• 1.1 Demographics. 1.2 Other significant languages in South Africa. 2 Constitutional provisions. 3 The Constitution of South Africa in various languages.
  • I always look forward to writing about languages in Africa, so I thought I should put the languages of South Africa under the spotlight.
  • It is the home language of 4.6% of Indian or Asian people, and of 1.5% of black South Africans. Afrikaans and South Africa’s population groups.
  • South Africa is known for its rich languages and fascinating cultural traditions that date back to ancient history.
  • The official languages of South Africa are Afrikaans, English, Ndebele, Xhosa, Zulu, Sesotho, Swati, Tswana, and Venda.
  • To get you more in tune with the diversity of South Africa below are greetings in the 11 official South African languages.
  • South Africa has diverse cultures and languages with eleven officially recognized languages in the constitution.
  • This map shows which languages are most spoken in the different parts of South Africa.
  • Sesotho sa Leboa is a southeastern Bantu language spoken by the Sotho people in the northeastern parts of South Africa, including
  • Read about the 11 official languages of South Africa, the language use, South African slang and interesting South African language facts.
  • Sepedi is the second of the Sotho languages spoken in South Africa, and most Sepedi speakers live in the Limpopo Province of South Africa.
  • On this page, we will tell you about languages in South Africa and which ones are the most spoken languages in this country.
  • The government, business and media might use English as the principal language. But did you know that there are 11 official languages of South Africa?