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Wikipedia

Afrikaans

Afrikaans (/ˌæfrɪˈkɑːns/ AF-rih-KAHNSS, /ˌɑːf-, -ˈkɑːnz/ AHF-, -⁠KAHNZ)[3][4] is a West Germanic language, spoken in South Africa, Namibia and (to a lesser extent) Botswana, Zambia and Zimbabwe. It evolved from the Dutch vernacular[5][6] of South Holland (Hollandic dialect)[7][8] spoken by the predominantly Dutch settlers and enslaved population of the Dutch Cape Colony, where it gradually began to develop distinguishing characteristics in the course of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.[9]

Afrikaans
Pronunciation[afriˈkɑːns]
Native to
Native speakers
7.2 million (2016)
10.3 million L2 speakers in South Africa (2011)[1]
Early forms
Latin script (Afrikaans alphabet), Arabic script
Signed Afrikaans[2]
Official status
Official language in
 South Africa
Recognised minority
language in
Regulated byDie Taalkommissie
Language codes
ISO 639-1af
ISO 639-2afr
ISO 639-3afr
Glottologafri1274
Linguasphere52-ACB-ba
   spoken by a majority
   spoken by a minority
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.
Colin speaking Afrikaans
Alaric speaking Afrikaans
Rossouw speaking Afrikaans
Obelisks of the Afrikaans Language Monument near Paarl

Although Afrikaans has adopted words from other languages, including German and the Khoisan languages, an estimated 90 to 95% of the vocabulary of Afrikaans is of Dutch origin.[n 1] Differences between Afrikaans and Dutch often lie in the more analytic morphology and grammar of Afrikaans, and different spellings.[n 2] There is a large degree of mutual intelligibility between the two languages, especially in written form.[10]

Etymology edit

The name of the language comes directly from the Dutch word Afrikaansch (now spelled Afrikaans)[11] meaning "African".[12] It was previously referred to as "Cape Dutch" (Kaap-Hollands/Kaap-Nederlands), a term also used to refer to the early Cape settlers collectively, or the derogatory "kitchen Dutch" (kombuistaal) from its use by slaves of colonial settlers "in the kitchen".

History edit

Origin edit

The Afrikaans language arose in the Dutch Cape Colony, through a gradual divergence from European Dutch dialects, during the course of the 18th century.[13][14] As early as the mid-18th century and as recently as the mid-20th century, Afrikaans was known in standard Dutch as a "kitchen language" (Afrikaans: kombuistaal), lacking the prestige accorded, for example, even by the educational system in Africa, to languages spoken outside Africa. Other early epithets setting apart Kaaps Hollands ("Cape Dutch", i.e. Afrikaans) as putatively beneath official Dutch standards included geradbraakt, gebroken and onbeschaafd Hollands ("mutilated/broken/uncivilised Dutch"), as well as verkeerd Nederlands ("incorrect Dutch").[15][16]

'Hottentot Dutch'
Dutch-based pidgin
Language codes
ISO 639-3None (mis)
Glottologhott1234

Den Besten theorises that modern Standard Afrikaans derives from two sources:[17]

  • Cape Dutch, a direct transplantation of European Dutch to Southern Africa, and
  • 'Hottentot Dutch',[18] a pidgin that descended from 'Foreigner Talk' and ultimately from the Dutch pidgin spoken by slaves, via a hypothetical Dutch creole.

Thus in his view Afrikaans is neither a creole nor a direct descendant of Dutch, but a fusion of two transmission pathways.

Development edit

 
Standard Dutch used in a 1916 South African newspaper before Afrikaans replaced it for use in media

Most of the first settlers whose descendants today are the Afrikaners were from the United Provinces (now Netherlands),[19] with up to one-sixth of the community of French Huguenot origin, and a seventh from Germany.[20]

African and Asian workers, Cape Coloured children of European settlers and Khoikhoi women,[21] and slaves contributed to the development of Afrikaans. The slave population was made up of people from East Africa, West Africa, India, Madagascar, and the Dutch East Indies (modern Indonesia).[22] A number were also indigenous Khoisan people, who were valued as interpreters, domestic servants, and labourers. Many free and enslaved women married or cohabited with the male Dutch settlers. M. F. Valkhoff argued that 75% of children born to female slaves in the Dutch Cape Colony between 1652 and 1672 had a Dutch father.[23] Sarah Grey Thomason and Terrence Kaufman argue that Afrikaans' development as a separate language was "heavily conditioned by nonwhites who learned Dutch imperfectly as a second language."[24]

Beginning in about 1815, Afrikaans started to replace Malay as the language of instruction in Muslim schools in South Africa, written with the Arabic alphabet: see Arabic Afrikaans. Later, Afrikaans, now written with the Latin script, started to appear in newspapers and political and religious works in around 1850 (alongside the already established Dutch).[13]

In 1875, a group of Afrikaans-speakers from the Cape formed the Genootskap vir Regte Afrikaaners ("Society for Real Afrikaners"),[13] and published a number of books in Afrikaans including grammars, dictionaries, religious materials and histories.

Until the early 20th century, Afrikaans was considered a Dutch dialect, alongside Standard Dutch, which it eventually replaced as an official language.[25] Before the Boer wars, "and indeed for some time afterwards, Afrikaans was regarded as inappropriate for educated discourse. Rather, Afrikaans was described derogatorily as 'a kitchen language' or 'a bastard jargon', suitable for communication mainly between the Boers and their servants."[26][better source needed]

Recognition edit

 
"Dit is ons erns" ("This is our passion"), at the Afrikaans Language Monument

In 1925, Afrikaans was recognised by the South African government as a distinct language, rather than simply a vernacular of Dutch.[13] On 8 May 1925, twenty-three years after the Second Boer War ended,[26] the Official Languages of the Union Act of 1925 was passed—mostly due to the efforts of the Afrikaans-language movement—at a joint sitting of the House of Assembly and the Senate, in which the Afrikaans language was declared a variety of Dutch.[27] The Constitution of 1961 reversed the position of Afrikaans and Dutch, so that English and Afrikaans were the official languages, and Afrikaans was deemed to include Dutch. The Constitution of 1983 removed any mention of Dutch altogether.

The Afrikaans Language Monument is located on a hill overlooking Paarl in the Western Cape Province. Officially opened on 10 October 1975,[28] it was erected on the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Society of Real Afrikaners,[29] and the 50th anniversary of Afrikaans being declared an official language of South Africa in distinction to Dutch.

Standardisation edit

 
The side view of the Pretoria Art Museum in Arcadia, Pretoria, with its name written in Afrikaans, Xhosa and Southern Ndebele.

The earliest Afrikaans texts were some doggerel verse from 1795 and a dialogue transcribed by a Dutch traveller in 1825. Afrikaans used the Latin alphabet around this time, although the Cape Muslim community used the Arabic script. In 1861, L.H. Meurant published his Zamenspraak tusschen Klaas Waarzegger en Jan Twyfelaar ("Conversation between Nicholas Truthsayer and John Doubter"), which is considered to be the first book published in Afrikaans.[30]

The first grammar book was published in 1876; a bilingual dictionary was later published in 1902. The main modern Afrikaans dictionary in use is the Verklarende Handwoordeboek van die Afrikaanse Taal (HAT). A new authoritative dictionary, called Woordeboek van die Afrikaanse Taal (WAT), was under development as of 2018. The official orthography of Afrikaans is the Afrikaanse Woordelys en Spelreëls, compiled by Die Taalkommissie.[30]

The Afrikaans Bible edit

The Afrikaners primarily were Protestants, of the Dutch Reformed Church of the 17th century. Their religious practices were later influenced in South Africa by British ministries during the 1800s.[31] A landmark in the development of the language was the translation of the whole Bible into Afrikaans. While significant advances had been made in the textual criticism of the Bible, especially the Greek New Testament, the 1933 translation followed the Textus Receptus and was closely akin to the Statenbijbel. Before this, most Cape Dutch-Afrikaans speakers had to rely on the Dutch Statenbijbel. This Statenvertaling had its origins with the Synod of Dordrecht of 1618 and was thus in an archaic form of Dutch. This was hard for Dutch speakers to understand, and increasingly unintelligible for Afrikaans speakers.

C. P. Hoogehout, Arnoldus Pannevis [af], and Stephanus Jacobus du Toit were the first Afrikaans Bible translators. Important landmarks in the translation of the Scriptures were in 1878 with C. P. Hoogehout's translation of the Evangelie volgens Markus (Gospel of Mark, lit. Gospel according to Mark); however, this translation was never published. The manuscript is to be found in the South African National Library, Cape Town.

The first official translation of the entire Bible into Afrikaans was in 1933 by J. D. du Toit, E. E. van Rooyen, J. D. Kestell, H. C. M. Fourie, and BB Keet.[32][33] This monumental work established Afrikaans as 'n suiwer en ordentlike taal, that is "a pure and proper language" for religious purposes, especially amongst the deeply Calvinist Afrikaans religious community that previously had been sceptical of a Bible translation that varied from the Dutch version that they were used to.

In 1983, a fresh translation marked the 50th anniversary of the 1933 version. The final editing of this edition was done by E. P. Groenewald, A. H. van Zyl, P. A. Verhoef, J. L. Helberg and W. Kempen. This translation was influenced by Eugene Nida's theory of dynamic equivalence which focused on finding the nearest equivalent in the receptor language to the idea that the Greek, Hebrew or Aramaic wanted to convey.

A new translation, Die Bybel: 'n Direkte Vertaling was released in November 2020. It is the first truly ecumenical translation of the Bible in Afrikaans as translators from various churches, including the Roman Catholic and Anglican Churches, were involved.[34]

Classification edit

Afrikaans descended from Dutch dialects in the 17th century. It belongs to a West Germanic sub-group, the Low Franconian languages.[35] Other West Germanic languages related to Afrikaans are German, English, the Frisian languages, and the unstandardised languages Low German and Yiddish.

Geographic distribution edit

Statistics edit

 
The geographical distribution of Afrikaans in South Africa: proportion of the population that speaks Afrikaans at home.
  0–20%
  20–40%
  40–60%
  60–80%
  80–100%
Country Speakers Percentage of speakers Year Reference
  Argentina 650 0.001% 2019 [36]
  Australia 49,375 0.68% 2021 [37]
  Botswana 8,082 0.11% 2011 [citation needed]
  Canada 23,410 0.32% 2016 [38]
  United Kingdom 11,247 0.16% 2011 [39]
  Finland 58 0.001% 2021 [40]
  Pakistan 2,228 0.03% 2016 [41]
  Mauritius 36 0.003% 2011 [citation needed]
  Namibia 219,760 3.05% 2011 [citation needed]
  New Zealand 36,966 0.51% 2018 [42]
  South Africa 6,855,082 94.66% 2011 [citation needed]
  United States 28,406 0.39% 2016 [43]
Total 7,211,537

Sociolinguistics edit

 
The geographical distribution of Afrikaans in South Africa: density of Afrikaans home-language speakers.
  <1 /km2
  1–3 /km2
  3–10 /km2
  10–30 /km2
  30–100 /km2
  100–300 /km2
  300–1000 /km2
  1000–3000 /km2
  >3000 /km2
 
The geographical distribution of Afrikaans in Namibia.

