Khartoum; University of Kordofan; University of Medical Sciences and Technology; University of the Holy Quran and Islamic Sciences; University of West Kordofan; University of Zalingei
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Under the 1998 constitution, only Arabic was the official language. [6] [2] Nonetheless, English was acknowledged as the principal language in the South into the 1990s. [2]It was also the chief language at the University of Khartoum and was the language of secondary schools even in the North before 1969. [2]