Serer language

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Serer
Spoken in: Senegal, the Gambia, Mauritania 
Region: West Africa
Total speakers: 3.2 million (mother tongue)

3.5 million (second language)

Language family: Niger-Congo
 Atlantic-Congo
  Atlantic
   Senegambian
    Serer
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: srr
ISO 639-3: srr – Serer

The Serer languages are a group of languages spoken by the Serer people in West Africa. They include:

All the Serer languages except Serer-Sine (the largest) are classified among the Cangin languages.

Most Serer speak Wolof, the language of the Wolof people, as a second language, and those who have grown up in the cities often speak it as a first language.

[edit] Some Serer Greetings

The following greetings and responses and spoken in most regions of Senegal that have serer speakers.

Nam fi'o? (pronounced, nam feeyoh) = How are you doing? -response = mexe meen (prounounced, may hay men) = I am here.

Ta mbind na? (pronounced, tah mbind nah) = How is the family? -Response = Owa maa (pronounced owa maa) = it is good.

In Senegalese culture, greetings are very important. Sometimes, villagers will spend minutes greeting each other.

[edit] External links

[edit] See also