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The number of languages natively spoken in Africa is variously estimated (depending on the delineation of language vs. dialect) at between 1,250 and 2,100, and by some counts at over 3,000.Nigeria alone has over 500 languages (according to SIL Ethnologue), one of the greatest concentrations of linguistic diversity in the world. The languages of Africa belong to many distinct language families, among which the largest are:
- Niger–Congo, which include the large Atlantic-Congo and Bantu branches in West, Central, Southeast and Southern Africa.
- Afroasiatic languages are spread throughout Western Asia, North Africa, the Horn of Africa and parts of the Sahel.
- Saharan, Nilotic and Central Sudanic languages (previously grouped under the hypothetical Nilo-Saharan macro-family), are present in East Africa and Sahel.
- Austronesian languages are spoken in Madagascar and parts of the Comoros.
- Khoe–Kwadi languages are spoken mostly in Namibia and Botswana.
- Indo-European languages, while not indigenous to Africa, are spoken in South Africa and Namibia (Afrikaans, English, German) and are used as lingua francas in Liberia and the former colonies of the United Kingdom (English), former colonies of France and of Belgium (French), former colonies of Portugal (Portuguese), former colonies of Italy (Italian), former colonies of Spain (Spanish) and the current Spanish territories of Ceuta, Melilla and the Canary Islands and the current French territories of Mayotte and La Réunion.
There are several other small families and language isolates, as well as creoles and languages that have yet to be classified. In addition, Africa has a wide variety of sign languages, many of which are language isolates.
Around a hundred languages are widely used for interethnic communication. These include Arabic, Swahili, Amharic, Oromo, Igbo, Somali, Hausa, Manding, Fulani and Yoruba, which are spoken as a second (or non-first) language by millions of people. Although many African languages are used on the radio, in newspapers and in primary-school education, and some of the larger ones are considered national languages, only a few are official at the national level. In Sub-Saharan Africa, most official languages at the national level tend to be colonial languages such as French, Portuguese, or English.
The African Union declared 2006 the "Year of African Languages".
Language groups
Most languages natively spoken in Africa belong to one of the two large language families that dominate the continent: Afroasiatic, or Niger–Congo. Another hundred belong to smaller families such as Ubangian, Nilotic, Saharan, and the various families previously grouped under the umbrella term Khoisan. In addition, the languages of Africa include several unclassified languages and sign languages.
The earliest Afroasiatic languages are associated with the Capsian culture, the Saharan languages are linked with the Khartoum Mesolithic/Neolithic cultures. Niger-Congo languages are correlated with the west and central African hoe-based farming traditions and the Khoisan languages are matched with the south and southeastern Wilton culture.
Afroasiatic languages
Afroasiatic languages are spoken throughout North Africa, the Horn of Africa, Western Asia and parts of the Sahel. There are approximately 375 Afroasiatic languages spoken by over 400 million people. The main subfamilies of Afroasiatic are Berber, Chadic, Cushitic, Omotic, Egyptian and Semitic. The Afroasiatic Urheimat is uncertain. The family's most extensive branch, the Semitic languages (including Arabic, Amharic and Hebrew among others), is the only branch of Afroasiatic that is spoken outside Africa.
Some of the most widely spoken Afroasiatic languages include Arabic (a Semitic language, and a recent arrival from West Asia), Somali (Cushitic), Berber (Berber), Hausa (Chadic), Amharic (Semitic) and Oromo (Cushitic). Of the world's surviving language families, Afroasiatic has the longest written history, as both the Akkadian language of Mesopotamia and Ancient Egyptian are members.
Nilo-Saharan languages
Nilo-Saharan languages are a proposed grouping of some one hundred diverse languages. Genealogical linkage between these languages has failed to be conclusively demonstrated, and support for the proposal is sparse among linguists. The languages share some unusual morphology, but if they are related, most of the branches must have undergone major restructuring since diverging from their common ancestor.[citation needed]
This hypothetical family would reach an expanse that stretches from the Nile Valley to northern Tanzania and into Nigeria and DR Congo, with the Songhay languages along the middle reaches of the Niger River as a geographic outlier. The inclusion of the Songhay languages is questionable, and doubts have been raised over the Koman, Gumuz and Kadu branches.[citation needed]
Some of the better known Nilo-Saharan languages are Kanuri, Fur, Songhay, Nobiin and the widespread Nilotic family, which includes the Luo, Dinka and Maasai. Most Nilo-Saharan languages are tonal, as are Niger-Congo languages.[citation needed]
Niger–Congo languages
The Niger–Congo languages constitute the largest language family spoken in West Africa and perhaps the world in terms of the number of languages.[citation needed] One of its salient features is an elaborate noun class system with grammatical concord. A large majority of languages of this family are tonal such as Yoruba and Igbo, Akan and Ewe language. A major branch of Niger–Congo languages is the Bantu phylum, which has a wider speech area than the rest of the family (see Niger–Congo B (Bantu) in the map above).
The Niger–Kordofanian language family, joining Niger–Congo with the Kordofanian languages of south-central Sudan, was proposed in the 1950s by Joseph Greenberg. Today, linguists often use "Niger–Congo" to refer to this entire family, including Kordofanian as a subfamily. One reason for this is that it is not clear whether Kordofanian was the first branch to diverge from rest of Niger–Congo. Mande has been claimed to be equally or more divergent. Niger–Congo is generally accepted by linguists, though a few question the inclusion of Mande and Dogon, and there is no conclusive evidence for the inclusion of Ubangian.
Other language families
Several languages spoken in Africa belong to language families concentrated or originating outside the African continent.
Austronesian
Malagasy belongs to the Austronesian languages and is the westernmost branch of the family. It is the national and co-official language of Madagascar, and a Malagasy dialect called Bushi is also spoken in Mayotte.
The ancestors of the Malagasy people migrated to Madagascar around 1,500 years ago from Southeast Asia, more specifically the island of Borneo. The origins of how they arrived to Madagascar remains a mystery, however the Austronesians are known for their seafaring culture. Despite the geographical isolation, Malagasy still has strong resemblance to Barito languages especially the Ma'anyan language of southern Borneo.
With more than 20 million speakers, Malagasy is one of the most widely spoken of the Austronesian languages.
Indo-European
Afrikaans is Indo-European, as is most of the vocabulary of most African creole languages. Afrikaans evolved from the Dutch vernacular of South Holland (Hollandic dialect) spoken by the mainly Dutch settlers of what is now South Africa, where it gradually began to develop distinguishing characteristics in the course of the 18th century, including the loss of verbal conjugation (save for 5 modal verbs), as well as grammatical case and gender. Most Afrikaans speakers live in South Africa. In Namibia it is the lingua franca. Overall 15 to 20 million people are estimated to speak Afrikaans.
Since the colonial era, Indo-European languages such as Afrikaans, English, French, Italian, Portuguese and Spanish have held official status in many countries, and are widely spoken, generally as lingua francas. (See African French and African Portuguese.) Additionally, languages like French, and Portuguese have become native languages in various countries.
French has become native in the urban areas of the DRC, and Gabon.
German was once used in Germany's colonies there from the late 1800s until World War I, when Britain and France took over and revoked German's official status. Despite this, German is still spoken in Namibia, mostly among the white population. Although it lost its official status in the 1990s, it has been redesignated as a national language. Indian languages such as Gujarati are spoken by South Asian expatriates exclusively. In earlier historical times, other Indo-European languages could be found in various parts of the continent, such as Old Persian and Greek in Egypt, Latin and Vandalic in North Africa and Modern Persian in the Horn of Africa.
Small families
The three small Khoisan families of southern Africa have not been shown to be closely related to any other major language family. In addition, there are various other families that have not been demonstrated to belong to one of these families. The classifications below follow Glottolog.
- Mande, some 70 languages, including the major languages of Mali and Guinea; these are generally thought to be divergent Niger–Congo, but debate persists
- Ubangian, some 70 languages, centered on the languages of the Central African Republic; may be Niger–Congo
- Te-Ne-Omotic, some 20 languages, previously classified under Afro-Asiatic, spoken in Ethiopia
- Khoe-Kwadi, around 10 languages, the primary family of Khoisan languages of Namibia and Botswana
- Surmic, some 11 languages, previously classified within either Sudanic or Nilo-Saharan
- Kx'a, around five languages, with various dialects, spoken in Southern Africa
- South Omotic, around five languages; previously classified within Afro-Asiatic, spoken in Ethiopia
- Tuu, or Taa-ǃKwi, two surviving languages
- Hadza, an isolate of Tanzania
- Bangime, a likely isolate of Mali
- Jalaa, a likely isolate of Nigeria
- Sandawe, an isolate of Tanzania
- Laal, a possible isolate of Chad
Khoisan is a term of convenience covering some 30 languages spoken by around 300,000–400,000 people. There are five Khoisan families that have not been shown to be related to each other: Khoe, Tuu and Kx'a, which are found mainly in Namibia and Botswana, as well as Sandawe and Hadza of Tanzania, which are language isolates. A striking feature of Khoisan languages, and the reason they are often grouped together, is their use of click consonants. Some neighbouring Bantu languages (notably Xhosa and Zulu) have clicks as well, but these were adopted from Khoisan languages. The Khoisan languages are also tonal.
Creole languages
Due partly to its multilingualism and its colonial past, a substantial proportion of the world's creole languages are to be found in Africa. Some are based on Indo-European languages (e.g. Krio from English in Sierra Leone and the very similar Pidgin in Nigeria, Ghana and parts of Cameroon; Cape Verdean Creole in Cape Verde and Guinea-Bissau Creole in Guinea-Bissau and Senegal, all from Portuguese; Seychellois Creole in the Seychelles and Mauritian Creole in Mauritius, both from French); some are based on Arabic (e.g. Juba Arabic in the southern Sudan, or Nubi in parts of Uganda and Kenya); some are based on local languages (e.g. Sango, the main language of the Central African Republic); while in Cameroon a creole based on French, English and local African languages known as Camfranglais has started to become popular.
Unclassified languages
A fair number of unclassified languages are reported in Africa. Many remain unclassified simply for lack of data; among the better-investigated ones that continue to resist easy classification are:
- possibly Afroasiatic: Ongota, Gomba
- possibly Nilo-Saharan: Shabo
- possibly Niger–Congo: Jalaa, Mbre, Bayot
- unknown: Laal, Mpre
Of these, Jalaa is perhaps the most likely to be an isolate.
