The Niger-Kordofanian family of languages is one of several language families spoken in Africa. It has two branches, Niger-Congo and Kordofanian. The Kordofanian languages are spoken primarily in Sudan. Niger-Congo languages are spoken throughout southern and central Africa.
Information taken from "African languages," Bartleby.com. http://www.bartleby.com/65/af/Africanlng.html
Kru languages constitute a small family within the very large Niger-Congo phylum, spoken by about 3 million people in the forest regions of southern Liberia and south-west Ivory Coast,
Sites containing substantial information about grammar, vocabulary and socio-linguistics of Kru languages.
General linguistic material about Kwa languages or specific information about minor languages. Major Kwa languages (Akan, Ewe, Baule, Fon) have their own category.
Luganda, also known as Ganda or Buganda, is one of the major languages of Sub-Saharan Africa and the major language of Uganda. It belongs to the Bantu family.
Suggest sites containing substantial information about the sounds and/or grammar and/or vocabulary of Luganda.
All linguistic material about this family, also known as Voltaic, composed of some 80 languages spoken in the area of the Upper Volta River, in West Africa.
Also called Matabele, Ndebele is a Bantu language that is considered by some to be a dialect of Zulu, and by others to be an independent language. It is spoken in South Africa, Botswana, and Zimbabwe.
Wolof is spoken in Gambia, Mauritania, and Senegal. The classification is Niger-Congo family, Western Sudanic subgroup, West Atlantic branch.
A century of Christian mission effort has had little impact, and there are only a few Wolof believers. Despite the official language being French, about 80 percent of the Senegalese population speaks Wolof.