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         African Languages:     more books (100)
  1. Language, Discourse and Power in African American Culture (Studies in the Social and Cultural Foundations of Language) by Marcyliena Morgan, 2002-08-12
  2. African Languages: An Introduction
  3. Speech, Language, Learning, and the African American Child by Jean E. Van Keulen, Gloria Toliver Weddington, et all 1997-10-14
  4. Africans and Native Americans: The Language of Race and the Evolution of Red-Black Peoples by Jack D. Forbes, 1993-03-01
  5. An Introduction to African Languages by George Tucker Childs, 2003-12
  6. The Negro-African Languages by L. Homburger, 1949-01-01
  7. African Voices: An Introduction to the Languages and Linguistics of Africa
  8. Talkin that Talk: African American Language and Culture by Geneva Smitherman, 1999-11
  9. The Swahili: Reconstructing the History and Language of an African Society, 800-1500 (The Ethnohistory Series) by Derek Nurse, Thomas Spear, 1985-01-01
  10. Songs of West Africa: A Collection of over 80 Traditional West African Folk Songs and Chants in 6 Languages with Translations, Annotations by Dan Gorlin, 2000-01-01
  11. African American Women's Language: Discourse, Education and Identity by Sonja L. Lanehart, 2009-11-01
  12. Language and the African American Child by Lisa J. Green, 2011-01-31
  13. The Development of African American English (Language in Society) by Walt Wolfram, Erik Thomas, 2002-06-17
  14. Practical Phonetics For Students of African Languages by D. Westermann, Ida C. Ward, 1990-01-10

1. Languages Of Africa - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Map showing the distribution of African language families and some major African languages. AfroAsiatic extends from the Sahel to Southwest Asia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_languages
Languages of Africa
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from African languages Jump to: navigation search It has been suggested that List of African languages be merged into this article or section. ( Discuss Map showing the distribution of African language families and some major African languages. Afro-Asiatic extends from the Sahel to Southwest Asia Niger-Congo is divided to show the size of the Bantu sub-family Official languages - in many African countries there are several official languages The languages of Africa are a diverse set of languages , many of which bear little relation to one another. European languages , especially French and English and, to a lesser degree, Portuguese and Dutch were influenced by the African languages. There are an estimated 2000 languages spoken in Africa About a hundred of these have been estimated to be major languages, and usually a visitor to a linguistic area can find someone who speaks the area's major language . African languages such as Swahili Hausa Igbo , and Yoruba , Ibibio language of the Ibibio/Annang/Efik people Ibibio Annang and Efik are spoken by millions of people. In Zimbabwe, most people speak Shona followed by those who speak Ndebele; however, English is the official language and is spoken by both the Shonas and the Ndebele. Nigeria has over 250 languages, these include, Yoruba, Igbo, Hausa, Ibibio, Annang, Efik, Urhobo and others, such as

2. Home African Languages
WELCOME TO THE DEPARTMENT OF AFRICAN LANGUAGES WELKOM BY DIE DEPARTEMENT AFRIKATALE WAMKELEKILE KWISEBE LEELWIMI ZASEAFRIKA. 283Y508.
http://academic.sun.ac.za/african_languages/

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WELCOME TO THE DEPARTMENT OF AFRICAN LANGUAGES
WELKOM BY DIE DEPARTEMENT AFRIKATALE
WAMKELEKILE KWISEBE LEELWIMI ZASE-AFRIKA

3. African_languages « Rss2go
Wikimedia s Foundation Headed to Africa Next Month. Wikimedia’s nonprofit, The Foundation, is kicking off its annual fundraiser for spreading knowledge
http://www.rss2go.net/topic/african_languages
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FeedItems If you feel the urge to send me spammail - Please use spam@junkmaildaily.com Thanks alot from Salzburg!