Afrikaans is also widely spoken in Namibia. Before independence, Afrikaans had equal status with German as an official language. Since independence in 1990, Afrikaans has had constitutional recognition as a national, but not official, language.[44][45] There is a much smaller number of Afrikaans speakers among Zimbabwe's white minority, as most have left the country since 1980. Afrikaans was also a medium of instruction for schools in Bophuthatswana, an Apartheid-era Bantustan.[46] Eldoret in Kenya was founded by Afrikaners.[47]

In 1976, secondary-school pupils in Soweto began a rebellion in response to the government's decision that Afrikaans be used as the language of instruction for half the subjects taught in non-White schools (with English continuing for the other half). Although English is the mother tongue of only 8.2% of the population, it is the language most widely understood, and the second language of a majority of South Africans.[48] Afrikaans is more widely spoken than English in the Northern and Western Cape provinces, several hundred kilometres from Soweto.[49] The Black community's opposition to Afrikaans and preference for continuing English instruction was underlined when the government rescinded the policy one month after the uprising: 96% of Black schools chose English (over Afrikaans or native languages) as the language of instruction.[49] Afrikaans-medium schools were also accused of using language policy to deter Black African parents.[50] Some of these parents, in part supported by provincial departments of education, initiated litigation which enabled enrolment with English as language of instruction. By 2006 there were 300 single-medium Afrikaans schools, compared to 2,500 in 1994, after most converted to dual-medium education.[50] Due to Afrikaans being viewed as the "language of the white oppressor" by some, pressure has been increased to remove Afrikaans as a teaching language in South African universities, resulting in bloody student protests in 2015.[51][52][53]

Under South Africa's Constitution of 1996, Afrikaans remains an official language, and has equal status to English and nine other languages. The new policy means that the use of Afrikaans is now often reduced in favour of English, or to accommodate the other official languages. In 1996, for example, the South African Broadcasting Corporation reduced the amount of television airtime in Afrikaans, while South African Airways dropped its Afrikaans name Suid-Afrikaanse Lugdiens from its livery. Similarly, South Africa's diplomatic missions overseas now display the name of the country only in English and their host country's language, and not in Afrikaans. Meanwhile, the constitution of the Western Cape, which went into effect in 1998, declares Afrikaans to be an official language of the province alongside English and Xhosa.[54]

The Afrikaans-language general-interest family magazine Huisgenoot has the largest readership of any magazine in the country.[55]

When the British design magazine Wallpaper described Afrikaans as "one of the world's ugliest languages" in its September 2005 article about the monument,[56] South African billionaire Johann Rupert (chairman of the Richemont Group), responded by withdrawing advertising for brands such as Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels, Montblanc and Alfred Dunhill from the magazine.[57] The author of the article, Bronwyn Davies, was an English-speaking South African.

Mutual intelligibility with Dutch edit

An estimated 90 to 95% of the Afrikaans lexicon is ultimately of Dutch origin,[58][59][60] and there are few lexical differences between the two languages.[61] Afrikaans has a considerably more regular morphology,[62] grammar, and spelling.[63] There is a high degree of mutual intelligibility between the two languages,[62][64][65] particularly in written form.[63][66][67]

Afrikaans acquired some lexical and syntactical borrowings from other languages such as Malay, Khoisan languages, Portuguese,[68] and Bantu languages,[69] and Afrikaans has also been significantly influenced by South African English.[70] Dutch speakers are confronted with fewer non-cognates when listening to Afrikaans than the other way round.[67] Mutual intelligibility thus tends to be asymmetrical, as it is easier for Dutch speakers to understand Afrikaans than for Afrikaans speakers to understand Dutch.[67]

In general, mutual intelligibility between Dutch and Afrikaans is far better than between Dutch and Frisian[71] or between Danish and Swedish.[67] The South African poet writer Breyten Breytenbach, attempting to visualise the language distance for Anglophones once remarked that the differences between (Standard) Dutch and Afrikaans are comparable to those between the Received Pronunciation and Southern American English.[72]

Current status edit

Use of Afrikaans as a first language by province
Province 1996[73] 2001[73] 2011[73] 2022[74]
Western Cape 58.5% 55.3% 49.7% 41.2%
Eastern Cape 9.8% 9.6% 10.6% 9.6%
Northern Cape 57.2% 56.6% 53.8% 54.6%
Free State 14.4% 11.9% 12.7% 10.3%
KwaZulu-Natal 1.6% 1.5% 1.6% 1.0%
North West 8.8% 8.8% 9.0% 5.2%
Gauteng 15.6% 13.6% 12.4% 7.7%
Mpumalanga 7.1% 5.5% 7.2% 3.2%
Limpopo 2.6% 2.6% 2.6% 2.3%
  South Africa 14.4%[75] 13.3%[76] 13.5%[77] 10.6%[78]

Post-apartheid South Africa has seen a loss of preferential treatment by the government for Afrikaans, in terms of education, social events, media (TV and radio), and general status throughout the country, given that it now shares its place as official language with ten other languages. Nevertheless, Afrikaans remains more prevalent in the media – radio, newspapers and television[79] – than any of the other official languages, except English. More than 300 book titles in Afrikaans are published annually.[80] South African census figures suggest a growing number of speakers in all nine provinces, a total of 6.85 million in 2011 compared to 5.98 million a decade earlier.[81] The South African Institute of Race Relations (SAIRR) projects that a growing majority of Afrikaans speakers will be Coloured.[82] Afrikaans speakers experience higher employment rates than other South African language groups, though as of 2012 half a million were unemployed.[81]

Despite the challenges of demotion and emigration that it faces in South Africa, the Afrikaans vernacular remains competitive, being popular in DSTV pay channels and several internet sites, while generating high newspaper and music CD sales. A resurgence in Afrikaans popular music since the late 1990s has invigorated the language, especially among a younger generation of South Africans. A recent trend is the increased availability of pre-school educational CDs and DVDs. Such media also prove popular with the extensive Afrikaans-speaking emigrant communities who seek to retain language proficiency in a household context.

Afrikaans-language cinema showed signs of new vigour in the early 21st century. The 2007 film Ouma se slim kind, the first full-length Afrikaans movie since Paljas in 1998, is seen as the dawn of a new era in Afrikaans cinema. Several short films have been created and more feature-length movies, such as Poena is Koning and Bakgat (both in 2008) have been produced, besides the 2011 Afrikaans-language film Skoonheid, which was the first Afrikaans film to screen at the Cannes Film Festival. The film Platteland was also released in 2011.[83] The Afrikaans film industry started gaining international recognition via the likes of big Afrikaans Hollywood film stars, like Charlize Theron (Monster) and Sharlto Copley (District 9) promoting their mother tongue.

SABC3 announced early in 2009 that it would increase Afrikaans programming due to the "growing Afrikaans-language market and [their] need for working capital as Afrikaans advertising is the only advertising that sells in the current South African television market". In April 2009, SABC3 started screening several Afrikaans-language programmes.[84] There is a groundswell movement within Afrikaans to be inclusive, and to promote itself along with the other indigenous official languages. In Namibia, the percentage of Afrikaans speakers declined from 11.4% (2001 Census) to 10.4% (2011 Census). The major concentrations are in Hardap (41.0%), ǁKaras (36.1%), Erongo (20.5%), Khomas (18.5%), Omaheke (10.0%), Otjozondjupa (9.4%), Kunene (4.2%), and Oshikoto (2.3%).[85]

Many native speakers of Bantu languages and English also speak Afrikaans as a second language. It is widely taught in South African schools, with about 10.3 million second-language students.[1]

Afrikaans is offered at many universities outside South Africa, including in the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Poland, Russia and the United States.[86]

Grammar edit

In Afrikaans grammar, there is no distinction between the infinitive and present forms of verbs, with the exception of the verbs 'to be' and 'to have':

infinitive form present indicative form Dutch English
wees is zijn or wezen be
het hebben have

In addition, verbs do not conjugate differently depending on the subject. For example,

Afrikaans Dutch English
ek is ik ben I am
jy/u is jij/u bent you are (sing.)
hy/sy/dit is hij/zij/het is he/she/it is
ons is wij zijn we are
julle is jullie zijn you are (plur.)
hulle is zij zijn they are

Only a handful of Afrikaans verbs have a preterite, namely the auxiliary wees ("to be"), the modal verbs, and the verb dink ("to think"). The preterite of mag ("may") is rare in contemporary Afrikaans.

Afrikaans Dutch English
present past present past present past
ek is ek was ik ben ik was I am I was
ek kan ek kon ik kan ik kon I can I could
ek moet ek moes ik moet ik moest I must (I had to)
ek wil ek wou ik wil ik wilde/wou I want to I wanted to
ek sal ek sou ik zal ik zou I shall I should
ek mag (ek mog) ik mag ik mocht I may I might
ek dink ek dog ik denk ik dacht I think I thought

All other verbs use the perfect tense, het + past participle (ge-), for the past. Therefore, there is no distinction in Afrikaans between I drank and I have drunk. (In colloquial German, the past tense is also often replaced with the perfect.)

Afrikaans Dutch English
ek het gedrink ik dronk I drank
ik heb gedronken I have drunk

When telling a longer story, Afrikaans speakers usually avoid the perfect and simply use the present tense, or historical present tense instead (as is possible, but less common, in English as well).

A particular feature of Afrikaans is its use of the double negative; it is classified in Afrikaans as ontkennende vorm and is something that is absent from the other West Germanic standard languages. For example,

Afrikaans: Hy kan nie Afrikaans praat nie, lit.'He can not Afrikaans speak not'
Dutch: Hij spreekt geen Afrikaans.
English: He can not speak Afrikaans. / He can't speak Afrikaans.

Both French and San origins have been suggested for double negation in Afrikaans. While double negation is still found in Low Franconian dialects in West Flanders and in some "isolated" villages in the centre of the Netherlands (such as Garderen), it takes a different form, which is not found in Afrikaans. The following is an example:

Afrikaans: Ek wil nie dit doen nie.* (lit. I want not this do not.)
Dutch: Ik wil dit niet doen.
English: I do not want to do this.

* Compare with Ek wil dit nie doen nie, which changes the meaning to "I want not to do this." Whereas Ek wil nie dit doen nie emphasizes a lack of desire to act, Ek wil dit nie doen nie emphasizes the act itself.

The -ne was the Middle Dutch way to negate but it has been suggested that since -ne became highly non-voiced, nie or niet was needed to complement the -ne. With time the -ne disappeared in most Dutch dialects.

The double negative construction has been fully grammaticalised in standard Afrikaans and its proper use follows a set of fairly complex rules as the examples below show:

Afrikaans Dutch (literally translated) More correct Dutch Literal English Idiomatic English
Ek het (nie) geweet dat hy (nie) sou kom (nie). Ik heb (niet) geweten dat hij (niet) zou komen. Ik wist (niet) dat hij (niet) zou komen. I did (not) know that he would (not) come. I did (not) know that he was (not) going to come.
Hy sal nie kom nie, want hy is siek.[n 3] Hij zal niet komen, want hij is ziek. Hij komt niet, want hij is ziek. He will not come, as he is sick. He is sick and is not going to come.
Dis (Dit is) nie so moeilik om Afrikaans te leer nie. Het is niet zo moeilijk (om) Afrikaans te leren. It is not so difficult to learn Afrikaans.

A notable exception to this is the use of the negating grammar form that coincides with negating the English present participle. In this case there is only a single negation.

Afrikaans: Hy is in die hospitaal, maar hy eet nie.
Dutch: Hij is in het ziekenhuis, maar hij eet niet.
English: He is in [the] hospital, though he doesn't eat.

Certain words in Afrikaans would be contracted. For example, moet nie, which literally means "must not", usually becomes moenie; although one does not have to write or say it like this, virtually all Afrikaans speakers will change the two words to moenie in the same way as do not is contracted to don't in English.

The Dutch word het ("it" in English) does not correspond to het in Afrikaans. The Dutch words corresponding to Afrikaans het are heb, hebt, heeft and hebben.

Afrikaans Dutch English
het heb, hebt, heeft, hebben have, has
die de, het the
dit het it

Phonology edit

A voice recording of Die Stem van Suid-Afrika ('The Voice of South Africa'), the former national anthem, read in poetic form

Vowels edit

Monophthong phonemes[87][88]
Front Central Back
unrounded rounded unrounded rounded
short long short long short long short long short long
Close i () y u ()
Mid e ə (əː) œ (œː) o ()
Near-open (æ) (æː)
Open a ɑː
  • As phonemes, /iː/ and /uː/ occur only in the words spieël /spiːl/ 'mirror' and koeël /kuːl/ 'bullet', which used to be pronounced with sequences /i.ə/ and /u.ə/, respectively. In other cases, [] and [] occur as allophones of, respectively, /i/ and /u/ before /r/.[89]
  • /y/ is phonetically long [] before /r/.[90]
  • /əː/ is always stressed and occurs only in the word wîe 'wedges'.[91]
  • The closest unrounded counterparts of /œ, œː/ are central /ə, əː/, rather than front /e, eː/.[92]
  • /œː, oː/ occur only in a few words.[93]
  • [æ] occurs as an allophone of /e/ before /k, χ, l, r/, though this occurs primarily dialectally, most commonly in the former Transvaal and Free State provinces.[94]

Diphthongs edit

Diphthong phonemes[95][96]
Starting point Ending point
Front Central Back
Mid unrounded ɪø, əi ɪə
rounded œi, ɔi ʊə œu
Open unrounded ai, ɑːi
  • /ɔi, ai/ occur mainly in loanwords.[97]

Consonants edit

  • All obstruents at the ends of words are devoiced, so that e.g. a final /d/ is realized as [t].[98]
  • /ɡ, dʒ, z/ occur only in loanwords. [ɡ] is also an allophone of /χ/ in some environments.[99]
  • /χ/ is most often uvular [χ ~ ʀ̥].[100][101][102] Velar [x] occurs only in some speakers.[101]
  • The rhotic is usually an alveolar trill [r] or tap [ɾ].[103] In some parts of the former Cape Province, it is realized uvularly, either as a trill [ʀ] or a fricative [ʁ].[104]

Dialects edit

 
A warning sign in Afrikaans: Gevaar Slagysters or "Danger, Traps".