Less-well investigated languages include Irimba, Luo, Mawa, Rer Bare (possibly Bantu languages), Bete (evidently Jukunoid), Bung (unclear), Kujarge (evidently Chadic), Lufu (Jukunoid), Meroitic (possibly Afroasiatic), Oropom (possibly spurious) and Weyto (evidently Cushitic). Several of these are extinct, and adequate comparative data is thus unlikely to be forthcoming. Hombert & Philippson (2009) list a number of African languages that have been classified as language isolates at one point or another. Many of these are simply unclassified, but Hombert & Philippson believe Africa has about twenty language families, including isolates. Beside the possibilities listed above, there are:
- Aasax or Aramanik (Tanzania) (South Cushitic? contains non-Cushitic lexicon)
- Imeraguen (Mauritania) – Hassaniyya Arabic restructured on an Azêr (Soninke) base
- Kara (Fer?) (Central African Republic)
- Oblo (Cameroon) (Adamawa? Extinct?)
Roger Blench notes a couple additional possibilities:
- Defaka (Nigeria)
- Dompo (Ghana)
Below is a list of language isolates and otherwise unclassified languages in Africa, from Vossen & Dimmendaal (2020:434):
Language | Country |
---|---|
Bangi Me | Mali |
Bayot | Senegal |
Dompo | Ghana |
Ega | Ivory Coast |
Gomba | Ethiopia |
Gumuz | Ethiopia, Sudan |
Hadza | Tanzania |
Irimba | Gabon |
Jalaa | Nigeria |
Kujarge | Chad |
Laal | Chad |
Lufu | Nigeria |
Luo | Cameroon |
Mawa | Nigeria |
Meyobe | Benin, Togo |
Mimi of Decorse; Mimi of Nachtigal | Chad |
Mpra | Ghana |
Oblo | Cameroon |
Ongota | Ethiopia |
Oropom | Kenya, Uganda |
Rer Bare | Ethiopia |
Shabo | Ethiopia |
Weyto | Ethiopia |
Wutana | Nigeria |
Yeni | Cameroon |
Sign languages
Many African countries have national sign languages, such as Algerian Sign Language, Tunisian Sign Language, Ethiopian Sign Language. Other sign languages are restricted to small areas or single villages, such as Adamorobe Sign Language in Ghana. Tanzania has seven, one for each of its schools for the Deaf, all of which are discouraged. Not much is known, since little has been published on these languages
Sign language systems extant in Africa include the Paget Gorman Sign System used in Namibia and Angola, the Sudanese Sign languages used in Sudan and South Sudan, the Arab Sign languages used across the Arab Mideast, the Francosign languages used in Francophone Africa and other areas such as Ghana and Tunisia, and the Tanzanian Sign languages used in Tanzania.
Language in Africa
Throughout the long multilingual history of the African continent, African languages have been subject to phenomena like language contact, language expansion, language shift and language death. A case in point is the Bantu expansion, in which Bantu-speaking peoples expanded over most of Sub-Equatorial Africa, intermingling with Khoi-San speaking peoples from much of Southeast Africa and Southern Africa and other peoples from Central Africa. Another example is the Arab expansion in the 7th century, which led to the extension of Arabic from its homeland in Asia, into much of North Africa and the Horn of Africa.
Trade languages are another age-old phenomenon in the African linguistic landscape. Cultural and linguistic innovations spread along trade routes and languages of peoples dominant in trade developed into languages of wider communication (lingua franca). Of particular importance in this respect are Berber (North and West Africa), Jula (western West Africa), Fulfulde (West Africa), Hausa (West Africa), Lingala (Congo), Swahili (Southeast Africa), Somali (Horn of Africa) and Arabic (North Africa and Horn of Africa).
After gaining independence, many African countries, in the search for national unity, selected one language, generally the former Indo-European colonial language, to be used in government and education. However, in recent years, African countries have become increasingly supportive of maintaining linguistic diversity. Language policies that are being developed nowadays are mostly aimed at multilingualism. This presents a methodological complication when collecting data in Africa and limited literature exists. An analysis of Afrobarometer public opinion survey data of 36 countries suggested that survey interviewers and respondents could engage in various linguistic behaviors, such as code-switching during the survey. Moreover, some African countries have been considering removing their official former Indo-European colonial languages, like Mali and Burkina Faso which removed French as an official language in 2024.
Official languages
other languages |
- Afroasiatic
- Berber:
- Berber in Morocco and Algeria
- Tamasheq in Mali
- Tawellemet in Mali
- Cushitic:
- Semitic:
- Austronesian
- Malagasy in Madagascar
- Ngbandi creole
- Sango in the Central African Republic
- French Creole
- Seychelles Creole in Seychelles
- Indo-European
- Afrikaans in South Africa
- English in Ghana, Gambia, Uganda, Zimbabwe, Nigeria, Cameroon, Kenya, South Africa, Liberia, Zambia, Malawi, Rwanda, Namibia, Seychelles, Sudan, Tanzania, Eswatini, Lesotho, and Mauritius.
- French in Benin, Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Comoros, Democratic Republic of Congo, Congo, Côte d'Ivoire, Djibouti, Gabon, Guinea, Madagascar, Niger, Rwanda, Senegal, Seychelles, and Togo.
- Portuguese in Angola, Mozambique, Guinea-Bissau, Cape Verde, São Tomé and Príncipe and Equatorial Guinea.
- Spanish in Equatorial Guinea
- Niger-Congo
- Bambara in Mali
- Bobo in Mali
- Bozo in Mali
- Chewa in Malawi and Zimbabwe
- Comorian in the Comoros
- Dogon in Mali
- Fula in Mali
- Kassonke in Mali
- Kongo in Angola, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Gabon, and Republic of the Congo
- Kinyarwanda in Rwanda
- Kirundi in Burundi
- Maninke in Mali
- Minyanka in Mali
- Senufo in Mali
- Sesotho in Lesotho, South Africa and Zimbabwe
- Setswana in Botswana and South Africa
- Shona, Sindebele in Zimbabwe
- Sepedi in South Africa
- Soninke in Mali
- Ndebele in South Africa
- Swahili in Tanzania, Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda
- Swati in Eswatini (Swaziland) and South Africa
- Tsonga in South Africa
- Venda in South Africa
- Xhosa in South Africa
- Zulu in South Africa
- Nilo-Saharan
- Songhay in Mali
Language | Family | Official status per country |
---|---|---|
Afrikaans | Indo-European | South Africa |
Amharic | Afroasiatic | Ethiopia |
Arabic | Afroasiatic | Algeria, Comoros, Chad, Djibouti, Egypt, Eritrea, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, Somalia, Sudan, |
Berber | Afroasiatic | Algeria, Morocco, Libya |
Chewa | Niger-Congo | Malawi, Zimbabwe |
Comorian | Niger-Congo | Comoros |
Kikongo | Niger-Congo | Angola, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Republic of the Congo |
Kinyarwanda | Niger-Congo | Rwanda |
Kirundi | Niger-Congo | Burundi |
Malagasy | Austronesian | Madagascar |
Ndebele | Niger-Congo | South Africa |
Oromo | Afroasiatic | Ethiopia |
Sango | French Creole | Central African Republic |
Sepedi | Niger-Congo | South Africa |
Sesotho | Niger-Congo | Lesotho, South Africa, Zimbabwe |
Setswana | Niger-Congo | Botswana, South Africa |
Seychelles Creole | French Creole | Seychelles |
Shona | Niger-Congo | Zimbabwe |
Sindebele | Niger-Congo | Zimbabwe |
Somali | Afroasiatic | Somalia, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya |
Swahili | Niger-Congo | Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda |
Swati | Niger-Congo | Eswatini, South Africa |
Tigrinya | Afroasiatic | Ethiopia, Eritrea |
Tsonga | Niger-Congo | Mozambique, Zimbabwe, South Africa |
Venda | Niger-Congo | South Africa, Zimbabwe |
Xhosa | Niger-Congo | South Africa |
Zulu | Niger-Congo | South Africa |
Cross-border languages
The colonial borders established by European powers following the Berlin Conference in 1884–1885 divided a great many ethnic groups and African language speaking communities. This can cause divergence of a language on either side of a border (especially when the official languages are different), for example, in orthographic standards. Some notable cross-border languages include Berber (which stretches across much of North Africa and some parts of West Africa), Kikongo (that stretches across northern Angola, western and coastal Democratic Republic of the Congo, and western and coastal Republic of the Congo), Somali (stretches across most of the Horn of Africa), Swahili (spoken in the African Great Lakes region), Fula (in the Sahel and West Africa) and Luo (in Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, South Sudan and Sudan).
Some prominent Africans such as former Malian president and former Chairman of the African Commission, Alpha Oumar Konaré, have referred to cross-border languages as a factor that can promote African unity.
Language change and planning
Language is not static in Africa any more than on other continents.[citation needed] In addition to the (likely modest) impact of borders, there are also cases of dialect levelling (such as in Igbo and probably many others), koinés (such as N'Ko and possibly Runyakitara) and emergence of new dialects (such as Sheng). In some countries, there are official efforts to develop standardized language versions.
There are also many less widely spoken languages that may be considered endangered languages.
Demographics
Of the 1 billion Africans (in 2009), about 17 percent speak an Arabic dialect.[citation needed] About 10 percent speak Swahili,[citation needed] the lingua franca of Southeast Africa; about 5 percent speak a Berber dialect;[citation needed] and about 5 percent speak Hausa, which serves as a lingua franca in much of the Sahel. Other large West African languages are Yoruba, Igbo, Akan and Fula. Major Horn of Africa languages are Somali, Amharic and Oromo. Lingala is important in Central Africa. Important South African languages are Sotho, Tswana, Pedi, Venda, Tsonga, Swazi, Southern Ndebele, Zulu, Xhosa and Afrikaans.
French, English, and Portuguese are important languages in Africa due to colonialism. About 320 million, 240 million and 35 million Africans, respectively, speak them as either native or secondary languages. Portuguese has become the national language of Angola and São Tomé and Príncipe, and Portuguese is the official language of Mozambique.
Linguistic features
Some linguistic features are particularly common among languages spoken in Africa, whereas others are less common. Such shared traits probably are not due to a common origin of all African languages. Instead, some may be due to language contact (resulting in borrowing) and specific idioms and phrases may be due to a similar cultural background.
Phonological
Some widespread phonetic features include:
- certain types of consonants, such as implosives (/ɓa/), ejectives (/kʼa/), the labiodental flap and in southern Africa, clicks (/ǂa/, /ᵑǃa/). True implosives are rare outside Africa, and clicks and the flap almost unheard of.