4. African_languages Encyclopedia - Powered By Seekcore.com
Meaning of african_languages. Search in Encyclopedia for african_languages. Map showing the distribution of African language families and some
http://www.seekcore.com/lexikon_African_languages_en.html
I
deutsch
english
italiano
español
français
português
dansk
nederlands
russkij
polski türkçe Web Pictures Videos News ... Encyclopedia Search in Encyclopedia for It has been suggested that List of African languages be merged into this article or section. ( Discuss Map showing the distribution of African language families and some major African languages. Afro-Asiatic extends from the Sahel to Southwest Asia Niger-Congo is divided to show the size of the Bantu sub-family Official languages - in many African countries there are several official languages The languages of Africa are a diverse set of languages , many of which bear little relation to one another. European languages , especially French and English and, to a lesser degree, Portuguese and Dutch were influenced by the African languages. There are an estimated 2000 languages spoken in Africa About a hundred of these have been estimated to be major languages, and usually a visitor to a linguistic area can find someone who speaks the area's major language . African languages such as Swahili Hausa Igbo , and Yoruba , Ibibio language of the Ibibio/Annang/Efik people Ibibio Annang and Efik are spoken by millions of people. In Zimbabwe, most people speak Shona followed by those who speak Ndebele; however, English is the official language and is spoken by both the Shonas and the Ndebele. Nigeria has over 250 languages, these include, Yoruba, Igbo, Hausa, Ibibio, Annang, Efik, Urhobo and others, such as

5. African Languages
African languages spoken throughout Africa. Find information and link about African languages, dialects, useful phrases, travel phrasebooks and more.
http://goafrica.about.com/od/africanlanguages/African_Languages.htm
zGCID=" test0" zGCID+=" test8" zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') zDO=0 You are here: About Travel Africa Travel African Culture and People African Languages Africa Travel Travel Africa Travel Essentials ... African Culture and People African Languages
African Languages
African languages number in their thousands and you can double that number if you count the dialects. Find links and information about all the major African languages and where they are spoken, below. African Languages What is Spoken Where? African language information and resources. Find out what African language is spoken where with links to online African language dictionaries and African language resources. Information about Swahili, Arabic, Amharic, Zulu, Afrikaans, Akan, Chewa and more. African Greetings: 35 Ways to Say "Hello" in Africa African Greetings. Learn how to say hello in several African languages spoken in Ghana, South Africa, Kenya, Egypt, Morocco, Botswana, Malawi and more. Being able to greet someone in their own language will help you enjoy your contact with local people even more while visiting Africa and the effort will certainly be appreciated. Swahili (KiSwahili) For Travelers Swahili (Kiswahili) for travelers to Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda. Learn some basic Swahili (KiSwahili) phrases and traveling in East Africa will be even more rewarding. Greetings, numbers, animals, transport and other basic phrases are covered in this article about Swahili. Find out where Swahili is spoken, basic rules of pronounciation, Swahili online courses, language schools and more.

6. African Languages By Countries :: Official And National Languages Of Africa
List of Official and Spoken Languages of African Countries.
http://www.nationsonline.org/oneworld/african_languages.htm
Nations Online
Countries of the World Home Languages of the World Languages of Africa
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Most Widely Spoken Languages
_ Official and Spoken Languages of African Countries.
List of official, national and spoken languages of Africa.
African Countries
Country
Official and national Languages
Other spoken Languages
Algeria Arabic French, Berber dialects. Angola Portuguese Narrow Bantu like Umbundu and other African languages. Benin French Fon and Yoruba (most common vernaculars in south), tribal languages (at least six major ones in north). Botswana English Setswana Burkina Faso French Native African languages belonging to Sudanic family spoken by 90% of the population. Burundi Kirundi, French Swahili (along Lake Tanganyika and in the Bujumbura area). Cameroon English, French 24 major African language groups. Cape Verde Portuguese Kabuverdianu (Crioulo) (a blend of Portuguese and West African words). Central African Republic French, Sangho (lingua franca and national language) Banda, Gbaya and other tribal languages.

7. African Languages - Search Results - MSN Encarta
MSN homeMailMy MSNSign in. encartagreeting cardsmore. Envelope Hotmail im Messenger Figure of person in front of computer monitor My MSN
http://encarta.msn.com/African_Languages.html
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Foreign Language Help Project Planner ... Join Now Searched for ' African Languages' Articles African Languages African Languages , group of languages that are native to Africa. Scholars estimate that the number of distinctive languages spoken on the African... ... The majority of the world’s 6,000 distinct languages are spoken by 10,000 people or less. Within the next 100 years many experts believe that half... See all search results in Articles (65) Maps Language Families of Africa Bantu Languages : spread throughout Africa See all search results in Maps (92) African Languages : drum imitating tonal sounds: Popular Juju Music of Nigeria African Elephant Koko the gorilla using sign language (photo) Video of woman using sign language ... Phone: 717 941-3406 See all search results in Colleges (8) Dictionary Encarta Translation Dictionaries Encarta's bilingual dictionaries provide quick and easy translations of English words in four languages — Spanish, French, German, and Italian.