Following early dialectal studies of Afrikaans, it was theorised that three main historical dialects probably existed after the Great Trek in the 1830s. These dialects are the Northern Cape, Western Cape, and Eastern Cape dialects.[105] Northern Cape dialect may have resulted from contact between Dutch settlers and the Khoekhoe people between the Great Karoo and the Kunene, and Eastern Cape dialect between the Dutch and the Xhosa. Remnants of these dialects still remain in present-day Afrikaans, although the standardising effect of Standard Afrikaans has contributed to a great levelling of differences in modern times.[106][better source needed]

There is also a prison cant, known as Sabela, which is based on Afrikaans, yet heavily influenced by Zulu. This language is used as a secret language in prison and is taught to initiates.[106]

Patagonian Afrikaans dialect edit

A distinct dialect of Afrikaans is spoken by the 650-strong South African community of Argentina, in the region of Patagonia.[107]

Influences on Afrikaans from other languages edit

Malay edit

Due to the early settlement of a Cape Malay community in Cape Town, who are now known as Coloureds, numerous Classical Malay words were brought into Afrikaans. Some of these words entered Dutch via people arriving from what is now known as Indonesia as part of their colonial heritage. Malay words in Afrikaans include:[108]

  • baie, which means 'very'/'much'/'many' (from banyak) is a very commonly used Afrikaans word, different from its Dutch equivalent veel or erg.
  • baadjie, Afrikaans for jacket (from baju, ultimately from Persian), used where Dutch would use jas or vest. The word baadje in Dutch is now considered archaic and only used in written, literary texts.
  • bobotie, a traditional Cape-Malay dish, made from spiced minced meat baked with an egg-based topping.
  • piesang, which means banana. This is different from the common Dutch word banaan. The Indonesian word pisang is also used in Dutch, though usage is more common.
  • piering, which means saucer (from piring, also from Persian).

Portuguese edit

Some words originally came from Portuguese such as sambreel ("umbrella") from the Portuguese sombreiro, kraal ("pen/cattle enclosure") from the Portuguese curral and mielie ("corn", from milho). Some of these words also exist in Dutch, like sambreel "parasol",[109] though usage is less common and meanings can slightly differ.

Khoisan languages edit

Some of these words also exist in Dutch, though with a more specific meaning: assegaai for example means "South-African tribal javelin"[111] and karos means "South-African tribal blanket of animal hides".[112]

Bantu languages edit

Loanwords from Bantu languages in Afrikaans include the names of indigenous birds, such as mahem and sakaboela, and indigenous plants, such as maroela and tamboekie(gras).[113]

French edit

The revoking of the Edict of Nantes on 22 October 1685 was a milestone in the history of South Africa, for it marked the beginning of the great Huguenot exodus from France. It is estimated that between 250,000 and 300,000 Protestants left France between 1685 and 1700; out of these, according to Louvois, 100,000 had received military training. A measure of the calibre of these immigrants and of their acceptance by host countries (in particular South Africa) is given by H. V. Morton in his book: In Search of South Africa (London, 1948). The Huguenots were responsible for a great linguistic contribution to Afrikaans, particularly in terms of military terminology as many of them fought on the battlefields during the wars of the Great Trek.

Most of the words in this list are descendants from Dutch borrowings from French, Old French or Latin, and are not direct influences from French on Afrikaans.

Afrikaans Dutch French English
advies advies avis advice
alarm alarm alarme alarm
ammunisie ammunitie, munitie munition ammunition
amusant amusant amusant funny
artillerie artillerie artillerie artillery
ateljee atelier atelier studio
bagasie bagage bagage luggage
bastion bastion bastion bastion
bataljon bataljon bataillon battalion
battery batterij batterie battery
biblioteek bibliotheek bibliothèque library
faktuur factuur facture invoice
fort fort fort fort
frikkadel frikadel fricadelle meatball
garnisoen garnizoen garnison garrison
generaal generaal général general
granaat granaat grenade grenade
infanterie infanterie infanterie infantry
interessant interessant intéressant interesting
kaliber kaliber calibre calibre
kanon kanon canon cannon
kanonnier kanonnier canonier gunner
kardoes kardoes, cartouche cartouche cartridge
kaptein kapitein capitaine captain
kolonel kolonel colonel colonel
kommandeur commandeur commandeur commander
kwartier kwartier quartier quarter
lieutenant lieutenant lieutenant lieutenant
magasyn magazijn magasin magazine
manier manier manière way
marsjeer marcheer, marcheren marcher (to) march
meubels meubels meubles furniture
militêr militair militaire militarily
morsel morzel morceau piece
mortier mortier mortier mortar
muit muit, muiten mutiner (to) mutiny
musket musket mousquet musket
muur muur mur wall
myn mijn mine mine
offisier officier officier officer
orde orde ordre order
papier papier papier paper
pionier pionier pionnier pioneer
plafon plafond plafond ceiling
plat plat plat flat
pont pont pont ferry
provoos provoost prévôt chief
rondte rondte, ronde ronde round
salvo salvo salve salvo
soldaat soldaat soldat soldier
tante tante tante aunt
tapyt tapijt tapis carpet
tros tros trousse bunch

Orthography edit

The Afrikaans writing system is based on Dutch, using the 26 letters of the ISO basic Latin alphabet, plus 16 additional vowels with diacritics. The hyphen (e.g. in a compound like see-eend 'sea duck'), apostrophe (e.g. ma's 'mothers'), and a whitespace character (e.g. in multi-word units like Dooie See 'Dead Sea') is part of the orthography of words, while the indefinite article ʼn is a ligature. All the alphabet letters, including those with diacritics, have capital letters as allographs; the ʼn does not have a capital letter allograph. This means that Afrikaans has 88 graphemes with allographs in total.

Majuscule forms (also called uppercase or capital letters)
A Á Ä B C D E É È Ê Ë F G H I Í Î Ï J K L M N O Ó Ô Ö P Q R S T U Ú Û Ü V W X Y Ý Z
Minuscule forms (also called lowercase or small letters)
a á ä b c d e é è ê ë f g h i í î ï j k l m n ʼn o ó ô ö p q r s t u ú û ü v w x y ý z

In Afrikaans, many consonants are dropped from the earlier Dutch spelling. For example, slechts ('only') in Dutch becomes slegs in Afrikaans. Also, Afrikaans and some Dutch dialects make no distinction between /s/ and /z/, having merged the latter into the former; while the word for "south" is written zuid in Dutch, it is spelled suid in Afrikaans (as well as dialectal Dutch writings) to represent this merger. Similarly, the Dutch digraph ij, normally pronounced as /ɛi/, corresponds to Afrikaans y, except where it replaces the Dutch suffix –lijk which is pronounced as /lək/, as in waarschijnlijk > waarskynlik.

Another difference is the indefinite article, 'n in Afrikaans and een in Dutch. "A book" is 'n boek in Afrikaans, whereas it is either een boek or 'n boek in Dutch. This 'n is usually pronounced as just a weak vowel, [ə], just like English "a".

The diminutive suffix in Afrikaans is -tjie, -djie or -ie, whereas in Dutch it is -tje or dje, hence a "bit" is ʼn bietjie in Afrikaans and beetje in Dutch.

The letters c, q, x, and z occur almost exclusively in borrowings from French, English, Greek and Latin. This is usually because words that had c and ch in the original Dutch are spelled with k and g, respectively, in Afrikaans. Similarly original qu and x are most often spelt kw and ks, respectively. For example, ekwatoriaal instead of equatoriaal, and ekskuus instead of excuus.

The vowels with diacritics in non-loanword Afrikaans are: á, ä, é, è, ê, ë, í, î, ï, ó, ô, ö, ú, û, ü, ý. Diacritics are ignored when alphabetising, though they are still important, even when typing the diacritic forms may be difficult. For example, geëet ("ate") instead of the 3 e's alongside each other: *geeet, which can never occur in Afrikaans, or , which translates to "say", whereas se is a possessive form. The acute's (á, é, í, ó, ú, ý) primary function is to place emphasis on a word (i.e. for emphatic reasons), by adding it to the emphasised syllable of the word. For example, sál ("will" (verb)), néé ('no'), móét ("must"), ("he"), gewéét ("knew"). The acute is only placed on the i if it is the only vowel in the emphasised word: wil ('want' (verb)) becomes wíl, but lui ('lazy') becomes lúi. Only a few non-loan words are spelled with acutes, e.g. dié ('this'), ('after'), óf ... óf ('either ... or'), nóg ... nóg ('neither ... nor'), etc. Only four non-loan words are spelled with the grave: ('yes?', 'right?', 'eh?'), ('here, take this!' or '[this is] yours!'), ('huh?', 'what?', 'eh?'), and appèl ('(formal) appeal' (noun)).

Initial apostrophes edit

A few short words in Afrikaans take initial apostrophes. In modern Afrikaans, these words are always written in lower case (except if the entire line is uppercase), and if they occur at the beginning of a sentence, the next word is capitalised. Three examples of such apostrophed words are 'k, 't, 'n. The last (the indefinite article) is the only apostrophed word that is common in modern written Afrikaans, since the other examples are shortened versions of other words (ek and het, respectively) and are rarely found outside of a poetic context.[120]

Here are a few examples:

Apostrophed version Usual version Translation Notes
'k 't Dit gesê Ek het dit gesê I said it Uncommon, more common: Ek't dit gesê
't Jy dit geëet? Het jy dit geëet? Did you eat it? Extremely uncommon
'n Man loop daar A man walks there Standard Afrikaans pronounces 'n as a schwa vowel.

The apostrophe and the following letter are regarded as two separate characters, and are never written using a single glyph, although a single character variant of the indefinite article appears in Unicode, ʼn.

Table of characters edit

For more on the pronunciation of the letters below, see Help:IPA/Afrikaans.