- doubly articulated labial-velar stops like /k͡pa/ and /ɡ͡ba/ are found in places south of the Sahara.
- prenasalized consonants, like /mpa/ and /ŋɡa/, are widespread in Africa but not common outside it.
- sequences of stops and fricatives at the beginnings of words, such as /fsa/, /pta/ and /dt͡sk͡xʼa/.
- nasal stops which only occur with nasal vowels, such as [ba] vs. [mã] (but both [pa] and [pã]), especially in West Africa.
- vowels contrasting an advanced or retracted tongue, commonly called "tense" and "lax".
- simple tone systems which are used for grammatical purposes.
Sounds that are relatively uncommon in African languages include uvular consonants, diphthongs and front rounded vowels
Tonal languages are found throughout the world but are especially common in Africa - in fact, there are far more tonal than non-tonal languages in Africa. Both the Nilo-Saharan and the Khoi-San phyla are fully tonal. The large majority of the Niger–Congo languages are also tonal. Tonal languages are also found in the Omotic, Chadic and South & East Cushitic branches of Afroasiatic. The most common type of tonal system opposes two tone levels, High (H) and Low (L). Contour tones do occur, and can often be analysed as two or more tones in succession on a single syllable. Tone melodies play an important role, meaning that it is often possible to state significant generalizations by separating tone sequences ("melodies") from the segments that bear them. Tonal sandhi processes like tone spread, tone shift, downstep and downdrift are common in African languages.
Syntactic
Widespread syntactical structures include the common use of adjectival verbs and the expression of comparison by means of a verb 'to surpass'. The Niger–Congo languages have large numbers of genders (noun classes) which cause agreement in verbs and other words. Case, tense and other categories may be distinguished only by tone. Auxiliary verbs are also widespread among African languages; the fusing of subject markers and TAM/polarity auxiliaries into what are known as tense pronouns are more common in auxiliary verb constructions in African languages than in most other parts of the world.
Semantic
Quite often, only one term is used for both animal and meat; the word nama or nyama for animal/meat is particularly widespread in otherwise widely divergent African languages.[citation needed]
Demographics
The following is a table displaying the number of speakers of given languages within Africa:
Language | Family | Native speakers (L1) | Official status per country |
---|---|---|---|
Abron | Niger–Congo | 1,393,000 | Ghana |
Afar | Afroasiatic | 2,500,000 | Spoken in Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia |
Afrikaans | Indo-European | 7,200,000 | National language in Namibia, co-official in South Africa |
Akan | Niger–Congo | 11,000,000 | None. Government sponsored language of Ghana |
Amharic | Afroasiatic | 32,400,000 | Ethiopia |
Arabic | Afroasiatic | 150,000,000 but with separate mutually unintelligible varieties | Algeria, Chad, Comoros, Djibouti, Egypt, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic, Somalia, Sudan, Tanzania (Zanzibar), Tunisia |
Berber | Afroasiatic | 16,000,000 (estimated) (including separate mutually unintelligible varieties) | Morocco, Algeria |
Bhojpuri | Indo-European | 65,300 | Spoken in Mauritius |
Cape Verdean Creole | Portuguese Creole | 871,000 | National language in Cape Verde |
Chewa | Niger–Congo | 9,700,000 | Malawi, Zimbabwe |
Comorian | Niger–Congo | 1,100,000 | Comoros |
Dangme | Niger–Congo | 1,020,000 | Ghana |
Dinka | Nilo-Saharan | 4,238,400 | South Sudan |
English | Indo-European | 6,500,000 (estimated) | See List of countries and territories where English is an official language |
Fon | Niger–Congo | 2,300,000 | Benin |
French | Indo-European | 1,200,000 (estimated) | See List of territorial entities where French is an official language and African French |
Fulani | Niger–Congo | 25,000,000 | National language of Senegal |
Ga | Niger–Congo | 745,000 | Ghana |
German | Indo-European | National language of Namibia, special status in South Africa | |
Gikuyu | Niger–Congo | 8,100,000 | Spoken in Kenya |
Hausa | Afroasiatic | 48,637,300 | Recognized in Nigeria, Ghana, Niger |
Hindi | Indo-European | Spoken in Mauritius | |
Igbo | Niger–Congo | 27,000,000 | Native in Nigeria |
Italian | Indo-European | Recognized in Eritrea and Somalia | |
Kalenjin | Nilo-Saharan | 6,600,000 | Spoken in Kenya and Uganda |
Khoekhoe | Khoe | 200,000 | National language of Namibia |
Kimbundu | Niger–Congo | 1,700,000 | Angola |
Kinyarwanda | Niger–Congo | 9,800,000 | Rwanda |
Kirundi | Niger–Congo | 8,800,000 | Burundi |
Kituba | Kongo-based creole | 5,400,000 | Democratic Republic of Congo, Republic of Congo |
Kongo | Niger–Congo | 5,600,000 | Angola, recognised national language of Republic of Congo and Democratic Republic of Congo |
Lingala | Niger–Congo | 5,500,000 | National language of Democratic Republic of Congo, Republic of Congo |
Luganda | Niger–Congo | 4,100,000 | Native language of Uganda |
Luhya | Niger–Congo | 6,800,000 | Spoken in Kenya |
Luo | Nilo-Saharan (probable) | 5,000,000 | Kenya, Tanzania |
Malagasy | Austronesian | 18,000,000 | Madagascar |
Mauritian Creole | French Creole | 1,100,000 | Native language of Mauritius |
Mossi | Niger–Congo | 7,600,000 | Recognised regional language in Burkina Faso |
Nambya | Niger–Congo | 100,000 | Zimbabwe |
Ndau | Niger–Congo | 2,400,000 | Zimbabwe |
Ndebele | Niger–Congo | 1,100,000 | Statutory national language in South Africa |
Noon | Niger–Congo | 33,000 | Senegal |
Northern Ndebele | Niger–Congo | 2,600,000 | Zimbabwe |
Northern Sotho | Niger–Congo | 4,600,000 | South Africa |
Nuer | Nilo-Saharan | 1,700,000 | South Sudan |
Oromo | Afroasiatic | 37,071,900 (2020) | Ethiopia |
Portuguese | Indo-European | 17,000,000 | Angola, Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, Equatorial Guinea, Mozambique, São Tomé and Príncipe |
Sena | Niger–Congo | 2,869,000 | Zimbabwe |
Sepedi | Niger–Congo | 4,700,000 | South Africa |
Sesotho | Niger–Congo | 5,600,000 | Lesotho, South Africa, Zimbabwe |
Seychellois Creole | French Creole | 73,000 | Seychelles |
Shona | Niger–Congo | 7,200,000 | Zimbabwe |
Somali | Afroasiatic | 21,937,940 | Somalia, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya |
Spanish | Indo-European | 1,100,000 | Equatorial Guinea, Spain (Ceuta, Melilla, Canary Islands), still marginally spoken in Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic, recognized in Morocco |
Southern Ndebele | Niger–Congo | 1,100,000 | South Africa |
Swahili | Niger–Congo | 50,000,000 | Official in Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, Democratic Republic of the Congo |
Swazi | Niger–Congo | 2,300,000 | Official in South Africa, Swaziland |
Tamil | Dravidian | Spoken in Mauritius | |
Telugu | Dravidian | Spoken in Mauritius | |
Tigrinya | Afroasiatic | 7,000,000 | Eritrea, regional language in Ethiopia |
Tonga | Niger–Congo | 1,500,000 | Zimbabwe |
Tsonga | Niger–Congo | 3,700,000 | Zimbabwe |
Twi | Niger–Congo | 630,000 | Regional language in Ghana |
Tshiluba | Niger–Congo | 6,300,000 (1991) | National language of Democratic Republic of the Congo |
Tsonga | Niger–Congo | 5,000,000 | South Africa, Zimbabwe (as 'as Shangani'), Mozambique |
Tshivenda | Niger–Congo | 1,300,000 | South Africa, Zimbabwe |
Tswana | Niger–Congo | 5,800,000 | Botswana, South Africa, spoken in Zimbabwe |
Umbundu | Niger–Congo | 6,000,000 | Angola |
Venda | Niger–Congo | 1,300,000 | South Africa, Zimbabwe |
Wolof | Niger–Congo | 5,454,000 | Lingua franca in Senegal |
Xhosa | Niger–Congo | 7,600,000 | South Africa, Zimbabwe |
Yoruba | Niger–Congo | 28,000,000 | Nigeria, Benin, Togo |
Zulu | Niger–Congo | 10,400,000 | South Africa |
By region
Below is a list of the major languages of Africa by region, family and total number of primary language speakers in millions.
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See also
General
- Writing systems of Africa
- Journal of West African Languages
- List of extinct languages of Africa
Works
- Polyglotta Africana
- The Languages of Africa
Classifiers
- Karl Lepsius
- Lionel Bender
- Wilhelm Bleek
- Christopher Ehret
- Carl Meinhof
- Diedrich Westermann
- Joseph Greenberg
Colonial and migratory influences
- Arabization
- Asian Africans
- Dutch Language Union
- French West Africa
- German colonization of Africa
- Islamization of Egypt
- Italian East Africa — including Italian Ethiopia
- Italian North Africa
- North African Arabs
- Maghrebi Arabic — via Muslim conquest of the Maghreb
- Portuguese language in Africa — predominant in Portuguese-speaking African countries
- Spanish Guinea — presently Equatorial Guinea
- Spanish West Africa
- Spanish North Africa
- West African Pidgin English
- White Africans of European ancestry
Notes
- Heine & Nurse (2000)
- Epstein, Edmund L.; Kole, Robert, eds. (1998). The Language of African Literature. Africa World Press. p. ix. ISBN 0-86543-534-0. Retrieved 23 June 2011.
Africa is incredibly rich in language—over 3,000 indigenous languages by some counts, and many creoles, pidgins, and lingua francas.
- "Ethnologue report for Nigeria". Ethnologue Languages of the World.
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- Yates, Y. "How Many People Speak Portuguese, And Where Is It Spoken?". Babbel Magazine. Retrieved 2 September 2023.
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- Matthews, P.H. (2014). Oxford Concise Dictionary of Linguistics (3rd ed.). OUP Oxford. ISBN 9780199675128.
- Pithouse, Kathleen; Mitchell, Claudia; Moletsane, Relebohile (16 December 2023). Making Connections: Self-Study & Social Action. Peter Lang. p. 91. ISBN 9781433105012.
