Thousands and thousands.
"African" is not a language. Africa is a continent that contains 54 countries and more than 2100 completely different languages. Some estimates place the number of languages at around 3000.If you have any questions about African languages, you will have to specify the language.The most prominent languages spoken in Africa are:AfrikaansAmharicArabicEnglishFrenchFulaHausaIgboOromaSomaliSwahiliYorubaZulu
Harriet Tubman is known to have spoken English fluently. Additionally, she is believed to have had some knowledge of African languages that were spoken by enslaved people, as well as some understanding of the Gullah dialect.
Africa is a continent of many different countries with languages and customs as diversified as many other nations.
Certainly not! French is spoken in France, which is a country on the european continent, not the african... It has Latin origins, then Romans, then old French (called Le Francois), and then acual French. It is also the official language in Belgium, Swiss, Canada (Quebec) and many others countries that are indeed on the african continent because these ones were colonized by France at one time of the History.
There are many languages spoken in Japan, but Japanese is by far the most spoken and official language and practically all Japanese citizens and many temporary residents speak it. Minority languages in Japan include Okinawan (spoken on Okinawa Island by many island natives), Korean (by the relatively large Korean immigrant population), and Ryukyuan languages spoken by natives of the Ryukyu Islands south of the main Japanese islands. English is limited to major cities or tourist areas although it is taught in secondary schools.
There is no language called "African." Africa is a huge continent with many languages. Perhaps you mean "Afrikaans," spoken in South Africa?
African is not a language. It is a continent of many different nations, where more than 3,000 different languages or dialects are spoken.
"African" is not a language. Africa is a continent that contains 54 countries and more than 2100 completely different languages. Some estimates place the number of languages at around 3000.If you have any questions about African languages, you will have to specify the language.The most prominent languages spoken in Africa are:AfrikaansAmharicArabicEnglishFrenchFulaHausaIgboOromaSomaliSwahiliYorubaZulu
Thousands and thousands.
Africa is the continent with the most languages spoken, with over 2,000 different languages. This linguistic diversity is due to the many different ethnic groups and cultures found throughout the continent.
Africa is believed to have the most living languages as of 2011. It is estimated that there are about 1500 languages in Africa.
There are many languages in Africa, from major languages like Swahili to small languages spoken only by a single tribe.
"African" is not a language. Africa is a continent that contains 54 countries and more than 2100 completely different languages. Some estimates place the number of languages at around 3000.If you have any quesitons about African languages, you will have to specify the language.The most prominent languages spoken in Africa are:AfrikaansAmharicArabicEnglishFrenchFulaHausaIgboOromaSomaliSwahiliYorubaZulu
Africa is the most multilingual continent on the planet, but there is some debate as to exactly how many languages are spoken; estimates range between roughly 1,000-over 3,000. In Nigeria alone, there are around 500 spoken languages. This immense linguistic diversity is a vast cultural treasure for the incredibly diverse people of the continent, but it also means that language policy is a major part of political debate in many countries.
"African" is not a language. Africa is a continent that contains 54 countries and more than 2100 completely different languages. Some estimates place the number of languages at around 3000.If you have any questions about African languages, you will have to specify the language.The most prominent languages spoken in Africa are:AfrikaansAmharicArabicEnglishFrenchFulaHausaIgboOromaSomaliSwahiliYorubaZulu
It is estimated that there were over 2,000 languages spoken in the Americas before the arrival of Europeans. Today, there are still hundreds of indigenous languages spoken across North, Central, and South America.
No, Africa does not predominantly speak English as a primary language. Africa is a continent with over 1,500 languages spoken, and English is only one of the many languages spoken across the continent.