Afrikaans letters and pronunciation
Grapheme IPA Examples and Notes
a /a/, /ɑː/ appel ('apple'; /a/), tale ('languages'; /ɑː/). Represents /a/ in closed syllables and /ɑː/ in stressed open syllables
á /a/, /ɑ:/ (after)
ä /a/, /ɑ:/ sebraägtig ('zebra-like'). The diaeresis indicates the start of new syllable.
aa /ɑː/ aap ('monkey', 'ape'). Only occurs in closed syllables.
aai /ɑːi/ draai ('turn')
ae /ɑːə/ vrae ('questions'); the vowels belong to two separate syllables
ai /ai/ baie ('many', 'much' or 'very'), ai (expression of frustration or resignation)
b /b/, /p/ boom ('tree')
c /s/, /k/ Found only in borrowed words or proper nouns; the former pronunciation occurs before 'e', 'i', or 'y'; featured in the Latinate plural ending -ici (singular form -ikus)
ch /ʃ/, /x/, /k/ chirurg ('surgeon'; /ʃ/; typically sj is used instead), chemie ('chemistry'; /x/), chitien ('chitin'; /k/). Found only in recent loanwords and in proper nouns
d /d/, /t/ dag ('day'), deel ('part', 'divide', 'share')
dj /d͡ʒ/, /k/ djati ('teak'), broodjie ('sandwich'). Used to transcribe foreign words for the former pronunciation, and in the diminutive suffix -djie for the latter in words ending with d
e /e(ː)/, /æ(ː)/, /ɪə/, /ɪ/, /ə/ bed (/e/), mens ('person', /eː/) (lengthened before /n/) ete ('meal', /ɪə/ and /ə/ respectively), ek ('I', /æ/), berg ('mountain', /æː/) (lengthened before /r/). /ɪ/ is the unstressed allophone of /ɪə/
é /e(ː)/, /æ(ː)/, /ɪə/ dié ('this'), mét ('with', emphasised), ék ('I; me', emphasised), wéét ('know', emphasised)
è /e/ Found in loanwords (like crèche) and proper nouns (like Eugène) where the spelling was maintained, and in four non-loanwords: ('yes?', 'right?', 'eh?'), ('here, take this!' or '[this is] yours!'), ('huh?', 'what?', 'eh?'), and appèl ('(formal) appeal' (noun)).
ê /eː/, /æː/ ('to say'), wêreld ('world'), lêer ('file') (Allophonically /æː/ before /(ə)r/)
ë - Diaeresis indicates the start of new syllable, thus ë, ëe and ëi are pronounced like 'e', 'ee' and 'ei', respectively
ee /ɪə/ weet ('to know'), een ('one')
eeu /ɪu/ leeu ('lion'), eeu ('century', 'age')
ei /ei/ lei ('to lead')
eu /ɪɵ/ seun ('son' or 'lad')
f /f/ fiets ('bicycle')
g /x/, /ɡ/ /ɡ/ exists as the allophone of /x/ if at the end of a root word preceded by a stressed single vowel + /r/ and suffixed with a schwa, e.g. berg ('mountain') is pronounced as /bæːrx/, and berge is pronounced as /bæːrɡə/
gh /ɡ/ gholf ('golf'). Used for /ɡ/ when it is not an allophone of /x/; found only in borrowed words. If the h instead begins the next syllable, the two letters are pronounced separately.
h /ɦ/ hael ('hail'), hond ('dog')
i /i/, /ə/ kind ('child'; /ə/), ink ('ink'; /ə/), krisis ('crisis'; /i/ and /ə/ respectively), elektrisiteit ('electricity'; /i/ for all three; third 'i' is part of diphthong 'ei')
í /i/, /ə/ krísis ('crisis', emphasised), dít ('that', emphasised)
î /əː/ wîe (plural of wig; 'wedges' or 'quoins')
ï /i/, /ə/ Found in words such as beïnvloed ('to influence'). The diaeresis indicates the start of new syllable.
ie /i(ː)/ iets ('something'), vier ('four')
j /j/ julle (plural 'you')
k /k/ kat ('cat'), kan ('can' (verb) or 'jug')
l /l/ lag ('laugh')
m /m/ man ('man')
n /n/ nael ('nail')
ʼn /ə/ indefinite article ʼn ('a'), styled as a ligature (Unicode character U+0149)
ng /ŋ/ sing ('to sing')
o /o/, /ʊə/, /ʊ/ op ('up(on)'; /o/), grote ('size'; /ʊə/), polisie ('police'; /ʊ/)
ó /o/, /ʊə/ óp ('done, finished', emphasised), gróót ('huge', emphasised)
ô /oː/ môre ('tomorrow')
ö /o/, /ʊə/ Found in words such as koöperasie ('co-operation'). The diaeresis indicates the start of new syllable, thus ö is pronounced the same as 'o' based on the following remainder of the word.
oe /u(ː)/ boek ('book'), koers ('course', 'direction')
oei /ui/ koei ('cow')
oo /ʊə/ oom ('uncle' or 'sir')
ooi /oːi/ mooi ('pretty', 'beautiful'), nooi ('invite')
ou /ɵu/ By itself means ('guy'). Sometimes spelled ouw in loanwords and surnames, for example Louw.
p /p/ pot ('pot'), pers ('purple' — or 'press' indicating the news media; the latter is often spelled with an <ê>)
q /k/ Found only in foreign words with original spelling maintained; typically k is used instead
r /r/ rooi ('red')
s /s/, /z/, /ʃ/, /ʒ/ ses ('six'), stem ('voice' or 'vote'), posisie ('position', /z/ for first 's', /s/ for second 's'), rasioneel ('rational', /ʃ/ (nonstandard; formally /s/ is used instead) visuëel ('visual', /ʒ/ (nonstandard; /z/ is more formal)
sj /ʃ/ sjaal ('shawl'), sjokolade ('chocolate')
t /t/ tafel ('table')
tj /tʃ/, /k/ tjank ('whine like a dog' or 'to cry incessantly'). The latter pronunciation occurs in the common diminutive suffix "-(e)tjie"
u /ɵ/, /y(ː)/ stuk ('piece'), unie ('union'), muur ('wall')
ú /œ/, /y(:)/ búk ('bend over', emphasised), ú ('you', formal, emphasised)
û /ɵː/ brûe ('bridges')
ü - Found in words such as reünie ('reunion'). The diaeresis indicates the start of a new syllable, thus ü is pronounced the same as u, except when found in proper nouns and surnames from German, like Müller.
ui /ɵi/ uit ('out')
uu /y(ː)/ uur ('hour')
v /f/, /v/ vis ('fish'), visuëel ('visual')
w /v/, /w/ water ('water'; /v/); allophonically /w/ after obstruents within a root; an example: kwas ('brush'; /w/)
x /z/, /ks/ xifoïed ('xiphoid'; /z/), x-straal ('x-ray'; /ks/).
y /əi/ byt ('bite')
ý /əi/ ('he', emphasised)
z /z/ Zoeloe ('Zulu'). Found only in onomatopoeia and loanwords

Sample text edit

Psalm 23 1983 translation:[121]

Die Here is my Herder, ek kom niks kort nie.
Hy laat my rus in groen weivelde. Hy bring my by waters waar daar vrede is.
Hy gee my nuwe krag. Hy lei my op die regte paaie tot eer van Sy naam.
Selfs al gaan ek deur donker dieptes, sal ek nie bang wees nie, want U is by my. In U hande is ek veilig.

Psalm 23 1953 translation:[122]

Die Here is my Herder, niks sal my ontbreek nie.
Hy laat my neerlê in groen weivelde; na waters waar rus is, lei Hy my heen.
Hy verkwik my siel; Hy lei my in die spore van geregtigheid, om sy Naam ontwil.
Al gaan ek ook in 'n dal van doodskaduwee, ek sal geen onheil vrees nie; want U is met my: u stok en u staf die vertroos my.

Lord's Prayer (Afrikaans New Living translation)[citation needed]

Ons Vader in die hemel, laat U Naam geheilig word.
Laat U koningsheerskappy spoedig kom.
Laat U wil hier op aarde uitgevoer word soos in die hemel.
Gee ons die porsie brood wat ons vir vandag nodig het.
En vergeef ons ons sondeskuld soos ons ook óns skuldenaars vergewe het.
Bewaar ons sodat ons nie aan verleiding sal toegee nie; en bevry ons van die greep van die bose.
Want van U is die koninkryk,
en die krag,
en die heerlikheid,
tot in ewigheid.
Amen

Lord's Prayer (Original translation):

Onse Vader wat in die hemel is,
laat U Naam geheilig word;
laat U koninkryk kom;
laat U wil geskied op die aarde,
net soos in die hemel.
Gee ons vandag ons daaglikse brood;
en vergeef ons ons skulde
soos ons ons skuldenaars vergewe
en laat ons nie in die versoeking nie
maar verlos ons van die bose
Want aan U behoort die koninkryk
en die krag
en die heerlikheid
tot in ewigheid.
Amen

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Afrikaans borrowed from other languages such as Portuguese, German, Malay, Bantu and Khoisan languages; see Sebba 1997, p. 160, Niesler, Louw & Roux 2005, p. 459.
    90 to 95% of Afrikaans vocabulary is ultimately of Dutch origin; see Mesthrie 1995, p. 214, Mesthrie 2002, p. 205, Kamwangamalu 2004, p. 203, Berdichevsky 2004, p. 131, Brachin & Vincent 1985, p. 132.
  2. ^ For morphology; see Holm 1989, p. 338, Geerts & Clyne 1992, p. 72. For grammar and spelling; see Sebba 1997, p. 161.
  3. ^ kan would be best used in this case because kan nie means cannot and since he is sick he is unable to come, whereas sal is "will" in English and is thus not the best word choice.

References edit

Citations edit

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Further reading edit

  • Grieshaber, Nicky. 2011. Diacs and Quirks in a Nutshell – Afrikaans spelling explained. Pietermaritzburg. ISBN 978-0-620-51726-3; e-ISBN 978-0-620-51980-9.
  • Roberge, P. T. (2002), "Afrikaans – considering origins", Language in South Africa, Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-53383-X
  • Thomas, C. H. (1899), "Boer language", Origin of the Anglo-Boer War revealed, London, England: Hodder and Stoughton

External links edit

  • afrikaans.com
  • (archived 4 June 2012)
  • Afrikaans-English Online Dictionary at majstro.com
  • Learn Afrikaans Online (Open Learning Environment)
  • Federasie van Afrikaanse Kultuurvereniginge (FAK) – Federation of Afrikaans Cultural Associations
  • Dutch Writers from South Africa: A Cultural-Historical Study, Part I from the World Digital Library
  • Afrikaans Literature and Language Web dossier African Studies Centre, Leiden (2011)