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- Hugues Steve Ndinga-Koumba-Binza, Hugues Steve Ndinga-Koumba-Binza (August 2011). "From foreign to national: a review of the status of French in Gabon".
- Hombert, Jean-Marie; Philippson, Gérard (2009). "The linguistic importance of language isolates: the African case". In Austin, Peter K.; Bond, Oliver; Charette, Monik; Nathan, David; Sells, Peter (eds.). Proceedings of Conference on Language Documentation and Linguistic Theory 2 (PDF). London: SOAS. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 May 2013.
- Vossen, Rainer; Dimmendaal, Gerrit J., eds. (2020). The Oxford Handbook of African Languages. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 392–407.
- Lau, Charles (30 April 2020). "Language differences between interviewers and respondents in African surveys (Chapter 5)". In Sha, Mandy (ed.). The Essential Role of Language in Survey Research. RTI Press. pp. 101–115. doi:10.3768/rtipress.bk.0023.2004. ISBN 978-1-934831-24-3.
- AfricaNews (26 July 2023). "Mali drops French as official language". Africanews. Retrieved 28 March 2024.
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- "Algeria reinstates term limit and recognises Berber language". BBC News.
- "JOURNAL OFFICIEL DE LA REPUBLIQUE DU MALI" (PDF). sgg-mali.ml. 29 September 2017. Retrieved 26 July 2023.
Langues nationales : langues considérées comme propres à une nation ou à un pays. Selon la Loi n°96- 049 du 23 août 1996, les langues nationales du Mali sont : le bamanankan (bambara), le bomu (bobo), le bozo (bozo), le dTgTsT (dogon), le fulfulde (peul), le hasanya (maure), le mamara (miniyanka), le maninkakan (malinké) le soninke (sarakolé), le soKoy (songhoï), le syenara (sénoufo), le tamasayt (tamasheq), le xaasongaxanKo (khassonké).
- CIA – The World Factbook.
- According to article 7 of The Transitional Federal Charter of the Somali Republic Archived 18 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine: "The official languages of the Somali Republic shall be Somali (Maay and Maxaatiri) and Arabic. The second languages of the Transitional Federal Government shall be English and Italian".
- Spencer, Erika Hope. "Research Guides: France & French Collections at the Library of Congress: Sub-Saharan Africa". guides.loc.gov. Retrieved 28 March 2024.
- Fehn, Anne-Maria (2019), Wolff, H. Ekkehard (ed.), "African Linguistics in Official Portuguese- and Spanish-Speaking Africa", A History of African Linguistics, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 189–204, ISBN 978-1-108-41797-6, retrieved 28 March 2024
- "ABOUT EQUATORIAL GUINEA | Equatorial Guinea Embassy USA". EG Embassy USA. Retrieved 28 March 2024.
- "The languages of South Africa" Archived 4 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine. southafrica.info.
- "ETHIOPIA TO ADD 4 MORE OFFICIAL LANGUAGES TO FOSTER UNITY". Ventures Africa. Ventures. 4 March 2020. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
- "Ethiopia is adding four more official languages to Amharic as political instability mounts". Nazret. Archived from the original on 17 August 2021. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
- Shaban, Abdurahman. "One to five: Ethiopia gets four new federal working languages". Africa News. Archived from the original on 15 December 2020. Retrieved 10 February 2021.
- African languages for Africa's development Archived 24 May 2006 at the Wayback Machine ACALAN (French & English).
- "Tongues under threat". The Economist. 22 January 2011. p. 58.
- 327 millions de francophones dans le monde en 2023 odsef.fss.ulaval.ca (in French)
- Verdeau, Paul (20 March 2023). "En 2023, 327 millions de personnes parlent français dans le monde, dont près de la moitié en Afrique". RTBF (in French). Retrieved 27 November 2023.
- Anderson, Gregory D. S. (2011). "Auxiliary verb constructions in the languages of Africa". Studies in African Linguistics. 40 (1 & 2): 1–409. doi:10.32473/sal.v40i1.107282.
- "Abron". Ethnologue. Retrieved 16 July 2019.
- Census 2011: Census in brief (PDF). Pretoria: Statistics South Africa. 2012. ISBN 978-0-621-41388-5. Archived (PDF) from the original on 13 May 2015.
- "Världens 100 största språk 2007" [The World's 100 Largest Languages in 2007]. Nationalencyklopedin (in Swedish).
- "Amharic". Ethnologue.
- "Arabic". Ethnologue.
- "Berber". Ethnologue.
- "Bhojpuri". Ethnologue. Retrieved 16 July 2019.
- "Chichewa". Ethnologue.
- "Dangme". Ethnologue. Retrieved 16 July 2019.
- "Dinka". Ethnologue. Retrieved 25 October 2024.
- "English". Ethnologue.
- "French". Ethnologue.com. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
- "Gikuyu". Ethnologue.
- Eberhard, David M.; Simons, Gary F.; Fennig, Charles D. "Ethnologue hau". Ethnologue. SIL International. Retrieved 30 June 2021.
- "Igbo". Ethnologue.
- Brenzinger, Matthias (2011). "The twelve modern Khoisan languages". In Witzlack-Makarevich, Alena; Ernszt, Martina (eds.). Khoisan languages and linguistics: proceedings of the 3rd International Symposium, Riezlern / Kleinwalsertal. QKF Research in Khoisan Studies. Vol. 29. Cologne: Rüdiger Köppe Verlag. p. 2. ISBN 978-3-89645-873-5.
- "Kongo". Ethnologue.
- "Luganda". 19 November 2019.
- "Luhya". Ethnologue.
- "Dholuo". Ethnologue.
- "Malagasy". Ethnologue.
- "Morisyen". Ethnologue.
- "Ndebele". Ethnologue. Retrieved 20 September 2016.
- "Sotho, Northern". Ethnologue.
- "Nuer". Ethnologue.
- "Oromo first-language speakers at Ethnologue (23rd ed., 2020)". Retrieved 27 November 2023.
- Eberhard, David M.; Simons, Gary F.; Fennig, Charles D. "Ethnologue report for Portuguese". Ethnologue. SIL International. Retrieved 16 April 2021.
- "Sotho, Southern". Ethnologue.
- "Ethnologue report for Shona (S.10)". Archived from the original on 19 February 2015. Retrieved 19 February 2015.
- "Somali". SIL International. 2024. Retrieved 5 February 2024.
- "Spanish". Ethnologue. Retrieved 10 January 2018.
- Peek, Philip M.; Yankah, Kwesi, eds. (2004). "Swahili". African folklore: an encyclopedia. Taylor & Francis. p. 699. doi:10.4324/9780203493144. ISBN 0-415-93933-X.
- "Tigrigna". Ethnologue.
- "Luba-Kasai". Ethnologue.
- "Tsonga". Ethnologue.
- "Tswana". 19 November 2019.
- "Umbundu". Ethnologue.
- "Venda". Ethnologue. Retrieved 15 December 2019.
- "Wolof". Ethnologue. Retrieved 15 December 2019.
- Mannan, Nuraddin (31 May 2006). "Memories of Utopia- Infoshop, World Bank" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 April 2012. Retrieved 14 October 2015.
There is no exact census for the Nubian population but some researchers estimate their number in Sudan for about 5 millions and about three millions in Egypt.
- "CORRECTION: Census shows South Sudan population at 8.2 million: report – Sudan Tribune: Plural news and views on Sudan". www.sudantribune.com. Archived from the original on 24 December 2010. Retrieved 21 July 2017.
- "unsudanig.org" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 January 2020. Retrieved 10 April 2018.
- DRDC Report on the 5th Population Census in Sudan darfurcentre.ch [permanent dead link ]
- Shoup, John A. (2011). Ethnic Groups of Africa and the Middle East. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. p. 333. ISBN 978-1-59884-363-7.
The Zaghawa is one of the major divisions of the Beri peoples who live in western Sudan and eastern Chad, and their language, also called Zaghawa, belongs to the Saharan branch of the Nilo-Saharan language group.
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References
- Childs, George Tucker (2003). An Introduction to African Languages. Amsterdam: John Benjamin. ISBN 9781588114211. OCLC 52766015.
- Chimhundu, Herbert (2002). Language Policies in Africa (PDF). Intergovernmental Conference on Language Policies in Africa (Revised ed.). Harare: UNESCO. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 May 2017.
- Cust, Robert Needham (1883). Modern Languages of Africa.
- Ellis, Stephen, ed. (1996). Africa Now: People, Policies, and Institutions. Ministry of Foreign Affairs (DGIS). ISBN 9780435089870.
- Elugbe, Ben (1998). "Cross-border and major languages of Africa". In Legère, K. (ed.). Cross-border Languages: Reports and Studies, Regional Workshop on Cross-Border Languages, National Institute for Educational Development (NIED), Okahandja, 23–27 September 1996. Windhoek: Gamsberg Macmillan.
- Ethnologue.com's Africa: A listing of African languages and language families.
- Greenberg, Joseph H. (1983). "Some areal characteristics of African languages". In Dihoff, Ivan R. (ed.). Current Approaches to African Linguistics. Publications in African Languages and Linguistics. Vol. 1. Dordrecht: Foris. pp. 3–21.
- Greenberg, Joseph H. (1966). The Languages of Africa (2nd ed.). Bloomington: Indiana University.
- Heine, Bernd; Nurse, Derek, eds. (2000). African Languages: An Introduction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Webb, Vic; Kembo-Sure, eds. (1998). African Voices: An Introduction to the Languages and Linguistics of Africa. Cape Town: Oxford University Press Southern Africa.
- Westphal, E.O.J. (1963). "The Linguistic Prehistory of Southern Africa: Bush, Kwadi, Hottentot, and Bantu Linguistic Relationships". Africa. 33 (3): 237–265. doi:10.2307/1157418. JSTOR 1157418. S2CID 143635864.
