When speaking about the Stone Age, one should remember that, until fairly recently, there were nomads in South Africa who made their arrowheads from stone and not metal. These people would have spoken Khoisan languages. But if the question it meant to refer to South African people living at the time that corresponds with the Stone Age in Europe, it is probably impossible to answer. One needs intricately written materials (on stone or whatever) to make any deductions about languages. All that is left in South Africa, often in caves, are drawings indicating that these peoples indeed had a culture, but nothing that would show us how they spoke or articulated their thoughts.
Correct. The black people in South Africa do not all speak the same language or share the same culture. Just as the white people in South Africa do not all speak the same language or share the same culture. It has nothing to do with black or white.For the languages of South Africa, click here.
Africans dont have a specific language because its a continent not a country .Therefore, if you speak the language of your tribe. For an example, if your from Ghana , then you have a specific tribe and you speak the language of that tribe.
It is a South African language that is derived from the Dutch spoken by early colonists. It was considered the language of the oppressor by the ANC during the Apartheid era, when it was mandatory in schools. Most South Africans speak English and/or native African languages.
Yes newr is a language speaked one of the languages that north Africans speak
South Africans speak in many different ways. There are 11 official languages and many other languages too. Like any country, there are different accents in different parts of it. So put all of these factors together and it is natural that there will be many ways that South Africans speak that have developed over centuries.
No. Most Africans from former British colonies do speak English. However, those from the nations of former French West Africa speak French, or a dialect thereof. And many Africans still only speak their indigenous African language.
Most South Africans speak English. You should be fine.
There is no such language as "South African".
It depends on how an "ethnic group" is defined. But if use of a common first language is an adequate substitute: 1: About 175 million mainly North Africans speak some form of Arabic 2: About 45-52 million East Africans speak OROMO 3: About 25-30 million East Africans speak SOMALİ The remainder of Africans speak less widespread languages.
The speak Dene Tha'...or South Slavey
Only some African tribes eg bushmen in Namibia have clicks and pops as part of their language.
There is no such language as "African". The countries in Africa speak more than 1,500 different languages.