8. African Language - Wikipedia
African language. Redirected from African Languages. The African languages are currently divided into the following four language families
http://facetroughgemstones.com/wikipedia/af/African_Languages.html
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African language
Redirected from African Languages The African languages are currently divided into the following four language families see also: Polyglotta Africana Joseph H. Greenberg The above are families indigenous to Africa. Two African languages belong to non-African families: Malagasy is an Austronesian language, and Afrikaans is Indo-European Studying African Languages In Europe there is a project going on building up a common curriculum in African Languages and Linguistics called EEQUALL (European Equivalences In African Languages And Linguistics). It will allow students to get credit points from different universities. http://www.eequall.info (currently a bit outdated) wikipedia.org dumped 2003-03-17 with terodump
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25 carat PURPLE Russian CHAROITE Loose hand polished jewelry piece 5 gram PRETTY
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28 carat golden brown BRONZITE Cab cabbing tumble polished jewelry shimmery 5 gr

9. Semitic Languages - Www.fi - Hakukone Joka Ymmärtää Suomalaista
Chadic is spoken by the Tuareg people. Semitic ca.encarta.msn. com/encyclopedia_761565449/african_languages.html Kaikki osumat sivustolta
http://www.fi/WebSearch?doQuery=true&query=Semitic languages

10. Category:African Languages - Wikibooks, Collection Of Open-content Textbooks
Retrieved from http//en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Categoryafrican_languages . Category Languages. Views. Category Discussion Edit this page History
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Category:African_Languages
Category:African Languages
From Wikibooks, the open-content textbooks collection
Jump to: navigation search These language books deal with African Languages. See also Subject:African Languages
Pages in category "African Languages"
The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total.
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Retrieved from " http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Category:African_Languages Category Languages Views Personal tools Navigation Community Search Toolbox

11. Kujarge B - Pasthound
Language School Explorer Information about african_languages. The family consists of more than a http//www.school-explorer.com/info/african_languages
http://www.pasthound.com/topics/Kujarge-

12. Horus, Ra And Thoth [Archive] - JREF Forum
(http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Greenberg african_languages) OK used to be called Hamitic. Whatever you want to call them, they are different to all
http://forums.randi.org/archive/index.php/t-59126.html
JREF Forum General Topics Religion and Philosophy PDA View Full Version : Horus, Ra and Thoth BeholdTheTruth 28th June 2006, 05:50 AM What's the origin of Ra the sun god and Thoth the moon god being the two eyes of Horus? And is there any truth that the word "thought" is etymologically related to the name "Thoth", especially as a thought is a reflection ala light bouncing off the moon? 28th June 2006, 07:52 AM As for the etymology, the OED links thought to Old English roots, with related terms in Old Saxon, Old Norse, and Gothic. I suppose it's possible that there's a connection to Thoth on some level, but if so it's not one that's been established. TragicMonkey 28th June 2006, 02:24 PM The Egyptians didn't call him "Thoth", that's how English speakers transliterated it millennia later. Last I heard of the matter, the experts were pronouncing it "Tehuti". Which sounds Polynesian to me, but heck, ancient Egypt was a long time ago. Words from their language would be extremely improbable to pop up in modern English. Just as likely as finding Babylonian words, or Hittite. Meffy 28th June 2006, 02:42 PM

13. Talk:African Languages - Indopedia, The Indological Knowledgebase
Retrieved from http//indopedia.org/Talkafrican_languages.html . This page has been accessed 16 times. This page was last modified 1217, 21 Sep 2004 by
http://indopedia.org/Talk:African_languages.html
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Talk:African languages
ज्ञानकोश: - The Indological Knowledgebase Shouldn't this article be called African languages (plural)? Strangeloop (talk) 22:33, 29 Aug 2004 (UTC)
I concur. - Mustafaa 03:14, 30 Aug 2004 (UTC)
Besides, there are already many pages that are linking to African Languages instead (which is a redirect to African language at present). But now the existence of that page poses a problem if we are going to move this one. And by just plain copy-pasting the text, the history of this page will be gone. Anyone suggestions on how to solve this?
I've sorted it Theresa Knott (taketh no rest) 10:35, 21 Sep 2004 (UTC)
Wow that was fast! Thanks! - Strangeloop (talk) 10:36, 21 Sep 2004 (UTC) edit
I created a map and added it to the article. I will adjust the text soon; on the map, I divided Niger-Congo in A and B to show the size of the Bantoid branch. - Strangeloop (talk) 12:17, 21 Sep 2004 (UTC)
Retrieved from " http://indopedia.org/Talk:African_languages.html

