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Home > Ndebele language


There are two versions of Ndebele in South Africa, they both belong to the Nguni group of Bantu Languages. The Northern Ndebele or Nrebele and the Southern Ndebele otherwise known as Amandebele . There is also a separate language called Ndebele (that is spoken primarily in Zimbabwe (but also in Botswana) - see Matabele.

The first group of Ndebele speakers are found in the Limpopo Province (formerly Northern Transvaal or Northern Province) of South Africa around the Towns of Mokopane (Potgietersrus) and Polokwane (Pietersburg). Unfortunately this language was never taken seriously, so it was never taught at school and neither did anyone sit down and compile a proper orthography. The language is sometimes mistakenly grouped under the Northern Sotho group of dialects. This language is becoming extinct. The new generation mostly speaks Northern Sotho.

One of the Ndebele people's famous achievements is that they caught the Afrikaners by surprise and killed one of their leaders Piet Potgieter . The Afrikaners built a monument and called it "Moorddrift". As revenge the Ndebele King was killed in his cave refuge, together with a few of his followers.

This group is sometimes called BaTlou. If this language were to be further grouped it would be grouped with Swazi, because of their use of the root ti- as opposed to izi- for example:

The second group of Ndebele speakers is found in the Mpumalanga and Gauteng Province of South Africa. This group's language was not taken seriously, and for years the children were taught Zulu instead. They were lucky because the apartheid government created a BantustanBantustan refers to any of the territories designated as tribal " homelands" for black South Africans during the Apartheid era. The term "bantustan" was first used in the late 1940s and was coined from Bantu (meaning "people" in the Bantu languages) and s for them called Kwandebele , and with this came the radio station, Radio Ndebele. In the new South Africa the name of the station was changed to Ikhwekhwezi, meaning Star. This station has funnily enough expanded its footprint to include the Northern Ndebele region. The language luckily still retains most of its flavour with a few Northern Sotho and Afrikaans words trickling in.

The Ndebele people have recently become famous for their colourful wall paintings and traditional garb. Their paintings are used for instance to attract tourists and were used to decorate tails of 15 British AirwaysFor the 1930s airline of similar name see British Airways Ltd. British Airways is the largest airline of the United Kingdom. It is also one of the largest airlines in the world, with the greatest number of flights from Europe to North America. History Bri jets as part of their ethnic art relaunch.

The Zimbabwean Ndebele is closer to Zulu than it is to the two South African Ndebele languages.




Bantu languagesBantu is a language family that belongs to the Niger-Congo group. Bantu languages are spoken in South Cameroon, in Gabon, Republic of the Congo, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Angola, Zambia, Malawi, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Namib Languages of South AfricaSouth Africa has 11 official languages, which is second in numbers only to India. It also recognises 8 non-official languages. Official Languages English Afrikaans Zulu Xhosa Ndebele Northen Sotho Southern Sotho Tswana Swazi Venda Tsonga Other languages T

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