Malawi: Chewa (de facto language of national identity) and English (statutory national working language). ![]() Eswatini (Swaziland): English and Swati.Comoros: Comorian, French (official) and Arabic.Botswana: English, Tswana, Kalanga, Khoi, Herero, Afrikaans, Nama, San, Ndebele, Sign language, and 21 others.Angola: Portuguese (official language), Cokwe, Kikongo, Oshiwambo, Umbundu, Kimbundu and 32 additional indigenous African languages.Tunisia: Modern Standard Arabic (official), Tunisian Arabic, French, Berber language, and English language.South Sudan: Arabic, English and other indigenous languages.Sudan: Arabic and English (official working languages) plus indigenous African languages.Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (in exile): Arabic (official) and Spanish (official) and French.Western Sahara (under Moroccan control): Hassaniya, Berber, Moroccan Arabic, Spanish and French.Moroccan Arabic, Hassaniya (present in the media), French (its wide use in education is legally established ), Spanish. Morocco: Arabic and Amazigh (co-official).Mauritania: Arabic (official and national), French, Poular, Soninke, and Wolof (national).Libya: Arabic (official), Amazigh, Tamahaq, Italian and English.Egypt: Arabic (official), Coptic, Egyptian Arabic, English and French.Algeria: Classic Arabic and Amazigh (both official and national language in the constitution) plus Algerian Arabic and French (in media, education and business).plus English and Italian (foreign languages) Somalia: Somali (official) and Arabic ("second language" official).At a regional level, working languages are Tigrigna in Tigray, Afarigna in Afar, Afaan Oromoo in Oromia, Somali in Somali region, Harari in Harari region Ethiopia: The federal working language is Amharic.Italian is an additional language spoken in commerce. The use and development of nine Eritrean languages (Tigrinya, Bilen, Afar, Saho, Rashaida, Tigre, Kunama, Nara and Hidarib) is encouraged at the local level and children attend primary school through the fifth grade in their mother tongue. Eritrea: Tigrinya, Arabic and English are predominantly used in commerce and government affairs.Djibouti: French and Arabic (official) plus Somali (official) & Afar.Uganda: English (official), Swahili (second official), Arabic, Luganda, other Bantu and.Swahili and English are de facto official languages and Arabic is spoken in Zanzibar. Tanzania: Swahili is the national language and English and many other indigenous languages. ![]() Seychelles: French, English & Seychellois Creole are official.Rwanda: French, English, Swahili and Kinyarwanda (co-official Kinyarwanda is also a national language).Kenya: English (official), Swahili (national and official) and 100+ other languages (Bantu, Nilotes, Cushites, Indians).Burundi: Kirundi (national and official), French and English (both official).Republic of the Congo: French (official), Lingala and Kituba national languages plus other dialects, including Kikongo and Kituba.Fang, Bube, Igbo, Pidgin English, Annobonese are also spoken. Equatorial Guinea: Spanish, French and Portuguese are the official languages of the country. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |