| Tyap, Tyab | 
|---|
| Person | A̱tyotyap, A̱tyotyab | 
|---|
| People | A̱tyap, A̱tyab | 
|---|
| Language | Tyap, Tyab | 
|---|
| Country | A̱tyap or A̱byin A̱tyap | 
|---|
| Tyap: Fantswam | 
|---|
| Person | A̱tyufantswam | 
|---|
| People | Fantswam | 
|---|
| Language | Fantswam | 
|---|
| Country | Fantswam or A̱byin Fantswam | 
|---|
| Tyap: Sholyio | 
|---|
| Person | A̱tyosholyio | 
|---|
| People | A̱sholyio | 
|---|
| Language | Sholyio | 
|---|
| Country | Sholyio or A̱byin A̱sholyio | 
|---|
| Tyap: Tyeca̱rak | 
|---|
| Person | A̱tyotyeca̱rak | 
|---|
| People | A̱tyeca̱rak | 
|---|
| Language | Tyeca̱rak | 
|---|
| Country | Tyeca̱rak or A̱byin A̱tyeca̱rak | 
|---|
| Tyap: Takad, Takat | 
|---|
| Person | A̱tyotakad | 
|---|
| People | A̱takad, Takad | 
|---|
| Language | Takad, Takat | 
|---|
| Country | Takad or A̱byin A̱takad | 
|---|
Tyap is a regionally important dialect cluster of Plateau languages in Nigeria's Middle Belt, named after its prestige dialect. It is also known by its Hausa exonym as Katab or Kataf. It is also known by the names of its dialectical varieties including Sholyio, Fantswam, Gworok, Takad, "Mabatado" (Tyap 'proper'), Tyeca̱rak and Tyuku (Tuku). In spite of being listed separately from the Tyap cluster, Jju's separation, according to Blench R.M. (2018), seems to be increasingly ethnic rather than a linguistic reality.