The official languages are:
French, English, Spanish, Portuguese, Bantu, Dutch, German, Swahili, and other local tribal languages...only four??? the most popular has to be French, followed by English and Portuguese...
But South of The Sahara inludes so many territories including Ethiopea which speaks italian, Somalia which speaks Arabic, Sudan which speaks Darf, and several others...
All spoken languages on Earth are "talkative." For information about the spoken languages of South Africa, click here.
Cape Town is part of South Africa so all languages spoken in South Africa are also spoken in Cape Town.We have 11 official languages. English, Afrikaans, Ndebele, Sepedi, Tswati, Tsonga, South Sotho, Tswana, Venda, Xhosa & ZuluSouth Africa has the following official languages:IsiZuluIsiXhosaAfrikaansSepediEnglishSetswanaSesothoXitsongaSiSwatiTshivendaIsiNdebele
The only widely spoken European languages in South Africa are English and Afrikaans.
Yes, the only Germanic languages spoken in Africa are:EnglishAfrikaansAfrikaans is spoken in South Africa.English is spoken in:BotswanaCameroonThe GambiaGhanaKenyaLesothoLiberiaMalawiMauritiusNamibiaNigeriaRwandaSaint HelenaSeychellesSierra LeoneSouth AfricaSwazilandUgandaZambiaZimbabwe
South Africa has 11 official languages and all these languages are allowed in court proceedings. However, the main language spoken is English.
English and Afrikaans are widespread. One or the other (or both) are spoken in virtually every city of South Africa.
There are many native languages spoken in South Africa.
Mainly English, although there is also a large population of German and Italian speaking people in South Africa as well
No, Afrikaans is spoken in South Africa. The official languages in Rwanda are English, French and Kinyarwanda.
No, the Sahara is in North Africa
English, Zulu and Afrikaans
African languages include Kiswahili (spoken in East Africa), Luganda (spoken in Uganda), Lingala (Congo), Zulu (South Africa), and Tigre for Eritrea.