what languages are spoken in Ethiopia? spread in Ethiopia has 83 languages, and more than 200 dialects spoken; The Ge’ez language was the first language in which it was used, and it is a language developed from the letters of the Sabaean language, and it turned into a written language during the reign of the Kingdom of Aksum, and it is still used today in the Ethiopian Orthodox Unification Church. The Ge’ez language developed into two languages used today: Tigrinya and Amharic. Amharic is the official language in the country, along with four other official languages spoken in Ethiopia, and the official languages in Ethiopia, according to 2007 statistics. So what are the official languages in Ethiopia?
Amharic (in Amharic: አማርኛ, pronounced Amarnia) or Amharic is the official language of Ethiopia, and it is a Semitic language belonging to the southwestern group and spoken by the people of Ethiopia, but it was influenced by Kushite languages a lot. Amharic is the second most widely spoken Semitic language after Arabic, and it is the official working language in Ethiopia, and in several states within the Ethiopian federal system; It is the language of the Ethiopian army and the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, and it is the language of about 2.7 million immigrants outside Ethiopia. The Amharic language has its own writing system, which is the Amharic fidel ፊደል fidel, which is descended from the Ge’ez abugida አቡጊዳ abugida.
The origins of languages in Ethiopia:
Languages in Ethiopia are divided into four main language families according to their origins.
- Semitic languages
- Cushitic languages
- Omote languages
- Nilo-Saharan languages.
There are about 88 different languages spoken in the country with the 1994 census of Ethiopia indicating that there are about 77 indigenous languages. A large proportion of the languages spoken in the country belong to the Afro-Asiatic family of languages which consists of the Cushitic and Semitic languages. Although their classification is uncertain, ugly languages are also spoken. Besides, the Nilotic peoples who are an ethnic minority in Ethiopia speak Nilo-Saharan languages. Of the 88 languages in the country, 2 are extinct while 86 are still alive. Of the remaining 86 languages, five are nearly extinct, eight are at risk of extinction, 14 are in development, 18 are strong, and 41 are institutional languages. In Ethiopia, English, which is the medium of instruction in universities and secondary schools, is the most widely spoken foreign language.
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