afrikaans, peoples, persons, from, africa, africans, white, speakers, afrikaners, ɑː, kahnss, ɑː, ɑː, kahnz, west, germanic, language, spoken, south, africa, namibia, lesser, extent, botswana, zambia, zimbabwe, evolved, from, dutch, vernacular, south, holland,. For peoples and persons from Africa see Africans For white Afrikaans speakers see Afrikaners Afrikaans ˌ ae f r ɪ ˈ k ɑː n s AF rih KAHNSS ˌ ɑː f ˈ k ɑː n z AHF KAHNZ 3 4 is a West Germanic language spoken in South Africa Namibia and to a lesser extent Botswana Zambia and Zimbabwe It evolved from the Dutch vernacular 5 6 of South Holland Hollandic dialect 7 8 spoken by the predominantly Dutch settlers and enslaved population of the Dutch Cape Colony where it gradually began to develop distinguishing characteristics in the course of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries 9 AfrikaansPronunciation afriˈkɑːns Native toSouth Africa Namibia Botswana Zambia ZimbabweNative speakers7 2 million 2016 10 3 million L2 speakers in South Africa 2011 1 Language familyIndo European GermanicWest GermanicWeser Rhine GermanicLow FranconianDutchAfrican DutchAfrikaansEarly formsFrankish DutchWriting systemLatin script Afrikaans alphabet Arabic scriptSigned formsSigned Afrikaans 2 Official statusOfficial language in South AfricaRecognised minoritylanguage in NamibiaRegulated byDie TaalkommissieLanguage codesISO 639 1 span class plainlinks af span ISO 639 2 span class plainlinks afr span ISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code afr class extiw title iso639 3 afr afr a Glottologafri1274Linguasphere52 ACB ba spoken by a majority spoken by a minorityThis 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 source source source source source source source source Colin speaking Afrikaans source source source source source source source Alaric speaking Afrikaans source source source source source source Rossouw speaking Afrikaans Obelisks of the Afrikaans Language Monument near PaarlAlthough Afrikaans has adopted words from other languages including German and the Khoisan languages an estimated 90 to 95 of the vocabulary of Afrikaans is of Dutch origin n 1 Differences between Afrikaans and Dutch often lie in the more analytic morphology and grammar of Afrikaans and different spellings n 2 There is a large degree of mutual intelligibility between the two languages especially in written form 10 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Origin 2 2 Development 2 3 Recognition 2 4 Standardisation 2 5 The Afrikaans Bible 2 6 Classification 3 Geographic distribution 3 1 Statistics 3 2 Sociolinguistics 3 3 Mutual intelligibility with Dutch 4 Current status 5 Grammar 6 Phonology 6 1 Vowels 6 1 1 Diphthongs 6 2 Consonants 7 Dialects 7 1 Patagonian Afrikaans dialect 8 Influences on Afrikaans from other languages 8 1 Malay 8 2 Portuguese 8 3 Khoisan languages 8 4 Bantu languages 8 5 French 9 Orthography 9 1 Initial apostrophes 9 2 Table of characters 10 Sample text 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 13 1 Citations 13 2 Sources 14 Further reading 15 External linksEtymology editThe name of the language comes directly from the Dutch word Afrikaansch now spelled Afrikaans 11 meaning African 12 It was previously referred to as Cape Dutch Kaap Hollands Kaap Nederlands a term also used to refer to the early Cape settlers collectively or the derogatory kitchen Dutch kombuistaal from its use by slaves of colonial settlers in the kitchen History editOrigin edit The Afrikaans language arose in the Dutch Cape Colony through a gradual divergence from European Dutch dialects during the course of the 18th century 13 14 As early as the mid 18th century and as recently as the mid 20th century Afrikaans was known in standard Dutch as a kitchen language Afrikaans kombuistaal lacking the prestige accorded for example even by the educational system in Africa to languages spoken outside Africa Other early epithets setting apart Kaaps Hollands Cape Dutch i e Afrikaans as putatively beneath official Dutch standards included geradbraakt gebroken and onbeschaafd Hollands mutilated broken uncivilised Dutch as well as verkeerd Nederlands incorrect Dutch 15 16 Hottentot Dutch Language familyDutch based pidginLanguage codesISO 639 3None mis Glottologhott1234Den Besten theorises that modern Standard Afrikaans derives from two sources 17 Cape Dutch a direct transplantation of European Dutch to Southern Africa and Hottentot Dutch 18 a pidgin that descended from Foreigner Talk and ultimately from the Dutch pidgin spoken by slaves via a hypothetical Dutch creole Thus in his view Afrikaans is neither a creole nor a direct descendant of Dutch but a fusion of two transmission pathways Development edit nbsp Standard Dutch used in a 1916 South African newspaper before Afrikaans replaced it for use in mediaMost of the first settlers whose descendants today are the Afrikaners were from the United Provinces now Netherlands 19 with up to one sixth of the community of French Huguenot origin and a seventh from Germany 20 African and Asian workers Cape Coloured children of European settlers and Khoikhoi women 21 and slaves contributed to the development of Afrikaans The slave population was made up of people from East Africa West Africa India Madagascar and the Dutch East Indies modern Indonesia 22 A number were also indigenous Khoisan people who were valued as interpreters domestic servants and labourers Many free and enslaved women married or cohabited with the male Dutch settlers M F Valkhoff argued that 75 of children born to female slaves in the Dutch Cape Colony between 1652 and 1672 had a Dutch father 23 Sarah Grey Thomason and Terrence Kaufman argue that Afrikaans development as a separate language was heavily conditioned by nonwhites who learned Dutch imperfectly as a second language 24 Beginning in about 1815 Afrikaans started to replace Malay as the language of instruction in Muslim schools in South Africa written with the Arabic alphabet see Arabic Afrikaans Later Afrikaans now written with the Latin script started to appear in newspapers and political and religious works in around 1850 alongside the already established Dutch 13 In 1875 a group of Afrikaans speakers from the Cape formed the Genootskap vir Regte Afrikaaners Society for Real Afrikaners 13 and published a number of books in Afrikaans including grammars dictionaries religious materials and histories Until the early 20th century Afrikaans was considered a Dutch dialect alongside Standard Dutch which it eventually replaced as an official language 25 Before the Boer wars and indeed for some time afterwards Afrikaans was regarded as inappropriate for educated discourse Rather Afrikaans was described derogatorily as a kitchen language or a bastard jargon suitable for communication mainly between the Boers and their servants 26 better source needed Recognition edit nbsp Dit is ons erns This is our passion at the Afrikaans Language MonumentIn 1925 Afrikaans was recognised by the South African government as a distinct language rather than simply a vernacular of Dutch 13 On 8 May 1925 twenty three years after the Second Boer War ended 26 the Official Languages of the Union Act of 1925 was passed mostly due to the efforts of the Afrikaans language movement at a joint sitting of the House of Assembly and the Senate in which the Afrikaans language was declared a variety of Dutch 27 The Constitution of 1961 reversed the position of Afrikaans and Dutch so that English and Afrikaans were the official languages and Afrikaans was deemed to include Dutch The Constitution of 1983 removed any mention of Dutch altogether The Afrikaans Language Monument is located on a hill overlooking Paarl in the Western Cape Province Officially opened on 10 October 1975 28 it was erected on the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Society of Real Afrikaners 29 and the 50th anniversary of Afrikaans being declared an official language of South Africa in distinction to Dutch Standardisation edit nbsp The side view of the Pretoria Art Museum in Arcadia Pretoria with its name written in Afrikaans Xhosa and Southern Ndebele The earliest Afrikaans texts were some doggerel verse from 1795 and a dialogue transcribed by a Dutch traveller in 1825 Afrikaans used the Latin alphabet around this time although the Cape Muslim community used the Arabic script In 1861 L H Meurant published his Zamenspraak tusschen Klaas Waarzegger en Jan Twyfelaar Conversation between Nicholas Truthsayer and John Doubter which is considered to be the first book published in Afrikaans 30 The first grammar book was published in 1876 a bilingual dictionary was later published in 1902 The main modern Afrikaans dictionary in use is the Verklarende Handwoordeboek van die Afrikaanse Taal HAT A new authoritative dictionary called Woordeboek van die Afrikaanse Taal WAT was under development as of 2018 The official orthography of Afrikaans is the Afrikaanse Woordelys en Spelreels compiled by Die Taalkommissie 30 The Afrikaans Bible edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Afrikaans news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Bible translations into Afrikaans The Afrikaners primarily were Protestants of the Dutch Reformed Church of the 17th century Their religious practices were later influenced in South Africa by British ministries during the 1800s 31 A landmark in the development of the language was the translation of the whole Bible into Afrikaans While significant advances had been made in the textual criticism of the Bible especially the Greek New Testament the 1933 translation followed the Textus Receptus and was closely akin to the Statenbijbel Before this most Cape Dutch Afrikaans speakers had to rely on the Dutch Statenbijbel This Statenvertaling had its origins with the Synod of Dordrecht of 1618 and was thus in an archaic form of Dutch This was hard for Dutch speakers to understand and increasingly unintelligible for Afrikaans speakers C P Hoogehout Arnoldus Pannevis af and Stephanus Jacobus du Toit were the first Afrikaans Bible translators Important landmarks in the translation of the Scriptures were in 1878 with C P Hoogehout s translation of the Evangelie volgens Markus Gospel of Mark lit Gospel according to Mark however this translation was never published The manuscript is to be found in the South African National Library Cape Town The first official translation of the entire Bible into Afrikaans was in 1933 by J D du Toit E E van Rooyen J D Kestell H C M Fourie and BB Keet 32 33 This monumental work established Afrikaans as n suiwer en ordentlike taal that is a pure and proper language for religious purposes especially amongst the deeply Calvinist Afrikaans religious community that previously had been sceptical of a Bible translation that varied from the Dutch version that they were used to In 1983 a fresh translation marked the 50th anniversary of the 1933 version The final editing of this edition was done by E P Groenewald A H van Zyl P A Verhoef J L Helberg and W Kempen This translation was influenced by Eugene Nida s theory of dynamic equivalence which focused on finding the nearest equivalent in the receptor language to the idea that the Greek Hebrew or Aramaic wanted to convey A new translation Die Bybel n Direkte Vertaling was released in November 2020 It is the first truly ecumenical translation of the Bible in Afrikaans as translators from various churches including the Roman Catholic and Anglican Churches were involved 34 Classification edit Indo European languages Germanic West Germanic Low Franconian Dutch AfrikaansAfrikaans descended from Dutch dialects in the 17th century It belongs to a West Germanic sub group the Low Franconian languages 35 Other West Germanic languages related to Afrikaans are German English the Frisian languages and the unstandardised languages Low German and Yiddish Geographic distribution editStatistics edit nbsp The geographical distribution of Afrikaans in South Africa proportion of the population that speaks Afrikaans at home 0 20 20 40 40 60 60 80 80 100 Country Speakers Percentage of speakers Year Reference nbsp Argentina 650 0 001 2019 36 nbsp Australia 49 375 0 68 2021 37 nbsp Botswana 8 082 0 11 2011 citation needed nbsp Canada 23 410 0 32 2016 38 nbsp United Kingdom 11 247 0 16 2011 39 nbsp Finland 58 0 001 2021 40 nbsp Pakistan 2 228 0 03 2016 41 nbsp Mauritius 36 0 003 2011 citation needed nbsp Namibia 219 760 3 05 2011 citation needed nbsp New Zealand 36 966 0 51 2018 42 nbsp South Africa 6 855 082 94 66 2011 citation needed nbsp United States 28 406 0 39 2016 43 Total 7 211 537Sociolinguistics edit nbsp The geographical distribution of Afrikaans in South Africa density of Afrikaans home language speakers lt 1 km2 1 3 km2 3 10 km2 10 30 km2 30 100 km2 100 300 km2 300 1000 km2 1000 3000 km2 gt 3000 km2 nbsp The geographical distribution of Afrikaans in Namibia Afrikaans is also widely spoken in Namibia Before independence Afrikaans had equal status with German as an official language Since independence in 1990 Afrikaans has had constitutional recognition as a national but not official language 44 45 There is a much smaller number of Afrikaans speakers among Zimbabwe s white minority as most have left the country since 1980 Afrikaans was also a medium of instruction for schools in Bophuthatswana an Apartheid era Bantustan 46 Eldoret in Kenya was founded by Afrikaners 47 In 1976 secondary school pupils in Soweto began a rebellion in response to the government s decision that Afrikaans be used as the language of instruction for half the subjects taught in non White schools with English continuing for the other half Although English is the mother tongue of only 8 2 of the population it is the language most widely understood and the second language of a majority of South Africans 48 Afrikaans is more widely spoken than English in the Northern and Western Cape provinces several hundred kilometres from Soweto 49 The Black community s opposition to Afrikaans and preference for continuing English instruction was underlined when the government rescinded the policy one month after the uprising 96 of Black schools chose English over Afrikaans or native languages as the language of instruction 49 Afrikaans medium schools were also accused of using language policy to deter