External links
- one of the largest online resources for African languages at Mofeko
- African language resources for children Archived 3 August 2015 at the Wayback Machine
- Web resources for African languages
- Linguistic maps of Africa from Muturzikin.com
- Online Dictionaries, e-books and other online fulltexts in or on African languages
This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Languages of Africa news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2025 Learn how and when to remove this message The number of languages natively spoken in Africa is variously estimated depending on the delineation of language vs dialect at between 1 250 and 2 100 and by some counts at over 3 000 Nigeria alone has over 500 languages according to SIL Ethnologue one of the greatest concentrations of linguistic diversity in the world The languages of Africa belong to many distinct language families among which the largest are Niger Congo which include the large Atlantic Congo and Bantu branches in West Central Southeast and Southern Africa Afroasiatic languages are spread throughout Western Asia North Africa the Horn of Africa and parts of the Sahel Saharan Nilotic and Central Sudanic languages previously grouped under the hypothetical Nilo Saharan macro family are present in East Africa and Sahel Austronesian languages are spoken in Madagascar and parts of the Comoros Khoe Kwadi languages are spoken mostly in Namibia and Botswana Indo European languages while not indigenous to Africa are spoken in South Africa and Namibia Afrikaans English German and are used as lingua francas in Liberia and the former colonies of the United Kingdom English former colonies of France and of Belgium French former colonies of Portugal Portuguese former colonies of Italy Italian former colonies of Spain Spanish and the current Spanish territories of Ceuta Melilla and the Canary Islands and the current French territories of Mayotte and La Reunion A rough overview of language families spoken in Africa Afroasiatic Nilo Saharan possibly a family Niger Congo some areas may not belong Bantu Khoisan not a family Indo European Austronesian There are several other small families and language isolates as well as creoles and languages that have yet to be classified In addition Africa has a wide variety of sign languages many of which are language isolates Around a hundred languages are widely used for interethnic communication These include Arabic Swahili Amharic Oromo Igbo Somali Hausa Manding Fulani and Yoruba which are spoken as a second or non first language by millions of people Although many African languages are used on the radio in newspapers and in primary school education and some of the larger ones are considered national languages only a few are official at the national level In Sub Saharan Africa most official languages at the national level tend to be colonial languages such as French Portuguese or English The African Union declared 2006 the Year of African Languages Language groupsClickable map showing the traditional language families subfamilies and major languages spoken in Africa Most languages natively spoken in Africa belong to one of the two large language families that dominate the continent Afroasiatic or Niger Congo Another hundred belong to smaller families such as Ubangian Nilotic Saharan and the various families previously grouped under the umbrella term Khoisan In addition the languages of Africa include several unclassified languages and sign languages The earliest Afroasiatic languages are associated with the Capsian culture the Saharan languages are linked with the Khartoum Mesolithic Neolithic cultures Niger Congo languages are correlated with the west and central African hoe based farming traditions and the Khoisan languages are matched with the south and southeastern Wilton culture Afroasiatic languages Afroasiatic languages are spoken throughout North Africa the Horn of Africa Western Asia and parts of the Sahel There are approximately 375 Afroasiatic languages spoken by over 400 million people The main subfamilies of Afroasiatic are Berber Chadic Cushitic Omotic Egyptian and Semitic The Afroasiatic Urheimat is uncertain The family s most extensive branch the Semitic languages including Arabic Amharic and Hebrew among others is the only branch of Afroasiatic that is spoken outside Africa Some of the most widely spoken Afroasiatic languages include Arabic a Semitic language and a recent arrival from West Asia Somali Cushitic Berber Berber Hausa Chadic Amharic Semitic and Oromo Cushitic Of the world s surviving language families Afroasiatic has the longest written history as both the Akkadian language of Mesopotamia and Ancient Egyptian are members Nilo Saharan languages Nilo Saharan languages are a proposed grouping of some one hundred diverse languages Genealogical linkage between these languages has failed to be conclusively demonstrated and support for the proposal is sparse among linguists The languages share some unusual morphology but if they are related most of the branches must have undergone major restructuring since diverging from their common ancestor citation needed This hypothetical family would reach an expanse that stretches from the Nile Valley to northern Tanzania and into Nigeria and DR Congo with the Songhay languages along the middle reaches of the Niger River as a geographic outlier The inclusion of the Songhay languages is questionable and doubts have been raised over the Koman Gumuz and Kadu branches citation needed Some of the better known Nilo Saharan languages are Kanuri Fur Songhay Nobiin and the widespread Nilotic family which includes the Luo Dinka and Maasai Most Nilo Saharan languages are tonal as are Niger Congo languages citation needed Niger Congo languages Map showing the traditional language families represented in Africa Afroasiatic Semitic Hamitic Austronesian Malay Polynesian Indo European Khoisan Niger Congo Bantu Central and Eastern Sudanese Central Bantoid Eastern Bantoid Guinean Mande Western Bantoid Nilo Saharan Kanuri Nilotic Songhai The Niger Congo languages constitute the largest language family spoken in West Africa and perhaps the world in terms of the number of languages citation needed One of its salient features is an elaborate noun class system with grammatical concord A large majority of languages of this family are tonal such as Yoruba and Igbo Akan and Ewe language A major branch of Niger Congo languages is the Bantu phylum which has a wider speech area than the rest of the family see Niger Congo B Bantu in the map above The Niger Kordofanian language family joining Niger Congo with the Kordofanian languages of south central Sudan was proposed in the 1950s by Joseph Greenberg Today linguists often use Niger Congo to refer to this entire family including Kordofanian as a subfamily One reason for this is that it is not clear whether Kordofanian was the first branch to diverge from rest of Niger Congo Mande has been claimed to be equally or more divergent Niger Congo is generally accepted by linguists though a few question the inclusion of Mande and Dogon and there is no conclusive evidence for the inclusion of Ubangian Other language families Several languages spoken in Africa belong to language families concentrated or originating outside the African continent Austronesian Malagasy belongs to the Austronesian languages and is the westernmost branch of the family It is the national and co official language of Madagascar and a Malagasy dialect called Bushi is also spoken in Mayotte The ancestors of the Malagasy people migrated to Madagascar around 1 500 years ago from Southeast Asia more specifically the island of Borneo The origins of how they arrived to Madagascar remains a mystery however the Austronesians are known for their seafaring culture Despite the geographical isolation Malagasy still has strong resemblance to Barito languages especially the Ma anyan language of southern Borneo With more than 20 million speakers Malagasy is one of the most widely spoken of the Austronesian languages Indo European Afrikaans is Indo European as is most of the vocabulary of most African creole languages Afrikaans evolved from the Dutch vernacular of South Holland Hollandic dialect spoken by the mainly Dutch settlers of what is now South Africa where it gradually began to develop distinguishing characteristics in the course of the 18th century including the loss of verbal conjugation save for 5 modal verbs as well as grammatical case and gender Most Afrikaans speakers live in South Africa In Namibia it is the lingua franca Overall 15 to 20 million people are estimated to speak Afrikaans Since the colonial era Indo European languages such as Afrikaans English French Italian Portuguese and Spanish have held official status in many countries and are widely spoken generally as lingua francas See African French and African Portuguese Additionally languages like French and Portuguese have become native languages in various countries French has become native in the urban areas of the DRC and Gabon German was once used in Germany s colonies there from the late 1800s until World War I when Britain and France took over and revoked German s official status Despite this German is still spoken in Namibia mostly among the white population Although it lost its official status in the 1990s it has been redesignated as a national language Indian languages such as Gujarati are spoken by South Asian expatriates exclusively In earlier historical times other Indo European languages could be found in various parts of the continent such as Old Persian and Greek in Egypt Latin and Vandalic in North Africa and Modern Persian in the Horn of Africa Small families The three small Khoisan families of southern Africa have not been shown to be closely related to any other major language family In addition there are various other families that have not been demonstrated to belong to one of these families The classifications below follow Glottolog Mande some 70 languages including the major languages of Mali and Guinea these are generally thought to be divergent Niger Congo but debate persists Ubangian some 70 languages centered on the languages of the Central African Republic may be Niger Congo Te Ne Omotic some 20 languages previously classified under Afro Asiatic spoken in Ethiopia Khoe Kwadi around 10 languages the primary family of Khoisan languages of Namibia and Botswana Surmic some 11 languages previously classified within either Sudanic or Nilo Saharan Kx a around five languages with various dialects spoken in Southern Africa South Omotic around five languages previously classified within Afro Asiatic spoken in Ethiopia Tuu or Taa ǃKwi two surviving languages Hadza an isolate of Tanzania Bangime a likely isolate of Mali Jalaa a likely isolate of Nigeria Sandawe an isolate of Tanzania Laal a possible isolate of Chad Khoisan is a term of convenience covering some 30 languages spoken by around 300 000 400 000 people There are five Khoisan families that have not been shown to be