Xhosa | ||||
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isiXhosa | ||||
Native to | South Africa, Lesotho | |||
Region | Eastern Cape, Western Cape | |||
Ethnicity | amaXhosa | |||
Native speakers
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8.2 million (2011 census) 11 million L2 speakers (2002) |
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Latin (Xhosa alphabet) Xhosa Braille |
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Signed Xhosa | ||||
Official status | ||||
Official language in
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South Africa Zimbabwe |
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Language codes | ||||
ISO 639-1 | xh |
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ISO 639-2 |
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ISO 639-3 |
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Glottolog | xhos1239 |
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S.41 |
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Linguasphere | 99-AUT-fa incl. |
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Proportion of the South African population that speaks Xhosa at home
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The Xhosa language | |
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Person | umXhosa |
People | amaXhosa |
Language | isiXhosa |
Country | kwaXhosa |
The Xhosa language (English /ˈkɔːsə/ or /ˈkoʊsə/;Xhosa: isiXhosa [isikǁʰɔ́ːsa]) is a Bantu language with click consonants ("Xhosa" begins with a click) and one of the official languages of South Africa. It is spoken by approximately 7.6 million people, or about 18% of the South African population. Like most other Bantu languages, Xhosa is a tonal language; the same sequence of consonants and vowels can have different meanings, depending on intonation. Xhosa has two tones: high and low.
Xhosa is written with the Latin alphabet. Three letters are used to indicate the basic clicks: c for dental clicks, x for lateral clicks and q for post-alveolar clicks (for a more detailed explanation, see the table of consonant phonemes below). Tones are not normally indicated in writing.
Xhosa is the southernmost branch of Nguni languages, which include Swazi, Northern Ndebele and Zulu. There is some mutual intelligibility with other Nguni languages, all of which share many linguistic features.
Nguni languages are, in turn, part of the much larger group of Bantu languages and so Xhosa is related to many languages of Africa.