14. ...Need French For Travel ? : British Expat Discussion Forum
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/african_languages L anguages of A frica There are an estimated 1800 languages spoken in Africa. Some African
http://britishexpats.com/forum/showthread.php?t=430006

15. FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY : African Languages : Hieroglyphics Books
Find the lowest price on new and used Hieroglyphics Books.
http://www.allbookstores.com/Foreign_Language_Study/African_Languages/Hieroglyph
Search By: Keyword Title Author ISBN Browse: Choose a subject: Art Children's Books Christian Books History Gardening Horror Mystery Oprah Book Club Photography Reference Romance Science Science Fiction Sports Technology Travel Art Children's Books Christian Books History ... African Languages : Hieroglyphics You may sort these results by title or by publication date
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16. Restricted Site
Languages of Africa, Wikipedia page with language maps http//en.wikipedia. org/wiki/african_languages. The Webbook of African Language Resources (Michigan
http://multilingual.texterity.com/multilingual/200709/?pg=70

17. African Languages
You can get any information about Africa here African Languages. The number of distinctive languages spoken in Africa is open to debate.
http://www.go-africa.org/african_languages.htm
The best source for African travel information. South Africa. Safari. Maps of Africa. Africa tour. About Articles African Resipes Cultures s Country Guide Adventures Directory Safety Tips
The best source for African travel information.
African Languages
The number of distinctive languages spoken in Africa is open to debate. Some experts put the number at around , while others count more than . Virtually all of these languages originated in Africa. The most widely spoken indigenous African language is Swahili , spoken by nearly 50 million Africans, followed by Hausa and Yoruba , each with more than 20 million speakers. Several languages have only a few thousand speakers. Scholars generally recognize four African language families: Niger-Congo, Afro-Asiatic, Nilo-Saharan, and Khoisan. Most Africans are multilingual, meaning that they speak two or more different languages. Few can afford to be otherwise, since daily life often brings people into contact with others who speak different languages. For instance, more than 50 languages are spoken in Nigeria alone. Tanzania, with significantly fewer people, has nearly 100 languages, including at least one from each of the four language families. North Africans and converts to Islam have spoken Arabic for centuries, and the use of European languages has spread across the continent since the dawn of colonialism. Today, the language of a country's former colonial rulers often serves as its common tongue.

18. African Languages
9780781808460, AfrikaansEnglish / English-Afrikaans Practical Dictionary, £17.50. 9780781804264, Hausa-English / English-Hausa Practical Dictionary, £14.99
http://www.gazellebookservices.co.uk/Languages/African Languages/african_languag
Afrikaans-English / English-Afrikaans Practical Dictionary Hausa-English / English-Hausa Practical Dictionary Hausa-English/English-Hausa Dictionary and Phrasebook Igbo-English / English-Igbo Dictionary and Phrasebook Afrikaans-English / English-Afrikaans Practical Dictionary Hausa-English / English-Hausa Practical Dictionary Hausa-English/English-Hausa Dictionary and Phrasebook Igbo-English / English-Igbo Dictionary and Phrasebook ... Yoruba-English / English-Yoruba Modern Practical Dictionary

19. Web Resources For African Languages
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/african_languages. African Anaphora Project. Linguistics Department, Rutgers University. www.africananaphora.rutgers.edu
http://goto.glocalnet.net/maho/webresources/general.html
WEB RESOURCES FOR
AFRICAN LANGUAGES
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click for full size image However, a simple four-way division betrays the fact that much of Africa's linguistic history as well as the relationships between languages and some language groupings are not yet fully understood. Much work on these issues still remain to be done. There are several "non-African" languages spoken in Africa (e.g. Malagasy, English, French, etc.), as well as many pidgins/creoles and other "new" languages. Moreover, many (indigenously) African languages are yet to be satisfactorily classified. The adjoining map depicts a slightly more skeptical view on the African language situation than that of the traditional Greenbergian view. The links on this page (which follow the section with references to printed sources immediately below) have been grouped into three categories:

20. University Of Zimbabwe Faculty Of Arts
Department Of African Languages. The Department s Mission is to achieve and maintain academic and scholarly excellence in both research and teaching of
http://www.uz.ac.zw/arts/african_languages/index.html

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