Black African parents 50 Some of these parents in part supported by provincial departments of education initiated litigation which enabled enrolment with English as language of instruction By 2006 there were 300 single medium Afrikaans schools compared to 2 500 in 1994 after most converted to dual medium education 50 Due to Afrikaans being viewed as the language of the white oppressor by some pressure has been increased to remove Afrikaans as a teaching language in South African universities resulting in bloody student protests in 2015 51 52 53 Under South Africa s Constitution of 1996 Afrikaans remains an official language and has equal status to English and nine other languages The new policy means that the use of Afrikaans is now often reduced in favour of English or to accommodate the other official languages In 1996 for example the South African Broadcasting Corporation reduced the amount of television airtime in Afrikaans while South African Airways dropped its Afrikaans name Suid Afrikaanse Lugdiens from its livery Similarly South Africa s diplomatic missions overseas now display the name of the country only in English and their host country s language and not in Afrikaans Meanwhile the constitution of the Western Cape which went into effect in 1998 declares Afrikaans to be an official language of the province alongside English and Xhosa 54 The Afrikaans language general interest family magazine Huisgenoot has the largest readership of any magazine in the country 55 When the British design magazine Wallpaper described Afrikaans as one of the world s ugliest languages in its September 2005 article about the monument 56 South African billionaire Johann Rupert chairman of the Richemont Group responded by withdrawing advertising for brands such as Cartier Van Cleef amp Arpels Montblanc and Alfred Dunhill from the magazine 57 The author of the article Bronwyn Davies was an English speaking South African Mutual intelligibility with Dutch edit Main article Comparison of Afrikaans and Dutch An estimated 90 to 95 of the Afrikaans lexicon is ultimately of Dutch origin 58 59 60 and there are few lexical differences between the two languages 61 Afrikaans has a considerably more regular morphology 62 grammar and spelling 63 There is a high degree of mutual intelligibility between the two languages 62 64 65 particularly in written form 63 66 67 Afrikaans acquired some lexical and syntactical borrowings from other languages such as Malay Khoisan languages Portuguese 68 and Bantu languages 69 and Afrikaans has also been significantly influenced by South African English 70 Dutch speakers are confronted with fewer non cognates when listening to Afrikaans than the other way round 67 Mutual intelligibility thus tends to be asymmetrical as it is easier for Dutch speakers to understand Afrikaans than for Afrikaans speakers to understand Dutch 67 In general mutual intelligibility between Dutch and Afrikaans is far better than between Dutch and Frisian 71 or between Danish and Swedish 67 The South African poet writer Breyten Breytenbach attempting to visualise the language distance for Anglophones once remarked that the differences between Standard Dutch and Afrikaans are comparable to those between the Received Pronunciation and Southern American English 72 Current status editUse of Afrikaans as a first language by province Province 1996 73 2001 73 2011 73 2022 74 Western Cape 58 5 55 3 49 7 41 2 Eastern Cape 9 8 9 6 10 6 9 6 Northern Cape 57 2 56 6 53 8 54 6 Free State 14 4 11 9 12 7 10 3 KwaZulu Natal 1 6 1 5 1 6 1 0 North West 8 8 8 8 9 0 5 2 Gauteng 15 6 13 6 12 4 7 7 Mpumalanga 7 1 5 5 7 2 3 2 Limpopo 2 6 2 6 2 6 2 3 nbsp South Africa 14 4 75 13 3 76 13 5 77 10 6 78 Post apartheid South Africa has seen a loss of preferential treatment by the government for Afrikaans in terms of education social events media TV and radio and general status throughout the country given that it now shares its place as official language with ten other languages Nevertheless Afrikaans remains more prevalent in the media radio newspapers and television 79 than any of the other official languages except English More than 300 book titles in Afrikaans are published annually 80 South African census figures suggest a growing number of speakers in all nine provinces a total of 6 85 million in 2011 compared to 5 98 million a decade earlier 81 The South African Institute of Race Relations SAIRR projects that a growing majority of Afrikaans speakers will be Coloured 82 Afrikaans speakers experience higher employment rates than other South African language groups though as of 2012 update half a million were unemployed 81 Despite the challenges of demotion and emigration that it faces in South Africa the Afrikaans vernacular remains competitive being popular in DSTV pay channels and several internet sites while generating high newspaper and music CD sales A resurgence in Afrikaans popular music since the late 1990s has invigorated the language especially among a younger generation of South Africans A recent trend is the increased availability of pre school educational CDs and DVDs Such media also prove popular with the extensive Afrikaans speaking emigrant communities who seek to retain language proficiency in a household context Afrikaans language cinema showed signs of new vigour in the early 21st century The 2007 film Ouma se slim kind the first full length Afrikaans movie since Paljas in 1998 is seen as the dawn of a new era in Afrikaans cinema Several short films have been created and more feature length movies such as Poena is Koning and Bakgat both in 2008 have been produced besides the 2011 Afrikaans language film Skoonheid which was the first Afrikaans film to screen at the Cannes Film Festival The film Platteland was also released in 2011 83 The Afrikaans film industry started gaining international recognition via the likes of big Afrikaans Hollywood film stars like Charlize Theron Monster and Sharlto Copley District 9 promoting their mother tongue SABC3 announced early in 2009 that it would increase Afrikaans programming due to the growing Afrikaans language market and their need for working capital as Afrikaans advertising is the only advertising that sells in the current South African television market In April 2009 SABC3 started screening several Afrikaans language programmes 84 There is a groundswell movement within Afrikaans to be inclusive and to promote itself along with the other indigenous official languages In Namibia the percentage of Afrikaans speakers declined from 11 4 2001 Census to 10 4 2011 Census The major concentrations are in Hardap 41 0 ǁKaras 36 1 Erongo 20 5 Khomas 18 5 Omaheke 10 0 Otjozondjupa 9 4 Kunene 4 2 and Oshikoto 2 3 85 Many native speakers of Bantu languages and English also speak Afrikaans as a second language It is widely taught in South African schools with about 10 3 million second language students 1 Afrikaans is offered at many universities outside South Africa including in the Netherlands Belgium Germany Poland Russia and the United States 86 Grammar editMain article Afrikaans grammar This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message In Afrikaans grammar there is no distinction between the infinitive and present forms of verbs with the exception of the verbs to be and to have infinitive form present indicative form Dutch Englishwees is zijn or wezen behe het hebben haveIn addition verbs do not conjugate differently depending on the subject For example Afrikaans Dutch Englishek is ik ben I amjy u is jij u bent you are sing hy sy dit is hij zij het is he she it isons is wij zijn we arejulle is jullie zijn you are plur hulle is zij zijn they areOnly a handful of Afrikaans verbs have a preterite namely the auxiliary wees to be the modal verbs and the verb dink to think The preterite of mag may is rare in contemporary Afrikaans Afrikaans Dutch Englishpresent past present past present pastek is ek was ik ben ik was I am I wasek kan ek kon ik kan ik kon I can I couldek moet ek moes ik moet ik moest I must I had to ek wil ek wou ik wil ik wilde wou I want to I wanted toek sal ek sou ik zal ik zou I shall I shouldek mag ek mog ik mag ik mocht I may I mightek dink ek dog ik denk ik dacht I think I thoughtAll other verbs use the perfect tense het past participle ge for the past Therefore there is no distinction in Afrikaans between I drank and I have drunk In colloquial German the past tense is also often replaced with the perfect Afrikaans Dutch Englishek het gedrink ik dronk I drankik heb gedronken I have drunkWhen telling a longer story Afrikaans speakers usually avoid the perfect and simply use the present tense or historical present tense instead as is possible but less common in English as well A particular feature of Afrikaans is its use of the double negative it is classified in Afrikaans as ontkennende vorm and is something that is absent from the other West Germanic standard languages For example Afrikaans Hy kan nie Afrikaans praat nie lit He can not Afrikaans speak not Dutch Hij spreekt geen Afrikaans English He can not speak Afrikaans He can t speak Afrikaans Both French and San origins have been suggested for double negation in Afrikaans While double negation is still found in Low Franconian dialects in West Flanders and in some isolated villages in the centre of the Netherlands such as Garderen it takes a different form which is not found in Afrikaans The following is an example Afrikaans Ek wil nie dit doen nie lit I want not this do not Dutch Ik wil dit niet doen English I do not want to do this Compare with Ek wil dit nie doen nie which changes the meaning to I want not to do this Whereas Ek wil nie dit doen nie emphasizes a lack of desire to act Ek wil dit nie doen nie emphasizes the act itself The ne was the Middle Dutch way to negate but it has been suggested that since ne became highly non voiced nie or niet was needed to complement the ne With time the ne disappeared in most Dutch dialects The double negative construction has been fully grammaticalised in standard Afrikaans and its proper use follows a set of fairly complex rules as the examples below show Afrikaans Dutch literally translated More correct Dutch Literal English Idiomatic EnglishEk het nie geweet dat hy nie sou kom nie Ik heb niet geweten dat hij niet zou komen Ik wist niet dat hij niet zou komen I did not know that he would not come I did not know that he was not going to come Hy sal nie kom nie want hy is siek n 3 Hij zal niet komen want hij is ziek Hij komt niet want hij is ziek He will not come as he is sick He is sick and is not going to come Dis Dit is nie so moeilik om Afrikaans te leer nie Het is niet zo moeilijk om Afrikaans te leren It is not so difficult to learn Afrikaans A notable exception to this is the use of the negating grammar form that coincides with negating the English present participle In this case there is only a single negation Afrikaans Hy is in die hospitaal maar hy eet nie Dutch Hij is in het ziekenhuis maar hij eet niet English He is in the hospital though he doesn t eat Certain words in Afrikaans would be contracted For example moet nie which literally means must not usually becomes moenie although one does not have to write or say it like this virtually all Afrikaans speakers will change the two words to moenie in the same way as do not is contracted to don t in English The Dutch word het it in English does not correspond to het in Afrikaans The Dutch words corresponding to Afrikaans het are heb hebt heeft and hebben Afrikaans Dutch Englishhet heb hebt heeft hebben have hasdie de het thedit het itPhonology editMain article Afrikaans phonology source source A voice recording of Die Stem van Suid Afrika The Voice of South Africa the former national anthem read in poetic formVowels edit Monophthong phonemes 87 88 Front Central Backunrounded rounded unrounded roundedshort long short long short long short long short longClose i iː y yː u uː Mid e eː e eː œ œː o oː Near open ae aeː Open a ɑːAs phonemes iː and uː occur only in the words spieel spiːl mirror and koeel kuːl bullet which used to be pronounced with sequences i e and u e respectively In other cases iː and uː occur as allophones of respectively i and u before r 89 y is phonetically long yː before r 90 eː is always stressed and occurs only in the word wie wedges 91 The closest unrounded counterparts of œ œː are central e eː rather than front e eː 92 œː oː occur only in a few words 93 ae occurs as an allophone of e before k x l r though this occurs primarily dialectally most commonly in the former Transvaal and Free State provinces 94 Diphthongs edit Diphthong phonemes 95 96 Starting point Ending pointFront Central BackMid unrounded ɪo ei ɪerounded œi ɔi ʊe œuOpen unrounded ai ɑːi ɔi ai occur mainly in loanwords 97 Consonants edit Consonant phonemes Labial Alveolar Post alveolar Dorsal GlottalNasal m n ŋPlosive voiceless p t t ʃ kvoiced b d d ʒ ɡ Fricative voiceless f s ʃ ɹ xvoiced v z ʒ ɦApproximant l jRhotic r ɾ ʀ ʁAll obstruents at the ends of words are devoiced so that e g a final d is realized as t 98 ɡ dʒ z occur only in loanwords ɡ is also an allophone of x in some environments 99 x is most often uvular x ʀ 100 101 102 Velar x occurs only in some speakers 101 The rhotic is usually an alveolar trill r or tap ɾ 103 In some parts of the former Cape Province it is realized uvularly either as a trill ʀ or a fricative ʁ 104 Dialects edit nbsp A warning sign in Afrikaans Gevaar Slagysters or Danger Traps Following early dialectal studies of Afrikaans it was theorised that three main historical dialects probably existed after the Great Trek in the 1830s These dialects are the Northern Cape Western Cape and Eastern Cape dialects 105 Northern Cape dialect may have resulted from contact between Dutch settlers and the Khoekhoe people between the Great Karoo and the Kunene and Eastern Cape dialect between the Dutch and the Xhosa Remnants of these dialects still remain in present day Afrikaans although the standardising effect of Standard Afrikaans has contributed to a great levelling of differences in modern times 106 better source needed There is also a prison cant known as Sabela which is based on Afrikaans yet heavily influenced by Zulu This language is used as a secret language in prison and is taught to initiates 106 