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  1. Building on the recognition of Africas vast linguistic diversity, it is essential to explore the continent’s four predominant language families: Afroasiatic, Nilo-Saharan, Niger-Congo, and Khoisan, each with its unique characteristics and distribution.

  2. Genesis 29.11–16 in Geʽez. The Geʽez script is an abugida that was created in Horn of Africa in the 8th-9th century BC for writing the Geʽez language. The script is used today in Ethiopia and Eritrea for Amharic, Tigrinya, and several other languages. It is sometimes called Ethiopic, and is known in Eritrea and Ethiopia as the fidel or ...

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  4. African language; it is an Austronesian language, akin to many of the languages of Island Southeast Asia and Oceania. The large number of countries in Africa is a heritage of the colonial history of the continent, as is also the linguistic situation (Map 2). Before the arrival of European explorers in the second half of the fifteenth century ...

  5. language served as an instrument of politicization and mobilization of the masses. It was Amilcar Cabral who declared that the most worthwhile thing the Portuguese left in Africa was their language. Cabral, the father of Cape Verdean and Guinean inde-pendence, was referring, of course, to Portuguese's role as a language that cut across

  6. Jun 26, 2020 · Ethiopia is home to Amharic, Tigrinya and other various languages. Most of these speakers use a writing system native to the Horn of Africa, the Ge’ez script, in which the letters are referred to as fid äl (ፊደል). Invented in the 6-5th century BCE, this script is still used today to write Amharic and Tigrinya.

  7. However, overall Bantu languages are the most well-described language group in Africa, and the first to attract comparative work, resulting in a reconstructed proto-language, Proto-Bantu. In terms of classification, Bantu is deeply embedded within the Niger-Congo phylum and belongs to the Benue-Congo family within it (Figure 14.1 ).

  8. 1 —NB: This is the author’s own amended version (post-peer review but pre-publication)— The Khoisan languages of southern Africa: facts, theories and confusions.1 Menán du Plessis Stellenbosch University ORCID: 0000-0003-4624-9066 Abstract The paper offers a brief but hopefully clarificatory account of the three language families generally referred to by linguists as Southern African ...