Oranjerivier-Afrikaans

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Oranjerivier-Afrikaans
Spoken in: South Africa
Total speakers:
Language family: Indo-European
 Germanic
  West Germanic
   Low Franconian
    Afrikaans
     Oranjerivier-Afrikaans
Language codes
ISO 639-1: af
ISO 639-2: afr
ISO/FDIS 639-3: afr — Afrikaans

 

Oranjerivier-Afrikaans ("Afrikaans of the Orange River") is a non-standard dialect of Afrikaans, which is a West Germanic language mainly spoken in northwestern South Africa and southern Namibia. Oranjerivier-Afrikaans has come into existence as a result of contact of Dutch settlers with Khoi-Khoi in South Africa. In the 19th century, it replaced the Khoi-Khoi languages. Some of the characteristics of Oranjerivier-Afrikaans are the plural form -goed (Ma-goed, meneergoed), variant pronunciation such as in kjerk (Church) and gjeld (money) and the ending -se, which indicates possession.

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In other languages