Patagonian Afrikaans dialect edit A distinct dialect of Afrikaans is spoken by the 650 strong South African community of Argentina in the region of Patagonia 107 Influences on Afrikaans from other languages editMalay edit Due to the early settlement of a Cape Malay community in Cape Town who are now known as Coloureds numerous Classical Malay words were brought into Afrikaans Some of these words entered Dutch via people arriving from what is now known as Indonesia as part of their colonial heritage Malay words in Afrikaans include 108 baie which means very much many from banyak is a very commonly used Afrikaans word different from its Dutch equivalent veel or erg baadjie Afrikaans for jacket from baju ultimately from Persian used where Dutch would use jas or vest The word baadje in Dutch is now considered archaic and only used in written literary texts bobotie a traditional Cape Malay dish made from spiced minced meat baked with an egg based topping piesang which means banana This is different from the common Dutch word banaan The Indonesian word pisang is also used in Dutch though usage is more common piering which means saucer from piring also from Persian Portuguese edit Some words originally came from Portuguese such as sambreel umbrella from the Portuguese sombreiro kraal pen cattle enclosure from the Portuguese curral and mielie corn from milho Some of these words also exist in Dutch like sambreel parasol 109 though usage is less common and meanings can slightly differ Khoisan languages edit dagga meaning cannabis 108 geitjie meaning lizard diminutive adapted from a Khoekhoe word 110 gogga meaning insect from the Khoisan xo xo karos blanket of animal hides kierie walking stick from Khoekhoe 110 Some of these words also exist in Dutch though with a more specific meaning assegaai for example means South African tribal javelin 111 and karos means South African tribal blanket of animal hides 112 Bantu languages edit Loanwords from Bantu languages in Afrikaans include the names of indigenous birds such as mahem and sakaboela and indigenous plants such as maroela and tamboekie gras 113 fundi from the Zulu word umfundi meaning scholar or student 114 but used to mean someone who is a student of expert on a certain subject i e He is a language fundi lobola meaning bride price from and referring to lobolo of the Nguni languages 115 mahem the grey crowned crane known in Latin as Balearica regulorum maroela medium sized dioecious tree known in Latin as Sclerocarya birrea 116 tamboekiegras species of thatching grass known as Hyparrhenia 117 tambotie deciduous tree also known by its Latin name Spirostachys africana 118 tjaila tjailatyd an adaption of the word chaile meaning to go home or to knock off from work 119 French edit The revoking of the Edict of Nantes on 22 October 1685 was a milestone in the history of South Africa for it marked the beginning of the great Huguenot exodus from France It is estimated that between 250 000 and 300 000 Protestants left France between 1685 and 1700 out of these according to Louvois 100 000 had received military training A measure of the calibre of these immigrants and of their acceptance by host countries in particular South Africa is given by H V Morton in his book In Search of South Africa London 1948 The Huguenots were responsible for a great linguistic contribution to Afrikaans particularly in terms of military terminology as many of them fought on the battlefields during the wars of the Great Trek Most of the words in this list are descendants from Dutch borrowings from French Old French or Latin and are not direct influences from French on Afrikaans Afrikaans Dutch French Englishadvies advies avis advicealarm alarm alarme alarmammunisie ammunitie munitie munition ammunitionamusant amusant amusant funnyartillerie artillerie artillerie artilleryateljee atelier atelier studiobagasie bagage bagage luggagebastion bastion bastion bastionbataljon bataljon bataillon battalionbattery batterij batterie batterybiblioteek bibliotheek bibliotheque libraryfaktuur factuur facture invoicefort fort fort fortfrikkadel frikadel fricadelle meatballgarnisoen garnizoen garnison garrisongeneraal generaal general generalgranaat granaat grenade grenadeinfanterie infanterie infanterie infantryinteressant interessant interessant interestingkaliber kaliber calibre calibrekanon kanon canon cannonkanonnier kanonnier canonier gunnerkardoes kardoes cartouche cartouche cartridgekaptein kapitein capitaine captainkolonel kolonel colonel colonelkommandeur commandeur commandeur commanderkwartier kwartier quartier quarterlieutenant lieutenant lieutenant lieutenantmagasyn magazijn magasin magazinemanier manier maniere waymarsjeer marcheer marcheren marcher to marchmeubels meubels meubles furnituremiliter militair militaire militarilymorsel morzel morceau piecemortier mortier mortier mortarmuit muit muiten mutiner to mutinymusket musket mousquet musketmuur muur mur wallmyn mijn mine mineoffisier officier officier officerorde orde ordre orderpapier papier papier paperpionier pionier pionnier pioneerplafon plafond plafond ceilingplat plat plat flatpont pont pont ferryprovoos provoost prevot chiefrondte rondte ronde ronde roundsalvo salvo salve salvosoldaat soldaat soldat soldiertante tante tante aunttapyt tapijt tapis carpettros tros trousse bunchOrthography editThe Afrikaans writing system is based on Dutch using the 26 letters of the ISO basic Latin alphabet plus 16 additional vowels with diacritics The hyphen e g in a compound like see eend sea duck apostrophe e g ma s mothers and a whitespace character e g in multi word units like Dooie See Dead Sea is part of the orthography of words while the indefinite article ʼn is a ligature All the alphabet letters including those with diacritics have capital letters as allographs the ʼn does not have a capital letter allograph This means that Afrikaans has 88 graphemes with allographs in total Majuscule forms also called uppercase or capital letters A A A B C D E E E E E F G H I I I I J K L M N O o O O P Q R S T U U U U V W X Y Y ZMinuscule forms also called lowercase or small letters a a a b c d e e e e e f g h i i i i j k l m n ʼn o o o o p q r s t u u u u v w x y y zIn Afrikaans many consonants are dropped from the earlier Dutch spelling For example slechts only in Dutch becomes slegs in Afrikaans Also Afrikaans and some Dutch dialects make no distinction between s and z having merged the latter into the former while the word for south is written zuid in Dutch it is spelled suid in Afrikaans as well as dialectal Dutch writings to represent this merger Similarly the Dutch digraph ij normally pronounced as ɛi corresponds to Afrikaans y except where it replaces the Dutch suffix lijk which is pronounced as lek as in waarschijnlijk gt waarskynlik Another difference is the indefinite article n in Afrikaans and een in Dutch A book is n boek in Afrikaans whereas it is either een boek or n boek in Dutch This n is usually pronounced as just a weak vowel e just like English a The diminutive suffix in Afrikaans is tjie djie or ie whereas in Dutch it is tje or dje hence a bit is ʼn bietjie in Afrikaans and beetje in Dutch The letters c q x and z occur almost exclusively in borrowings from French English Greek and Latin This is usually because words that had c and ch in the original Dutch are spelled with k and g respectively in Afrikaans Similarly original qu and x are most often spelt kw and ks respectively For example ekwatoriaal instead of equatoriaal and ekskuus instead of excuus The vowels with diacritics in non loanword Afrikaans are a a e e e e i i i o o o u u u y Diacritics are ignored when alphabetising though they are still important even when typing the diacritic forms may be difficult For example geeet ate instead of the 3 e s alongside each other geeet which can never occur in Afrikaans or se which translates to say whereas se is a possessive form The acute s a e i o u y primary function is to place emphasis on a word i e for emphatic reasons by adding it to the emphasised syllable of the word For example sal will verb nee no moet must hy he geweet knew The acute is only placed on the i if it is the only vowel in the emphasised word wil want verb becomes wil but lui lazy becomes lui Only a few non loan words are spelled with acutes e g die this na after of of either or nog nog neither nor etc Only four non loan words are spelled with the grave ne yes right eh de here take this or this is yours he huh what eh and appel formal appeal noun Initial apostrophes edit A few short words in Afrikaans take initial apostrophes In modern Afrikaans these words are always written in lower case except if the entire line is uppercase and if they occur at the beginning of a sentence the next word is capitalised Three examples of such apostrophed words are k t n The last the indefinite article is the only apostrophed word that is common in modern written Afrikaans since the other examples are shortened versions of other words ek and het respectively and are rarely found outside of a poetic context 120 Here are a few examples Apostrophed version Usual version Translation Notes k t Dit gese Ek het dit gese I said it Uncommon more common Ek t dit gese t Jy dit geeet Het jy dit geeet Did you eat it Extremely uncommon n Man loop daar A man walks there Standard Afrikaans pronounces n as a schwa vowel The apostrophe and the following letter are regarded as two separate characters and are never written using a single glyph although a single character variant of the indefinite article appears in Unicode ʼn Table of characters edit For more on the pronunciation of the letters below see Help IPA Afrikaans Afrikaans letters and pronunciation Grapheme IPA Examples and Notesa a ɑː appel apple a tale languages ɑː Represents a in closed syllables and ɑː in stressed open syllablesa a ɑ na after a a ɑ sebraagtig zebra like The diaeresis indicates the start of new syllable aa ɑː aap monkey ape Only occurs in closed syllables aai ɑːi draai turn ae ɑːe vrae questions the vowels belong to two separate syllablesai ai baie many much or very ai expression of frustration or resignation b b p boom tree c s k Found only in borrowed words or proper nouns the former pronunciation occurs before e i or y featured in the Latinate plural ending ici singular form ikus ch ʃ x k chirurg surgeon ʃ typically sj is used instead chemie chemistry x chitien chitin k Found only in recent loanwords and in proper nounsd d t dag day deel part divide share dj d ʒ k djati teak broodjie sandwich Used to transcribe foreign words for the former pronunciation and in the diminutive suffix djie for the latter in words ending with de e ː ae ː ɪe ɪ e bed e mens person eː lengthened before n ete meal ɪe and e respectively ek I ae berg mountain aeː lengthened before r ɪ is the unstressed allophone of ɪe e e ː ae ː ɪe die this met with emphasised ek I me emphasised weet know emphasised e e Found in loanwords like creche and proper nouns like Eugene where the spelling was maintained and in four non loanwords ne yes right eh de here take this or this is yours he huh what eh and appel formal appeal noun e eː aeː se to say wereld world leer file Allophonically aeː before e r e Diaeresis indicates the start of new syllable thus e ee and ei are pronounced like e ee and ei respectivelyee ɪe weet to know een one eeu ɪu leeu lion eeu century age ei ei lei to lead eu ɪɵ seun son or lad f f fiets bicycle g x ɡ ɡ exists as the allophone of x if at the end of a root word preceded by a stressed single vowel r and suffixed with a schwa e g berg mountain is pronounced as baeːrx and berge is pronounced as baeːrɡe gh ɡ gholf golf Used for ɡ when it is not an allophone of x found only in borrowed words If the h instead begins the next syllable the two letters are pronounced separately h ɦ hael hail hond dog i i e kind child e ink ink e krisis crisis i and e respectively elektrisiteit electricity i for all three third i is part of diphthong ei i i e krisis crisis emphasised dit that emphasised i eː wie plural of wig wedges or quoins i i e Found in words such as beinvloed to influence The diaeresis indicates the start of new syllable ie i ː iets something vier four j j julle plural you k k kat cat kan can verb or jug l l lag laugh m m man man n n nael nail ʼn e indefinite article ʼn a styled as a ligature Unicode character U 0149 ng ŋ sing to sing o o ʊe ʊ op up on o grote size ʊe polisie police ʊ o o ʊe op done finished emphasised groot huge emphasised o oː more tomorrow o o ʊe Found in words such as kooperasie co operation The diaeresis indicates the start of new syllable thus o is pronounced the same as o based on the following remainder of the word oe u ː boek book koers course direction oei ui koei cow oo ʊe oom uncle or sir ooi oːi mooi pretty beautiful nooi invite ou ɵu By itself means guy Sometimes spelled ouw in loanwords and surnames for example Louw p p pot pot pers purple or press indicating the news media the latter is often spelled with an lt e gt q k Found only in foreign words with original spelling maintained typically k is used insteadr r rooi red s s z ʃ ʒ ses six stem voice or vote posisie position z for first s s for second s rasioneel rational ʃ nonstandard formally s is used instead visueel visual ʒ nonstandard z is more formal sj ʃ sjaal shawl sjokolade chocolate t t tafel table tj tʃ k tjank whine like a dog or to cry incessantly The latter pronunciation occurs in the common diminutive suffix e tjie u ɵ y ː stuk piece unie union muur wall u œ y buk bend over emphasised u you formal emphasised u ɵː brue bridges u Found in words such as reunie reunion The diaeresis indicates the start of a new syllable thus u is pronounced the same as u except when found in proper nouns and surnames from German like Muller ui ɵi uit out uu y ː uur hour v f v vis fish visueel visual w v w water water v allophonically w after obstruents within a root an example kwas brush w x z ks xifoied xiphoid z x straal x ray ks y ei byt bite y ei hy he emphasised z z Zoeloe Zulu Found only in onomatopoeia and loanwordsSample text editPsalm 23 1983 translation 121 Die Here is my Herder ek kom niks kort nie Hy laat my rus in groen weivelde Hy bring my by waters waar daar vrede is Hy gee my nuwe krag Hy lei my op die regte paaie tot eer van Sy naam Selfs al gaan