related to each other Khoe Tuu and Kx a which are found mainly in Namibia and Botswana as well as Sandawe and Hadza of Tanzania which are language isolates A striking feature of Khoisan languages and the reason they are often grouped together is their use of click consonants Some neighbouring Bantu languages notably Xhosa and Zulu have clicks as well but these were adopted from Khoisan languages The Khoisan languages are also tonal Creole languages Due partly to its multilingualism and its colonial past a substantial proportion of the world s creole languages are to be found in Africa Some are based on Indo European languages e g Krio from English in Sierra Leone and the very similar Pidgin in Nigeria Ghana and parts of Cameroon Cape Verdean Creole in Cape Verde and Guinea Bissau Creole in Guinea Bissau and Senegal all from Portuguese Seychellois Creole in the Seychelles and Mauritian Creole in Mauritius both from French some are based on Arabic e g Juba Arabic in the southern Sudan or Nubi in parts of Uganda and Kenya some are based on local languages e g Sango the main language of the Central African Republic while in Cameroon a creole based on French English and local African languages known as Camfranglais has started to become popular Unclassified languages A fair number of unclassified languages are reported in Africa Many remain unclassified simply for lack of data among the better investigated ones that continue to resist easy classification are possibly Afroasiatic Ongota Gomba possibly Nilo Saharan Shabo possibly Niger Congo Jalaa Mbre Bayot unknown Laal Mpre Of these Jalaa is perhaps the most likely to be an isolate Less well investigated languages include Irimba Luo Mawa Rer Bare possibly Bantu languages Bete evidently Jukunoid Bung unclear Kujarge evidently Chadic Lufu Jukunoid Meroitic possibly Afroasiatic Oropom possibly spurious and Weyto evidently Cushitic Several of these are extinct and adequate comparative data is thus unlikely to be forthcoming Hombert amp Philippson 2009 list a number of African languages that have been classified as language isolates at one point or another Many of these are simply unclassified but Hombert amp Philippson believe Africa has about twenty language families including isolates Beside the possibilities listed above there are Aasax or Aramanik Tanzania South Cushitic contains non Cushitic lexicon Imeraguen Mauritania Hassaniyya Arabic restructured on an Azer Soninke base Kara Fer Central African Republic Oblo Cameroon Adamawa Extinct Roger Blench notes a couple additional possibilities Defaka Nigeria Dompo Ghana Below is a list of language isolates and otherwise unclassified languages in Africa from Vossen amp Dimmendaal 2020 434 Language CountryBangi Me MaliBayot SenegalDompo GhanaEga Ivory CoastGomba EthiopiaGumuz Ethiopia SudanHadza TanzaniaIrimba GabonJalaa NigeriaKujarge ChadLaal ChadLufu NigeriaLuo CameroonMawa NigeriaMeyobe Benin TogoMimi of Decorse Mimi of Nachtigal ChadMpra GhanaOblo CameroonOngota EthiopiaOropom Kenya UgandaRer Bare EthiopiaShabo EthiopiaWeyto EthiopiaWutana NigeriaYeni CameroonSign languages Many African countries have national sign languages such as Algerian Sign Language Tunisian Sign Language Ethiopian Sign Language Other sign languages are restricted to small areas or single villages such as Adamorobe Sign Language in Ghana Tanzania has seven one for each of its schools for the Deaf all of which are discouraged Not much is known since little has been published on these languages Sign language systems extant in Africa include the Paget Gorman Sign System used in Namibia and Angola the Sudanese Sign languages used in Sudan and South Sudan the Arab Sign languages used across the Arab Mideast the Francosign languages used in Francophone Africa and other areas such as Ghana and Tunisia and the Tanzanian Sign languages used in Tanzania Language in AfricaThroughout the long multilingual history of the African continent African languages have been subject to phenomena like language contact language expansion language shift and language death A case in point is the Bantu expansion in which Bantu speaking peoples expanded over most of Sub Equatorial Africa intermingling with Khoi San speaking peoples from much of Southeast Africa and Southern Africa and other peoples from Central Africa Another example is the Arab expansion in the 7th century which led to the extension of Arabic from its homeland in Asia into much of North Africa and the Horn of Africa Trade languages are another age old phenomenon in the African linguistic landscape Cultural and linguistic innovations spread along trade routes and languages of peoples dominant in trade developed into languages of wider communication lingua franca Of particular importance in this respect are Berber North and West Africa Jula western West Africa Fulfulde West Africa Hausa West Africa Lingala Congo Swahili Southeast Africa Somali Horn of Africa and Arabic North Africa and Horn of Africa After gaining independence many African countries in the search for national unity selected one language generally the former Indo European colonial language to be used in government and education However in recent years African countries have become increasingly supportive of maintaining linguistic diversity Language policies that are being developed nowadays are mostly aimed at multilingualism This presents a methodological complication when collecting data in Africa and limited literature exists An analysis of Afrobarometer public opinion survey data of 36 countries suggested that survey interviewers and respondents could engage in various linguistic behaviors such as code switching during the survey Moreover some African countries have been considering removing their official former Indo European colonial languages like Mali and Burkina Faso which removed French as an official language in 2024 Official languages Official languages in Africa Afrikaans Portuguese Arabic Spanish English Swahili French other languagesAfroasiaticBerber Berber in Morocco and Algeria Tamasheq in Mali Tawellemet in Mali Cushitic Afar in Ethiopia Oromo in Ethiopia and Kenya Somali in Somalia Ethiopia Kenya and Djibouti Semitic Amharic in Ethiopia Arabic in Algeria Chad Comoros Djibouti Egypt Libya Mauritania Morocco Somalia Sudan Tunisia and Zanzibar Tanzania Hassaniya Arabic in Mali Tigrinya in Ethiopia and EritreaAustronesianMalagasy in MadagascarNgbandi creoleSango in the Central African RepublicFrench CreoleSeychelles Creole in SeychellesIndo EuropeanAfrikaans in South Africa English in Ghana Gambia Uganda Zimbabwe Nigeria Cameroon Kenya South Africa Liberia Zambia Malawi Rwanda Namibia Seychelles Sudan Tanzania Eswatini Lesotho and Mauritius French in Benin Burundi Cameroon Central African Republic Chad Comoros Democratic Republic of Congo Congo Cote d Ivoire Djibouti Gabon Guinea Madagascar Niger Rwanda Senegal Seychelles and Togo Portuguese in Angola Mozambique Guinea Bissau Cape Verde Sao Tome and Principe and Equatorial Guinea Spanish in Equatorial GuineaNiger CongoBambara in Mali Bobo in Mali Bozo in Mali Chewa in Malawi and Zimbabwe Comorian in the Comoros Dogon in Mali Fula in Mali Kassonke in Mali Kongo in Angola Democratic Republic of the Congo Gabon and Republic of the Congo Kinyarwanda in Rwanda Kirundi in Burundi Maninke in Mali Minyanka in Mali Senufo in Mali Sesotho in Lesotho South Africa and Zimbabwe Setswana in Botswana and South Africa Shona Sindebele in Zimbabwe Sepedi in South Africa Soninke in Mali Ndebele in South Africa Swahili in Tanzania Kenya Rwanda and Uganda Swati in Eswatini Swaziland and South Africa Tsonga in South Africa Venda in South Africa Xhosa in South Africa Zulu in South AfricaNilo SaharanSonghay in MaliLanguage Family Official status per countryAfrikaans Indo European South AfricaAmharic Afroasiatic EthiopiaArabic Afroasiatic Algeria Comoros Chad Djibouti Egypt Eritrea Libya Mauritania Morocco Somalia Sudan Berber Afroasiatic Algeria Morocco LibyaChewa Niger Congo Malawi ZimbabweComorian Niger Congo ComorosKikongo Niger Congo Angola Democratic Republic of the Congo Republic of the CongoKinyarwanda Niger Congo RwandaKirundi Niger Congo BurundiMalagasy Austronesian MadagascarNdebele Niger Congo South AfricaOromo Afroasiatic EthiopiaSango French Creole Central African RepublicSepedi Niger Congo South AfricaSesotho Niger Congo Lesotho South Africa ZimbabweSetswana Niger Congo Botswana South AfricaSeychelles Creole French Creole SeychellesShona Niger Congo ZimbabweSindebele Niger Congo ZimbabweSomali Afroasiatic Somalia Djibouti Ethiopia KenyaSwahili Niger Congo Kenya Rwanda Tanzania UgandaSwati Niger Congo Eswatini South AfricaTigrinya Afroasiatic Ethiopia EritreaTsonga Niger Congo Mozambique Zimbabwe South AfricaVenda Niger Congo South Africa ZimbabweXhosa Niger Congo South AfricaZulu Niger Congo South AfricaCross border languages The colonial borders established by European powers following the Berlin Conference in 1884 1885 divided a great many ethnic groups and African language speaking communities This can cause divergence of a language on either side of a border especially when the official languages are different for example in orthographic standards Some notable cross border languages include Berber which stretches across much of North Africa and some parts of West Africa Kikongo that stretches across northern Angola western and coastal Democratic Republic of the Congo and western and coastal Republic of the Congo Somali stretches across most of the Horn of Africa Swahili spoken in the African Great Lakes region Fula in the Sahel and West Africa and Luo in Democratic Republic of the Congo Ethiopia Kenya Tanzania Uganda South Sudan and Sudan Some prominent Africans such as former Malian president and former Chairman of the African Commission Alpha Oumar Konare have referred to cross border languages as a factor that can promote African unity Language change and planning Language is not static in Africa any more than on other continents citation needed In addition to the likely modest impact of borders there are also cases of dialect levelling such as in Igbo and probably many others koines such as N Ko and possibly Runyakitara and emergence of new dialects such as Sheng In some countries there are official efforts to develop standardized language versions There are also many less widely spoken languages that may be considered endangered languages Demographics Of the 1 billion Africans in 2009 about 17 percent speak an Arabic dialect citation needed About 10 percent speak Swahili citation needed the lingua franca of Southeast Africa about 5 percent speak a Berber dialect citation needed and about 5 percent speak Hausa which serves as a lingua franca in much of the Sahel Other large West African languages are Yoruba Igbo Akan and Fula Major Horn of Africa languages are Somali Amharic and Oromo Lingala is important in Central Africa Important South African languages are Sotho Tswana Pedi Venda Tsonga Swazi Southern Ndebele Zulu Xhosa and Afrikaans French English and Portuguese are