Friday, February 19, 2010

What Does You Have Zulu Mean How Is One's First Language Decided In South Africa?

How is one's first language decided in South Africa? - what does you have zulu mean

I know that South Africa 11 official languages - Afrikaans, English, Southern Ndebele, Northern Sotho, Sotho, Swati, Tsonga, Tswana, Venda, Xhosa's, Zulu.
But that does not mean that all South Africans can speak for all 11 languages, is not it?
As the South Africans have chosen language?
It was the first language of the parents or the school they decided to go? Or select a region, is grown up?

Switzerland has four official languages, and whose first language is determined mainly by the regions.
They were German-speaking regions in French and Italian and French.
Is it similar to South Africa?

My dear fellow, South Africa, which is their first language, and how is it decided? If you have only their parents & # 039, was the first language or region where you grew up?

5 comments:

darius.w... said...

Each of the 11 official languages is a language of a particular ethnic group. Not all blacks in South Africa, for example, are the same genetic material, and since all have different cultures and different histories, they have different languages.

The 11 languages that you have mentioned, especially representatives from 11 different cultures, each with its own history and culture. Some, such as Xhosa and Zulu and Sotho and Tswana are linked and are part of a group of similar language. In addition, Xhosa and Sotho is completely different. This reflects the fact that these languages are spoken by different cultures, while other cultures are historically close.

Languages are also in certain regions, such as the Zulu language, is concentrated in the province of KwaZulu-NatalINCE and Sotho in the Free State province. This does not mean that the languages are spoken here, which essentially led me to the answer you want. A first language is determined by culture or race, when you went, English and Afrikaans, while as a mediator in a language of the compound in black black and white South Africans and the main languages, including Zulu, Xhosa and Sotho-understood by most black South Africans are also Venda and Pedi speakers that are highly concentrated, and to my knowledge in the minority.

I am a white South Africans of European descent, so I speak Afrikaans, a Germanic language, adapted from the Dutch, and other elements of German, French, Portuguese, Malaysia and even mixed and someBantu (black natives). If I move to another area where there are no speakers of Afrikaans, I speak English, people of other languages, but I raise my children in English or Zulu, or any other language.

Since the language is defined by each of us appreciated and go in a different language is primarily for his own people, or removed, at least in the white population, because the past a lot of conflict between the Afrikaners, who speak Afrikaans and English.

So basically every ethnic group has its own language, and we hold no matter where we live! Of course, most ethnic groups are often still concentrated in a particular region, then we can say that the regional languages then. Just liKE Switzerland, where I take in different language, different ethnic backgrounds of the people who live there, but do not change the language in which it moves? If you speak a French, could raise their children in Italian, so he moved in the Italian region?

Oh, and something I've never met someone who can speak 11 languages. Some have as many speakers as Pedi. And do not speak Africans in general, most white Southern English or Afrikaans as their mother tongue, while almost all the speakers to speak Afrikaans, English as a second language. Most never be able to speak a black tongue, while many blacks I have met up to 5 languages.

chersgaz said...

His mother tongue first decide, ur LAN. Mine is in English. My father was my mother, Switzerland and South Africa.

C.P. said...

Well, I think it's pretty obvious that you speak do not speak the language of their parents, but all Afrikaans South Africans can speak English. It's like an unwritten rule - you realize that their children speak English ... I do not think that in a church, where they in a language they do not understand what he has not acted to preach the religion. ( "Caution, the language in which to worship, to God?)
So finally, I would say that the decision of the parents ...

cakes4af... said...

Normally one of the first language, the language is spoken at home with their parents, I grew up. The second or additional language is not generally used at home. I know a girl whose father was British and his mother was Afrikaans. A child speaks normally speaks the language of the mother, then call the mother tongue. The child had two older brothers grew up speaking Afrikaans at home should be. He has until she goes to school. She was under a school for English and her parents started to speak English with her and her siblings remained in Afrikaans. You can imagine that the girl did not know a language correctly. Sad. The mother of a language that was spoken of his birth, is considered one of the firstANGUAGE.

The Blue bull said...

The language used is the same as our parents. It is the same for all 11 languages in South Africa. Since then, others prefer to learn English and one or two more if you want.

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