ek deur donker dieptes sal ek nie bang wees nie want U is by my In U hande is ek veilig Psalm 23 1953 translation 122 Die Here is my Herder niks sal my ontbreek nie Hy laat my neerle in groen weivelde na waters waar rus is lei Hy my heen Hy verkwik my siel Hy lei my in die spore van geregtigheid om sy Naam ontwil Al gaan ek ook in n dal van doodskaduwee ek sal geen onheil vrees nie want U is met my u stok en u staf die vertroos my Lord s Prayer Afrikaans New Living translation citation needed Ons Vader in die hemel laat U Naam geheilig word Laat U koningsheerskappy spoedig kom Laat U wil hier op aarde uitgevoer word soos in die hemel Gee ons die porsie brood wat ons vir vandag nodig het En vergeef ons ons sondeskuld soos ons ook ons skuldenaars vergewe het Bewaar ons sodat ons nie aan verleiding sal toegee nie en bevry ons van die greep van die bose Want van U is die koninkryk en die krag en die heerlikheid tot in ewigheid Amen Lord s Prayer Original translation Onse Vader wat in die hemel is laat U Naam geheilig word laat U koninkryk kom laat U wil geskied op die aarde net soos in die hemel Gee ons vandag ons daaglikse brood en vergeef ons ons skulde soos ons ons skuldenaars vergewe en laat ons nie in die versoeking nie maar verlos ons van die bose Want aan U behoort die koninkryk en die krag en die heerlikheid tot in ewigheid AmenSee also edit nbsp Language portal nbsp South Africa portal nbsp Netherlands portalAardklop Arts Festival Afrikaans literature Afrikaans speaking population in South Africa Arabic Afrikaans Handwoordeboek van die Afrikaanse Taal Afrikaans Dictionary Differences between Afrikaans and Dutch IPA Afrikaans Klein Karoo Nasionale Kunstefees Arts Festival Languages of South Africa Languages of Zimbabwe Afrikaans List of Afrikaans language poets List of Afrikaans singers List of English words of Afrikaans origin South African Translators Institute TsotsitaalNotes edit Afrikaans borrowed from other languages such as Portuguese German Malay Bantu and Khoisan languages see Sebba 1997 p 160 Niesler Louw amp Roux 2005 p 459 90 to 95 of Afrikaans vocabulary is ultimately of Dutch origin see Mesthrie 1995 p 214 Mesthrie 2002 p 205 Kamwangamalu 2004 p 203 Berdichevsky 2004 p 131 Brachin amp Vincent 1985 p 132 For morphology see Holm 1989 p 338 Geerts amp Clyne 1992 p 72 For grammar and spelling see Sebba 1997 p 161 kan would be best used in this case because kan nie means cannot and since he is sick he is unable to come whereas sal is will in English and is thus not the best word choice References editCitations edit a b Afrikaans at Ethnologue 19th ed 2016 nbsp Aarons amp Reynolds South African Sign Language in Monaghan ed Many Ways to be Deaf International Variation in Deaf Communities 2003 Wells John C 2008 Longman Pronunciation Dictionary 3rd ed Longman ISBN 978 1 4058 8118 0 Roach Peter 2011 Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary 18th ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 15253 2 K Pithouse C Mitchell R Moletsane Making Connections Self Study amp Social Action p 91 J A Heese 1971 Die herkoms van die Afrikaner 1657 1867 The origin of the Afrikaner in Afrikaans Cape Town A A Balkema OCLC 1821706 OL 5361614M Herkomst en groei van het Afrikaans G G Kloeke 1950 Heeringa Wilbert de Wet Febe van Huyssteen Gerhard B 2015 The origin of Afrikaans pronunciation a comparison to west Germanic languages and Dutch dialects Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus 47 doi 10 5842 47 0 649 ISSN 2224 3380 Standaard Afrikaans PDF Afrikaner Pers 1948 Retrieved 17 September 2014 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Dutch and Afrikaans share mutual intelligibility see Gooskens 2007 p 453 Holm 1989 p 338 Baker amp Prys Jones 1997 p 302 Egil Breivik amp Hakon Jahr 1987 p 232 For written mutual intelligibility see Sebba 2007 Sebba 1997 p 161 The changed spelling rule was introduced in article 1 rule 3 of the Dutch orthography law of 14 February 1947 In 1954 the Word list of the Dutch language which regulates the spelling of individual words including the word Afrikaans was first published Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en Koninkrijksrelaties 21 February 1997 Wet voorschriften schrijfwijze Nederlandsche taal wetten overheid nl in Dutch Archived from the original on 5 February 2021 Retrieved 10 March 2023 Afrikaans Online Etymology Dictionary Douglas Harper Retrieved 24 January 2020 a b c d Afrikaans Omniglot Retrieved 22 September 2010 Afrikaans language Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 31 August 2010 Retrieved 22 September 2010 Alatis Hamilton Tan Ai Hui 2002 Georgetown University Round Table on Languages and Linguistics 2000 Linguistics Language and the Professions Education Journalism Law Medicine and Technology Washington DC University Press p 132 ISBN 978 0 87840 373 8 Brown Keith Ogilvie Sarah eds 2008 Concise Encyclopedia of Languages of the World Oxford Elsevier p 8 ISBN 978 0 08 087774 7 den Besten Hans 1989 From Khoekhoe foreignertalk via Hottentot Dutch to Afrikaans the creation of a novel grammar In Putz Dirven eds Wheels within wheels papers of the Duisburg symposium on pidgin and creole languages Frankfurt am Main Peter Lang pp 207 250 Hammarstrom Harald Forke Robert Haspelmath Martin Bank Sebastian eds 2020 Hottentot Dutch Glottolog 4 3 Kaplan Irving 1971 Area Handbook for the Republic of South Africa PDF pp 46 771 James Louis Garvin ed 1933 Cape Colony Encyclopaedia Britannica Clark Nancy L William H Worger 2016 South Africa The Rise and Fall of Apartheid 3rd ed Abingdon Oxon Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 12444 8 OCLC 883649263 Worden Nigel 2010 Slavery in Dutch South Africa Cambridge University Press pp 40 43 ISBN 978 0521152662 Thomason amp Kaufman 1988 pp 252 254 Thomason amp Kaufman 1988 p 256 Afrikaans Language Courses in London Keylanguages com Archived from the original on 12 August 2007 Retrieved 22 September 2010 a b Kaplan R B Baldauf R B Language Planning amp Policy Language Planning and Policy in Africa Botswana Malawi Mozambique and South Africa Retrieved 17 March 2017 registration required Afrikaans becomes the official language of the Union of South Africa South African History Online 16 March 2011 Retrieved 17 March 2017 Speech by the Minister of Art and Culture N Botha at the 30th anniversary festival of the Afrikaans Language Monument in Afrikaans South African Department of Arts and Culture 10 October 2005 Archived from the original on 4 June 2011 Retrieved 28 November 2009 Galasko C November 2008 The Afrikaans Language Monument Spine 33 23 doi 10 1097 01 brs 0000339413 49211 e6 a b Tomasz Kamusella Finex Ndhlovu 2018 The Social and Political History of Southern Africa s Languages Palgrave Macmillan UK pp 17 18 ISBN 978 1 137 01592 1 Afrikaner South African History Online South African History Online SAHO Retrieved 20 October 2017 Bogaards Attie H Bybelstudies in Afrikaans Archived from the original on 10 October 2008 Retrieved 23 September 2008 Afrikaanse Bybel vier 75 jaar in Afrikaans Bybelgenootskap van Suid Afrika 25 August 2008 Archived from the original on 9 June 2008 Retrieved 23 September 2008 Bible Society of South Africa Afrikaans Bible translation www bybelgenootskap co za Archived from the original on 25 July 2020 Retrieved 30 May 2020 Harbert Wayne 2007 The Germanic Languages Cambridge University Press pp 17 ISBN 978 0 521 80825 5 Afrikaans is making a comeback in Argentina along with koeksisters and milktart Business Insider South Africa Retrieved 11 October 2019 ABS Language used at Home by State and Territory ABS Retrieved 28 June 2022 Census Profile 2016 Census of Canada 8 February 2017 Retrieved 8 August 2019 2011 Census Detailed analysis English language proficiency in parts of the United Kingdom Main language and general health characteristics Office for National Statistics Retrieved 20 January 2018 Language according to age and sex by region 1990 2021 Statistics Finland Retrieved 10 January 2023 Press Statement Census 2016 Results Profile 7 Migration and Diversity CSO Central Statistics Office www cso ie Top 25 Languages in New Zealand Ministry for Ethnic Communities www ethniccommunities govt nz 2016 American Community Survey 5 year estimates Ipums USA University of Minnesota Retrieved 10 March 2023 Frydman Jenna 2011 A Critical Analysis of Namibia s English only language policy In Bokamba Eyamba G ed Selected proceedings of the 40th Annual Conference on African Linguistics African languages and linguistics today PDF Somerville Massachusetts Cascadilla Proceedings Project pp 178 189 ISBN 978 1 57473 446 1 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Willemyns Roland 2013 Dutch Biography of a Language Oxford University Press p 232 ISBN 978 0 19 985871 2 Armoria patriae Republic of Bophuthatswana Archived from the original on 26 October 2009 Kamau John 25 December 2020 Eldoret the town that South African Boers started Business Daily Govt info available online in all official languages South Africa The Good News Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine a b Black Linguistics Language Society and Politics in Africa and the Americas by Sinfree Makoni p 120S a b Lafon Michel 2008 Asikhulume African Languages for all a powerful strategy for spearheading transformation and improvement of the South African education system In Lafon Michel Webb Vic Wa Kabwe Segatti Aurelia eds The Standardisation of African Languages Language political realities Institut Francais d Afrique du Sud Johannesburg p 47 Retrieved 30 January 2021 via HAL SHS Lynsey Chutel 25 February 2016 South Africa Protesting students torch university buildings Stamford Advocate Associated Press Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Studentenunruhen Konflikte zwischen Schwarz und Weiss Student unrest conflicts between black and white Die Presse 25 February 2016 Sudafrika Unerklarliche Gewaltserie an Universitaten South Africa Unexplained violence at universities Euronews 25 February 2016 Archived from the original on 27 February 2016 Retrieved 28 February 2016 Constitution of the Western Cape 1997 Chapter 1 section 5 1 a Superbrands com visited on 21 March 2012 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 24 September 2015 Pressly Donwald 5 December 2005 Rupert snubs mag over Afrikaans slur Business Africa Archived from the original on 16 February 2006 Retrieved 10 March 2023 Afrikaans stars join row over ugly language Archived 27 November 2011 at the Wayback Machine Cape Argus 10 December 2005 Mesthrie 1995 p 214 Brachin amp Vincent 1985 p 132 Mesthrie 2002 p 205 Sebba 1997 p 161 a b Holm 1989 p 338 a b Sebba 1997 Baker amp Prys Jones 1997 p 302 Egil Breivik amp Hakon Jahr 1987 p 232 Sebba 2007 a b c d Gooskens 2007 pp 445 467 Language Standardization and Language Change The Dynamics of Cape Dutch John Benjamins Publishing Company 2004 p 22 ISBN 9027218579 Retrieved 10 November 2008 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Niesler Louw amp Roux 2005 pp 459 474 Afrikaans Standard Afrikaans Lycos Retriever Archived from the original on 20 November 2011 ten Thije Jan D Zeevaert Ludger 2007 Receptive Multilingualism Linguistic analyses language policies and didactic concepts John Benjamins Publishing Company p 17 ISBN 978 9027219268 Retrieved 19 May 2010 S Linfield interview in Salmagundi 2000 a b c Languages Afrikaans World Data Atlas Archived from the original on 4 October 2014 Retrieved 17 September 2014 1 2 8 Home language by province percentages Statistics South Africa Archived from the original on 24 August 2007 Retrieved 17 September 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University Press ISBN 9780199286751 retrieved 31 May 2010 Stell Gerard 2008 2011 Mapping linguistic communication across colour divides Black Afrikaans in Central South Africa Vrije Universiteit Brussel retrieved 2 June 2010 Swanepoel J F 1927 The sounds of Afrikaans Their Dialectic Variations and the Difficulties They Present to an Englishman PDF Longmans Green amp Co archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Thomason Sarah Grey Kaufman Terrence 1988 Language Contact Creolization and Genetic Linguistics University of California Press published 1991 ISBN 0 520 07893 4 Webb Victor N 2002 Language in South Africa the role of language in national transformation reconstruction and development IMPACT Studies in Language and Society vol 14 John Benjamins Publishing Company doi 10 1075 impact 14 ISBN 9789027297631 Webb Victor N 2003 Language policy development in South Africa PDF Centre for Research in the Politics of Language University of Pretoria archived from the original PDF on 9 December 2003 Namibian Population Census 2001 Languages Spoken in Namibia Government of Namibia archived from the original on 16 May 2010 retrieved 28 May 2010 Wissing Daan 2016 Afrikaans phonology segment inventory Taalportaal archived from the original on 15 April 2017 retrieved 16 April 2017 CIA 2010 The World Factbook CIA Namibia Central Intelligence Agency retrieved 28 May 2010Further reading editGrieshaber Nicky 2011 Diacs and Quirks in a Nutshell Afrikaans spelling explained Pietermaritzburg ISBN 978 0 620 51726 3 e ISBN 978 0 620 51980 9 Roberge P T 2002 Afrikaans considering origins Language in South Africa Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 53383 X Thomas C H 1899 Boer language Origin of the Anglo Boer War revealed London England Hodder and StoughtonExternal links edit nbsp Afrikaans edition of Wikipedia the free encyclopedia nbsp Wikivoyage has a phrasebook for Afrikaans nbsp Wikibooks has a book on the topic of Afrikaans nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Afrikaans afrikaans com Afrikaans English Online Dictionary at Hablaa archived 4 June 2012 Afrikaans English Online Dictionary at majstro com Learn Afrikaans Online Open Learning Environment Federasie van Afrikaanse Kultuurvereniginge FAK Federation of Afrikaans Cultural Associations Dutch Writers from South Africa A Cultural Historical Study Part I from the World Digital Library Afrikaans Literature and Language Web dossier African Studies Centre Leiden 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Afrikaans amp oldid 1217980881, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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