important languages in Africa due to colonialism About 320 million 240 million and 35 million Africans respectively speak them as either native or secondary languages Portuguese has become the national language of Angola and Sao Tome and Principe and Portuguese is the official language of Mozambique Linguistic featuresSome linguistic features are particularly common among languages spoken in Africa whereas others are less common Such shared traits probably are not due to a common origin of all African languages Instead some may be due to language contact resulting in borrowing and specific idioms and phrases may be due to a similar cultural background Phonological Some widespread phonetic features include certain types of consonants such as implosives ɓa ejectives kʼa the labiodental flap and in southern Africa clicks ǂa ᵑǃa True implosives are rare outside Africa and clicks and the flap almost unheard of doubly articulated labial velar stops like k pa and ɡ ba are found in places south of the Sahara prenasalized consonants like mpa and ŋɡa are widespread in Africa but not common outside it sequences of stops and fricatives at the beginnings of words such as fsa pta and dt sk xʼa nasal stops which only occur with nasal vowels such as ba vs ma but both pa and pa especially in West Africa vowels contrasting an advanced or retracted tongue commonly called tense and lax simple tone systems which are used for grammatical purposes Sounds that are relatively uncommon in African languages include uvular consonants diphthongs and front rounded vowels Tonal languages are found throughout the world but are especially common in Africa in fact there are far more tonal than non tonal languages in Africa Both the Nilo Saharan and the Khoi San phyla are fully tonal The large majority of the Niger Congo languages are also tonal Tonal languages are also found in the Omotic Chadic and South amp East Cushitic branches of Afroasiatic The most common type of tonal system opposes two tone levels High H and Low L Contour tones do occur and can often be analysed as two or more tones in succession on a single syllable Tone melodies play an important role meaning that it is often possible to state significant generalizations by separating tone sequences melodies from the segments that bear them Tonal sandhi processes like tone spread tone shift downstep and downdrift are common in African languages Syntactic Widespread syntactical structures include the common use of adjectival verbs and the expression of comparison by means of a verb to surpass The Niger Congo languages have large numbers of genders noun classes which cause agreement in verbs and other words Case tense and other categories may be distinguished only by tone Auxiliary verbs are also widespread among African languages the fusing of subject markers and TAM polarity auxiliaries into what are known as tense pronouns are more common in auxiliary verb constructions in African languages than in most other parts of the world Semantic Quite often only one term is used for both animal and meat the word nama or nyama for animal meat is particularly widespread in otherwise widely divergent African languages citation needed DemographicsThe following is a table displaying the number of speakers of given languages within Africa Language Family Native speakers L1 Official status per countryAbron Niger Congo 1 393 000 GhanaAfar Afroasiatic 2 500 000 Spoken in Djibouti Eritrea EthiopiaAfrikaans Indo European 7 200 000 National language in Namibia co official in South AfricaAkan Niger Congo 11 000 000 None Government sponsored language of GhanaAmharic Afroasiatic 32 400 000 EthiopiaArabic Afroasiatic 150 000 000 but with separate mutually unintelligible varieties Algeria Chad Comoros Djibouti Egypt Libya Mauritania Morocco Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic Somalia Sudan Tanzania Zanzibar TunisiaBerber Afroasiatic 16 000 000 estimated including separate mutually unintelligible varieties Morocco AlgeriaBhojpuri Indo European 65 300 Spoken in MauritiusCape Verdean Creole Portuguese Creole 871 000 National language in Cape VerdeChewa Niger Congo 9 700 000 Malawi ZimbabweComorian Niger Congo 1 100 000 ComorosDangme Niger Congo 1 020 000 GhanaDinka Nilo Saharan 4 238 400 South SudanEnglish Indo European 6 500 000 estimated See List of countries and territories where English is an official languageFon Niger Congo 2 300 000 BeninFrench Indo European 1 200 000 estimated See List of territorial entities where French is an official language and African FrenchFulani Niger Congo 25 000 000 National language of SenegalGa Niger Congo 745 000 GhanaGerman Indo European National language of Namibia special status in South AfricaGikuyu Niger Congo 8 100 000 Spoken in KenyaHausa Afroasiatic 48 637 300 Recognized in Nigeria Ghana NigerHindi Indo European Spoken in MauritiusIgbo Niger Congo 27 000 000 Native in NigeriaItalian Indo European Recognized in Eritrea and SomaliaKalenjin Nilo Saharan 6 600 000 Spoken in Kenya and UgandaKhoekhoe Khoe 200 000 National language of NamibiaKimbundu Niger Congo 1 700 000 AngolaKinyarwanda Niger Congo 9 800 000 RwandaKirundi Niger Congo 8 800 000 BurundiKituba Kongo based creole 5 400 000 Democratic Republic of Congo Republic of CongoKongo Niger Congo 5 600 000 Angola recognised national language of Republic of Congo and Democratic Republic of CongoLingala Niger Congo 5 500 000 National language of Democratic Republic of Congo Republic of CongoLuganda Niger Congo 4 100 000 Native language of UgandaLuhya Niger Congo 6 800 000 Spoken in KenyaLuo Nilo Saharan probable 5 000 000 Kenya TanzaniaMalagasy Austronesian 18 000 000 MadagascarMauritian Creole French Creole 1 100 000 Native language of MauritiusMossi Niger Congo 7 600 000 Recognised regional language in Burkina FasoNambya Niger Congo 100 000 ZimbabweNdau Niger Congo 2 400 000 ZimbabweNdebele Niger Congo 1 100 000 Statutory national language in South AfricaNoon Niger Congo 33 000 SenegalNorthern Ndebele Niger Congo 2 600 000 ZimbabweNorthern Sotho Niger Congo 4 600 000 South AfricaNuer Nilo Saharan 1 700 000 South SudanOromo Afroasiatic 37 071 900 2020 EthiopiaPortuguese Indo European 17 000 000 Angola Cape Verde Guinea Bissau Equatorial Guinea Mozambique Sao Tome and PrincipeSena Niger Congo 2 869 000 ZimbabweSepedi Niger Congo 4 700 000 South AfricaSesotho Niger Congo 5 600 000 Lesotho South Africa ZimbabweSeychellois Creole French Creole 73 000 SeychellesShona Niger Congo 7 200 000 ZimbabweSomali Afroasiatic 21 937 940 Somalia Djibouti Ethiopia KenyaSpanish Indo European 1 100 000 Equatorial Guinea Spain Ceuta Melilla Canary Islands still marginally spoken in Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic recognized in MoroccoSouthern Ndebele Niger Congo 1 100 000 South AfricaSwahili Niger Congo 50 000 000 Official in Tanzania Kenya Uganda Rwanda Democratic Republic of the CongoSwazi Niger Congo 2 300 000 Official in South Africa SwazilandTamil Dravidian Spoken in MauritiusTelugu Dravidian Spoken in MauritiusTigrinya Afroasiatic 7 000 000 Eritrea regional language in EthiopiaTonga Niger Congo 1 500 000 ZimbabweTsonga Niger Congo 3 700 000 ZimbabweTwi Niger Congo 630 000 Regional language in GhanaTshiluba Niger Congo 6 300 000 1991 National language of Democratic Republic of the CongoTsonga Niger Congo 5 000 000 South Africa Zimbabwe as as Shangani MozambiqueTshivenda Niger Congo 1 300 000 South Africa ZimbabweTswana Niger Congo 5 800 000 Botswana South Africa spoken in ZimbabweUmbundu Niger Congo 6 000 000 AngolaVenda Niger Congo 1 300 000 South Africa ZimbabweWolof Niger Congo 5 454 000 Lingua franca in SenegalXhosa Niger Congo 7 600 000 South Africa ZimbabweYoruba Niger Congo 28 000 000 Nigeria Benin TogoZulu Niger Congo 10 400 000 South AfricaBy region Below is a list of the major languages of Africa by region family and total number of primary language speakers in millions North AfricaAfroasiatic Semitic Arabic 200 Berber 30 40 Kabyle Atlas Tuareg Zenaga Nilo Saharan Nubian 5 Fur 5 Zaghawa Masalit Niger Congo Kordofanian languages Nuba Central AfricaNiger Congo Bantu Lingala Kinyarwanda 12 Kongo 5 Tshiluba Kirundi Eastern AfricaNiger Congo Bantu Swahili 5 10 Gikuyu 8 Ganda 6 Luhya 6 Austronesian Malagasy 20 Niger Congo Ubangian Gbaya 2 Banda 1 2 Zande Nilo Saharan Kanuri 10 Luo 5 Sara 3 4 Kalenjin 6 Dinka Nuer Shilluk Maasai 1 2 Afroasiatic Semitic Amharic 20 Tigrinya 5 Cushitic Somali 10 15 Oromo 30 35 Nilo Saharan 1Gumuz Anuak Kunama Nara Niger Congo 1Zigula Southern AfricaNiger Congo Bantu Zulu 10 Xhosa 8 Chokwe Shona 7 Sotho 5 Tsonga 12 Tswana 4 Umbundu 4 Sepedi 4 Chichewa 8 Makua 8 Indo European Germanic Afrikaans 7 English 5 Romance Portuguese 14 West AfricaNiger Congo Benue Congo Ibibio Nigeria 7 Volta Niger Igbo Nigeria 30 35 Yoruba 40 Kwa Akan Ghana Cote d Ivoire 11 Gur More 5 Senegambian Fula West Africa 40 Wolof 8 Afroasiatic Chadic Hausa 50 Nilo Saharan Saharan Kanuri 10 Songhai 5 Zarma 5See alsoAfrica portalLanguage portalGeneral Writing systems of Africa Journal of West African Languages List of extinct languages of AfricaWorks Polyglotta Africana The Languages of AfricaClassifiers Karl Lepsius Lionel Bender Wilhelm Bleek Christopher Ehret Carl Meinhof Diedrich Westermann Joseph GreenbergColonial and migratory influences Arabization Asian Africans Dutch Language Union French West Africa German colonization of Africa Islamization of Egypt Italian East Africa including Italian Ethiopia Italian North Africa North African Arabs Maghrebi Arabic via Muslim conquest of the Maghreb Portuguese language in Africa predominant in Portuguese speaking African countries Spanish Guinea presently Equatorial Guinea Spanish West Africa Spanish North Africa West African Pidgin English White Africans of European ancestryNotesHeine amp Nurse 2000 Epstein Edmund L Kole Robert eds 1998 The Language of African Literature Africa World Press p ix ISBN 0 86543 534 0 Retrieved 23 June 2011 Africa is incredibly rich in language over 3 000 indigenous languages by some counts and many creoles pidgins and lingua francas Ethnologue report for Nigeria Ethnologue Languages of the World Oluwole Victor 12 September 2021 A comprehensive list of all the English speaking countries in Africa Business Insider Africa Retrieved 2 September 2023 Stein Smith Kathleen 17 March 2022 Africa and the French language are growing together in global importance The Conversation Retrieved 2 September 2023 Yates Y How Many People Speak Portuguese And Where Is It Spoken Babbel Magazine Retrieved 2 September 2023 African Union Summit 2006 Khartoum Sudan Southern African Regional Poverty Network Archived from the original on 30 May 2006 Bender M Lionel 1985 Review of Ehred amp Posnansky eds The archaeological and linguistic reconstruction of African history Language 61 3 4 Linguistic Society of America 695 doi 10 2307 414395 JSTOR 414395 Retrieved 31 January 2017 Ehret Christopher 2000 Language and History In Heine Bernd Nurse Derek eds African Languages An Introduction Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 290 