Wiki Languages: Afrikaans (Afrikaans)

Updated: 17-07-2024 by Wikilanguages.net
☞ share facebook ☞ share twitter
Display language: Simple English (simple)
Language: Afrikaans (Afrikaans)Local name: Afrikaans
Language code: af
Speak area: South AfricaClassification: Germanic
Country: South AfricaSecond language: Namibia
Usage: nationalWiki language for Afrikaans

Dictionary for Afrikaans (Afrikaans) in Simple English

EnglishAfrikaans
AfrikaansSimple English
Afrikaans
Pronunciation[afriˈkɑːns]
Native toSouth Africa, Namibia
Native speakers
7.2 million (2016)[1]
10.3 million L2 speakers in South Africa (2002)[2]
Language family
Indo-European
  • Germanic
    • West Germanic
      • Low Franconian
        • Dutch
          • Afrikaans
Writing system
  • Latin using Afrikaans alphabet
  • Afrikaans Braille
Signed forms
Signed Afrikaans[3]
Official status
Official language in
wikilanguages.net South Africa
Recognised minority
language in
wikilanguages.net Namibia
Regulated byDie Taalkommissie
Language codes
ISO 639-1
ISO 639-2
ISO 639-3afr
Glottologafri1274
Linguasphere52-ACB-ba
Afrikaans ETN15 Spread.svg
Regions shaded dark blue represent areas of concentrated Afrikaans-speaking communities
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.
Spoken Afrikaans

Afrikaans is a West Germanic language mainly spoken in South Africa and Namibia. It was originally the dialect that developed among the AfrikanerProtestantsettlers, the unfree workers, and slaves brought to the Cape area in southwestern South Africa by the Dutch East India Company (Dutch: Verenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie - VOC) between 1652 and 1705. Most of these first settlers were from the United Provinces (now Netherlands), though there were also many from Germany, some from France, a few from Scotland, and various other countries. The unfree workers and slaves were Malays, and Malagasy in addition to the native Khoi and Bushmen.

Research by J. A. Heese says that until 1807, 36.8% of the ancestors of the White Afrikaans speaking population were Dutch, 35% were German, 14.6% were French and 7.2% non-white (of African and/or Asian origins). Heese's figures are questioned by other researchers, however, and especially the non-white component quoted by Heese is very much in doubt.

A sizeable minority of those who speak Afrikaans as a first language are not white. The dialect became known as "Cape Dutch". Later, Afrikaans was sometimes called "African Dutch" or "Kitchen Dutch". Afrikaans was considered a Dutchdialect until the early 20th century, when it began to be widely known as a different language. The name Afrikaans is simply the Dutch word for African, and the language is the African form of Dutch.

Related pages

  • Afrikaans Language Monument
  • Afrikaans-English Dictionary On-line

References

  1. Afrikaans at Ethnologue (19th ed., 2016)
  2. Webb (2002), 14:78.
  3. Aarons & Reynolds, "South African Sign Language" in Monaghan (ed.), Many Ways to be Deaf: International Variation in Deaf Communities (2003).

All Languages for you

Other languages

Abkhazian Acehnese Adyghe Afrikaans Akan Albanian Alemannic Amharic Anglo-Saxon Arabic Aragonese Aramaic Armenian Aromanian Assamese Asturian Atikamekw Avar Awadhi Aymara Azerbaijani Balinese Bambara Banjar Banyumasan Bashkir Basque Bavarian Belarusian Belarusian-Taraskievica Bengali Bhojpuri Bishnupriya_Manipuri Bislama Bosnian Breton Buginese Bulgarian Burmese Buryat Cantonese Catalan Cebuano Central_Bicolano Chamorro Chechen Cherokee Cheyenne Chichewa Chinese Chuvash Classical_Chinese Cornish Corsican Cree Crimean_Tatar Croatian Czech Dagbani Danish Dinka Divehi Doteli Dutch Dutch_Low_Saxon Dzongkha Egyptian_Arabic Emilian-Romagnol English Erzya Esperanto Estonian Ewe Extremaduran Faroese Fiji_Hindi Fijian Finnish Franco-Provencal French Friulian Fula Gagauz Galician Gan Georgian German Gilaki Goan_Konkani Gorontalo Gothic Greek Greenlandic Guarani Guianan_Creole Gujarati Gun Haitian Hakka Hausa Hawaiian Hebrew Hill_Mari Hindi Hungarian Icelandic Ido Igbo Ilokano Inari_Sami Indonesian Ingush Interlingua Interlingue Inuktitut Inupiak Irish Italian Jamaican_Patois Japanese Javanese Kabardian_Circassian Kabiye Kabyle Kalmyk Kannada Kapampangan Karachay-Balkar Karakalpak Kashmiri Kashubian Kazakh Khmer Kikuyu Kinyarwanda Kirghiz Kirundi Komi Komi-Permyak Kongo Korean Kotava Kurdish Ladin Ladino Lak Lao Latgalian Latin Latvian Lezgian Ligurian Limburgish Lingala Lingua_Franca_Nova Lithuanian Livvi-Karelian Lojban Lombard Low_Saxon Lower_Sorbian Luganda Luxembourgish Macedonian Madurese Maithili Malagasy Malay Malayalam Maltese Manx Maori Marathi Mazandarani Meadow_Mari Meitei Min_Dong Min_Nan Minangkabau Mingrelian Mirandese Moksha Mon Mongolian Moroccan_Arabic NKo Nahuatl Nauruan Navajo Neapolitan Nepali Newar Nias Norfolk Norman North_Frisian Northern_Sami Northern_Sotho Norwegian-Bokmal Norwegian-Nynorsk Novial Occitan Old_Church_Slavonic Oriya Oromo Ossetian Palatinate_German Pali Pangasinan Papiamentu Pashto Pennsylvania_German Persian Picard Piedmontese Polish Pontic Portuguese Punjabi Quechua Ripuarian Romani Romanian Romansh Russian Rusyn Sakha Sakizaya Samoan Samogitian Sango Sanskrit Santali Saraiki Sardinian Saterland_Frisian Scots Scottish_Gaelic Seediq Serbian Serbo-Croatian Sesotho Shan Shona Sicilian Silesian Simple_English Sindhi Sinhalese Slovak Slovenian Somali Sorani South_Azerbaijani Southern_Altai Spanish Sranan Sundanese Swahili Swati Swedish Tachelhit Tagalog Tahitian Tajik Tamil Tarantino Tatar Tayal Telugu Tetum Thai Tibetan Tigrinya Tok_Pisin Tongan Tsonga Tswana Tulu Tumbuka Turkish Turkmen Tuvan Twi Udmurt Ukrainian Upper_Sorbian Urdu Uyghur Uzbek Venda Venetian Vepsian Vietnamese Volapuk Voro Walloon Waray-Waray Welsh West_Flemish West_Frisian Western_Armenian Western_Punjabi Wolof Wu Xhosa Yiddish Yoruba Zamboanga_Chavacano Zazaki Zeelandic Zhuang Zulu
🔝