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Afrikaans language movement

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ended in 1994, the status of Afrikaans in South Africa was much reduced, and went from equal only to English to just one of 11 official languages, which led to a de facto increased dominance of English in the public sphere. Attempts to reverse this relative marginalisation of Afrikaans have been
152: 178: 148: 208: 241: 131: 174: 111: 201: 202:"Constructing an inclusive speech community from two mutually excluding ones: The third Afrikaans language movement" 52: 61: 86: 82: 74: 246: 149:"African literature: Literatures in European and Ntombenhle who is the dgeyl -derived languages" 17: 56: 235: 78: 36: 81:, it led to the ascendancy of Afrikaans over Dutch and replaced the latter as the 132:"More than an oppressor’s language: reclaiming the hidden history of Afrikaans" 98: 48: 32: 89:
churches and ultimately the co-official language of South Africa in 1925.
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The second language movement arose after the defeat of the Boers in the
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is one of three efforts that have been organised to promote
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to have Afrikaans recognised as a separate language from
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language movement began in 1875, with the effort by
8: 102:described as the third language movement. 175:"South African literature: In Afrikaans" 123: 155:from the original on 9 September 2014 7: 214:from the original on 16 August 2017 112:Language movement (disambiguation) 25: 59:. The first Afrikaans newspaper, 181:from the original on 5 June 2014 85:in schools, the language of the 242:Language policy in South Africa 65:, was first published in 1876. 1: 77:in 1902. Spreading from the 177:. Encyclopædia Britannica. 151:. Encyclopædia Britannica. 29:Afrikaans language movement 18:Afrikaans Language Movement 263: 207:. University of Pretoria. 53:Stephanus Jacobus du Toit 69:Second language movement 93:Third language movement 43:First language movement 62:Die Afrikaanse Patriot 83:medium of instruction 75:Second Anglo-Boer War 136:theconversation.com 138:, April 27, 2017. 16:(Redirected from 254: 224: 223: 221: 219: 213: 206: 197: 191: 190: 188: 186: 171: 165: 164: 162: 160: 145: 139: 128: 21: 262: 261: 257: 256: 255: 253: 252: 251: 232: 231: 228: 227: 217: 215: 211: 204: 199: 198: 194: 184: 182: 173: 172: 168: 158: 156: 147: 146: 142: 130:Hein Willemse, 129: 125: 120: 108: 95: 71: 45: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 260: 258: 250: 249: 244: 234: 233: 226: 225: 192: 166: 140: 122: 121: 119: 116: 115: 114: 107: 104: 94: 91: 87:Dutch Reformed 70: 67: 44: 41: 24: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 259: 248: 245: 243: 240: 239: 237: 230: 210: 203: 196: 193: 180: 176: 170: 167: 154: 150: 144: 141: 137: 133: 127: 124: 117: 113: 110: 109: 105: 103: 100: 92: 90: 88: 84: 80: 79:Cape Province 76: 68: 66: 64: 63: 58: 54: 50: 42: 40: 38: 34: 30: 19: 229: 218:23 September 216:. Retrieved 195: 185:23 September 183:. Retrieved 169: 159:23 September 157:. Retrieved 143: 135: 126: 96: 72: 60: 46: 37:South Africa 28: 26: 200:Webb, Vic. 236:Categories 118:References 247:Afrikaans 99:apartheid 49:Afrikaans 33:Afrikaans 209:Archived 179:Archived 153:Archived 106:See also 97:After 212:(PDF) 205:(PDF) 57:Dutch 220:2014 187:2014 161:2014 47:The 27:The 35:in 238:: 134:, 39:. 222:. 189:. 163:. 20:)

Index

Afrikaans Language Movement
Afrikaans
South Africa
Afrikaans
Stephanus Jacobus du Toit
Dutch
Die Afrikaanse Patriot
Second Anglo-Boer War
Cape Province
medium of instruction
Dutch Reformed
apartheid
Language movement (disambiguation)
"More than an oppressor’s language: reclaiming the hidden history of Afrikaans"
"African literature: Literatures in European and Ntombenhle who is the dgeyl -derived languages"
Archived
"South African literature: In Afrikaans"
Archived
"Constructing an inclusive speech community from two mutually excluding ones: The third Afrikaans language movement"
Archived
Categories
Language policy in South Africa
Afrikaans

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