ISBN 0 521 66629 5 Retrieved 12 March 2018 Campbell Lyle Mixco Mauricio J 2007 A Glossary of Historical Linguistics University of Utah Press ISBN 9780874808926 Matthews P H 2014 Oxford Concise Dictionary of Linguistics 3rd ed OUP Oxford ISBN 9780199675128 Pithouse Kathleen Mitchell Claudia Moletsane Relebohile 16 December 2023 Making Connections Self Study amp Social Action Peter Lang p 91 ISBN 9781433105012 Heese J A 1971 Die herkoms van die Afrikaner 1657 1867 The origin of the Afrikaner 1657 1867 in Afrikaans Cape Town A A Balkema OCLC 1821706 OL 5361614M Kloeke G G 1950 Herkomst en groei van het Afrikaans PDF Leiden Universitaire Pers Leiden Heeringa Wilbert de Wet Febe 2007 The origin of Afrikaans pronunciation a comparison to west Germanic languages and Dutch dialects CiteSeerX 10 1 1 222 5044 Coetzee Abel 1948 Standaard Afrikaans PDF Afrikaner Pers Retrieved 17 September 2014 Tibategeza Eustard January 2023 Language in Education Policy and Practice in the Democratic Republic of Congo Hugues Steve Ndinga Koumba Binza Hugues Steve Ndinga Koumba Binza August 2011 From foreign to national a review of the status of French in Gabon Hombert Jean Marie Philippson Gerard 2009 The linguistic importance of language isolates the African case In Austin Peter K Bond Oliver Charette Monik Nathan David Sells Peter eds Proceedings of Conference on Language Documentation and Linguistic Theory 2 PDF London SOAS Archived from the original PDF on 23 May 2013 Vossen Rainer Dimmendaal Gerrit J eds 2020 The Oxford Handbook of African Languages Oxford Oxford University Press pp 392 407 Lau Charles 30 April 2020 Language differences between interviewers and respondents in African surveys Chapter 5 In Sha Mandy ed The Essential Role of Language in Survey Research RTI Press pp 101 115 doi 10 3768 rtipress bk 0023 2004 ISBN 978 1 934831 24 3 AfricaNews 26 July 2023 Mali drops French as official language Africanews Retrieved 28 March 2024 AfricaNews 7 December 2023 Burkina abandons French as an official language Africanews Retrieved 28 March 2024 Algeria reinstates term limit and recognises Berber language BBC News JOURNAL OFFICIEL DE LA REPUBLIQUE DU MALI PDF sgg mali ml 29 September 2017 Retrieved 26 July 2023 Langues nationales langues considerees comme propres a une nation ou a un pays Selon la Loi n 96 049 du 23 aout 1996 les langues nationales du Mali sont le bamanankan bambara le bomu bobo le bozo bozo le dTgTsT dogon le fulfulde peul le hasanya maure le mamara miniyanka le maninkakan malinke le soninke sarakole le soKoy songhoi le syenara senoufo le tamasayt tamasheq le xaasongaxanKo khassonke CIA The World Factbook According to article 7 of The Transitional Federal Charter of the Somali Republic Archived 18 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine The official languages of the Somali Republic shall be Somali Maay and Maxaatiri and Arabic The second languages of the Transitional Federal Government shall be English and Italian Spencer Erika Hope Research Guides France amp French Collections at the Library of Congress Sub Saharan Africa guides loc gov Retrieved 28 March 2024 Fehn Anne Maria 2019 Wolff H Ekkehard ed African Linguistics in Official Portuguese and Spanish Speaking Africa A History of African Linguistics Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 189 204 ISBN 978 1 108 41797 6 retrieved 28 March 2024 ABOUT EQUATORIAL GUINEA Equatorial Guinea Embassy USA EG Embassy USA Retrieved 28 March 2024 The languages of South Africa Archived 4 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine southafrica info ETHIOPIA TO ADD 4 MORE OFFICIAL LANGUAGES TO FOSTER UNITY Ventures Africa Ventures 4 March 2020 Retrieved 2 February 2021 Ethiopia is adding four more official languages to Amharic as political instability mounts Nazret Archived from the original on 17 August 2021 Retrieved 2 February 2021 Shaban Abdurahman One to five Ethiopia gets four new federal working languages Africa News Archived from the original on 15 December 2020 Retrieved 10 February 2021 African languages for Africa s development Archived 24 May 2006 at the Wayback Machine ACALAN French amp English Tongues under threat The Economist 22 January 2011 p 58 327 millions de francophones dans le monde en 2023 odsef fss ulaval ca in French Verdeau Paul 20 March 2023 En 2023 327 millions de personnes parlent francais dans le monde dont pres de la moitie en Afrique RTBF in French Retrieved 27 November 2023 Anderson Gregory D S 2011 Auxiliary verb constructions in the languages of Africa Studies in African Linguistics 40 1 amp 2 1 409 doi 10 32473 sal v40i1 107282 Abron Ethnologue Retrieved 16 July 2019 Census 2011 Census in brief PDF Pretoria Statistics South Africa 2012 ISBN 978 0 621 41388 5 Archived PDF from the original on 13 May 2015 Varldens 100 storsta sprak 2007 The World s 100 Largest Languages in 2007 Nationalencyklopedin in Swedish Amharic Ethnologue Arabic Ethnologue Berber Ethnologue Bhojpuri Ethnologue Retrieved 16 July 2019 Chichewa Ethnologue Dangme Ethnologue Retrieved 16 July 2019 Dinka Ethnologue Retrieved 25 October 2024 English Ethnologue French Ethnologue com Retrieved 15 January 2021 Gikuyu Ethnologue Eberhard David M Simons Gary F Fennig Charles D Ethnologue hau Ethnologue SIL International Retrieved 30 June 2021 Igbo Ethnologue Brenzinger Matthias 2011 The twelve modern Khoisan languages In Witzlack Makarevich Alena Ernszt Martina eds Khoisan languages and linguistics proceedings of the 3rd International Symposium Riezlern Kleinwalsertal QKF Research in Khoisan Studies Vol 29 Cologne Rudiger Koppe Verlag p 2 ISBN 978 3 89645 873 5 Kongo Ethnologue Luganda 19 November 2019 Luhya Ethnologue Dholuo Ethnologue Malagasy Ethnologue Morisyen Ethnologue Ndebele Ethnologue Retrieved 20 September 2016 Sotho Northern Ethnologue Nuer Ethnologue Oromo first language speakers at Ethnologue 23rd ed 2020 Retrieved 27 November 2023 Eberhard David M Simons Gary F Fennig Charles D Ethnologue report for Portuguese Ethnologue SIL International Retrieved 16 April 2021 Sotho Southern Ethnologue Ethnologue report for Shona S 10 Archived from the original on 19 February 2015 Retrieved 19 February 2015 Somali SIL International 2024 Retrieved 5 February 2024 Spanish Ethnologue Retrieved 10 January 2018 Peek Philip M Yankah Kwesi eds 2004 Swahili African folklore an encyclopedia Taylor amp Francis p 699 doi 10 4324 9780203493144 ISBN 0 415 93933 X Tigrigna Ethnologue Luba Kasai Ethnologue Tsonga Ethnologue Tswana 19 November 2019 Umbundu Ethnologue Venda Ethnologue Retrieved 15 December 2019 Wolof Ethnologue Retrieved 15 December 2019 Mannan Nuraddin 31 May 2006 Memories of Utopia Infoshop World Bank PDF Archived from the original PDF on 6 April 2012 Retrieved 14 October 2015 There is no exact census for the Nubian population but some researchers estimate their number in Sudan for about 5 millions and about three millions in Egypt CORRECTION Census shows South Sudan population at 8 2 million report Sudan Tribune Plural news and views on Sudan www sudantribune com Archived from the original on 24 December 2010 Retrieved 21 July 2017 unsudanig org PDF Archived from the original PDF on 12 January 2020 Retrieved 10 April 2018 DRDC Report on the 5th Population Census in Sudan darfurcentre ch permanent dead link Shoup John A 2011 Ethnic Groups of Africa and the Middle East Bloomsbury Publishing USA p 333 ISBN 978 1 59884 363 7 The Zaghawa is one of the major divisions of the Beri peoples who live in western Sudan and eastern Chad and their language also called Zaghawa belongs to the Saharan branch of the Nilo Saharan language group The World Factbook 22 September 2021 The World Factbook 22 September 2021 The World Factbook 22 September 2021 The World Factbook 22 September 2021 The World Factbook 22 September 2021 The World Factbook 22 September 2021 The World Factbook 22 September 2021 The World Factbook 22 September 2021 The World Factbook 22 September 2021 The World Factbook 22 September 2021 The World Factbook 22 September 2021 The World Factbook 22 September 2021 Welcome to Kenya National Bureau of Statistics Archived from the original on 21 November 2013 Retrieved 28 June 2013 Racoma Dine 22 April 2012 The Maasai of Kenya and Tanzania The Language Journal Archived from the original on 28 April 2012 Summary and Statistical Report of the 2007 Population and Housing Census Population Size by Age and Sex PDF Report Addis Ababa Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia December 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 14 February 2012 Retrieved 29 October 2014 The World Factbook 22 September 2021 Report on minority groups in Somalia PDF Archived from the original PDF on 21 October 2013 The World Factbook 22 September 2021 The World Factbook 22 September 2021 Akindipe Tola Kakaula Geofrey Jone Alcino Learn Chokwe Language Learn Chokwe Mofeko The World Factbook 22 September 2021 The World Factbook 22 September 2021 The World Factbook 22 September 2021 The World Factbook 22 September 2021 The World Factbook 22 September 2021 The World Factbook 22 September 2021 The World Factbook 22 September 2021 The World Factbook 22 September 2021 ReferencesChilds George Tucker 2003 An Introduction to African Languages Amsterdam John Benjamin ISBN 9781588114211 OCLC 52766015 Chimhundu Herbert 2002 Language Policies in Africa PDF Intergovernmental Conference on Language Policies in Africa Revised ed Harare UNESCO Archived from the original PDF on 16 May 2017 Cust Robert Needham 1883 Modern Languages of Africa Ellis Stephen ed 1996 Africa Now People Policies and Institutions Ministry of Foreign Affairs DGIS ISBN 9780435089870 Elugbe Ben 1998 Cross border and major languages of Africa In Legere K ed Cross border Languages Reports and Studies Regional Workshop on Cross Border Languages National Institute for Educational Development NIED Okahandja 23 27 September 1996 Windhoek Gamsberg Macmillan Ethnologue com s Africa A listing of African languages and language families Greenberg Joseph H 1983 Some areal characteristics of African languages In Dihoff Ivan R ed Current Approaches to African Linguistics Publications in African Languages and Linguistics Vol 1 Dordrecht Foris pp 3 21 Greenberg Joseph H 1966 The Languages of Africa 2nd ed Bloomington Indiana University Heine Bernd Nurse Derek eds 2000 African Languages An Introduction Cambridge Cambridge University Press Webb Vic Kembo Sure eds 1998 African Voices An Introduction to the Languages and Linguistics of Africa Cape Town Oxford University Press Southern Africa Westphal E O J 1963 The Linguistic Prehistory of Southern Africa Bush Kwadi Hottentot and Bantu Linguistic Relationships Africa 33 3 237 265 doi 10 2307 1157418 JSTOR 1157418 S2CID 143635864 External linksone of the largest online resources for African languages at Mofeko African language resources for children Archived 3 August 2015 at the Wayback Machine Web resources for African languages Linguistic maps of Africa from Muturzikin com Online Dictionaries e books and other online fulltexts in or on African languages