Afrikaans is spoken by the Afrikaans-speaking community in South Africa and Namibia. It is one of South Africa's 11 official languages and is derived from Dutch, brought to the region by Dutch settlers in the 17th century.
No, Afrikaans is spoken in South Africa. The official languages in Rwanda are English, French and Kinyarwanda.
"Afrikaans" is spoken by "Afrikaaners" which are the native people of South Africa. "Afrikaans" is a language that is generally spoken by all caucasians (in South Africa), but not exclusively, there are millions of coloured people in South Africa who also speak "Afrikaans" and about 8million caucasians who speak it, but only the caucasians in South Africa who speak "Afrikaans" are regarded as an "Afrikaaner"
Afrikaans is spoken mainly in South Africa and Namibia, but is also spoken in South Africa's neighbouring countries as well as amongst immigrant communities in the UK, USA and Australia.
Afrikaans
The only widely spoken European languages in South Africa are English and Afrikaans.
Afrikaans, spoken by the people of South Africa see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afrikaans
There is no such language as "African". Hundreds of languages are spoken in Africa. If you meant "Afrikaans" which is a derivative of Dutch that is spoken in South Africa, the word is "Beer".
English and Afrikaans are widespread. One or the other (or both) are spoken in virtually every city of South Africa.
Mostly Afrikaans, but also a lot of Xhosa.
Afrikaans. It is an Indo-European language of the Germanic language family, and is closely related to (and sometimes mutually intelligible with) Dutch and especially Flemish.
Yes, the only Germanic languages spoken in Africa are:EnglishAfrikaansAfrikaans is spoken in South Africa.English is spoken in:BotswanaCameroonThe GambiaGhanaKenyaLesothoLiberiaMalawiMauritiusNamibiaNigeriaRwandaSaint HelenaSeychellesSierra LeoneSouth AfricaSwazilandUgandaZambiaZimbabwe