Yoruba is natively spoken by about 41 million people, primarily in Nigeria, where it is one of the official languages, and among Yoruba communities in Benin and Togo. It is integral to Yoruba cultural identity, known for its vibrant traditions in art (such as beadwork and pottery), religion (including Ifá divination), and festivals like the Osun-Osogbo festival. Written in the Latin alphabet with diacritics, Yoruba grammar features a subject-verb-object (SVO) word order, extensive use of noun classes (similar to other Niger-Congo languages), and a system of verb conjugations that indicate tense, aspect, and mood.
Stats
Language Family: Niger-Congo
Writing System: Latin
Writing System Type: Alphabet
Writing Direction: L to R
Tones / Pitch Accent: 3
Morphology: Analytic
Cases: 0
Grammatical Gender / Noun Class: 0
Number of Verb Tenses: 6
Word Order: SVO
Number of Vowels (Monophthongs): 11
Number of Consonants: 18
Areas Where Spoken
Benin (12.2%) (1.63 mil)
Nigeria (18.0%) (39.3 mil)
Resources
Books
The Body in Yorùbá: A Linguistic Study - Pdf with vocabulary and examples about the body
The Linguistic Analysis of the Structure of the Yoruba Numerals - Pdf explaining numerals
Yoruba: A Grammar Sketch [PDF] - Basic grammar guide
Yorùbá Yé Mi - Textbook PDF with audio
Radio
Radio Palmwine (local music)
Videos
Yorùbá Lessons with Adérónké̩ - Vocab and culture
I speak Yorùbá too - Audio grammar lessons
Blessing Kayode - Culture and vocab
The Yoruba Blog - Vocab and culture
Websites
lexilogos.com - English <=> Yoruba
edeyoruba.com [PDF] - English => Yoruba
glosbe.com - English <=> Yoruba
Lexilogos: More Resources - Dictionaries, grammar, journal articles
Naijish - a comprehensive Yoruba Language Learning site
CeLT Indiana University - Course with dialogues
FSI Yoruba - Basic and intermediate course