Amharic | |
---|---|
አማርኛ Amarəñña | |
![]() Amharic script, fidäl, from Geʽez script | |
Pronunciation | [amarɨɲːa] ⓘ |
Native to | Ethiopia |
Ethnicity | Amhara |
Speakers | L1: 35 million (2020)[1] L2: 25 million (2019)[2] Total: 60 million (2019–2020)[3] |
Geʽez script (Amharic syllabary) Geʽez Braille | |
Signed Amharic[4] | |
Official status | |
Official language in | ![]() |
Regulated by | Imperial Academy (former) |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-1 | am |
ISO 639-2 | amh |
ISO 639-3 | amh |
Glottolog | amha1245 |
Linguasphere | 12-ACB-a |
Amharic (/æmˈhærɪk/ am-HARR-ik[6][7][8] or /ɑːmˈhɑːrɪk/ ahm-HAR-ik;[9] native name: አማርኛ, romanized: Amarəñña, IPA: [amarɨɲːa] ⓘ) is an Ethio-Semitic language, which is a subgrouping within the Semitic branch of the Afroasiatic languages. It is spoken as a first language by the Amharas, and also serves as a lingua franca for all other populations residing in major cities and towns in Ethiopia.[10]
The language serves as the official working language of the Ethiopian federal government, and is also the official or working language of several of Ethiopia's federal regions.[11] In 2020 in Ethiopia, it had over 33.7 million mother-tongue speakers of which 31 million are ethnically Amhara, and more than 25.1 million second language speakers in 2019, making the total number of speakers over 58.8 million.[12][13] Amharic is the largest, most widely spoken language in Ethiopia, and the most spoken mother-tongue in Ethiopia. Amharic is also the second most widely spoken Semitic language in the world (after Arabic).[14][15]
Amharic is written left-to-right using a system that grew out of the Geʽez script.[16] The segmental writing system in which consonant-vowel sequences are written as units is called an abugida (አቡጊዳ).[17] The graphemes are called fidäl (ፊደል), which means 'script, alphabet, letter, character'.
There is no universally agreed-upon Romanization of Amharic into Latin script. The Amharic examples in the sections below use one system that is common among linguists specializing in Ethiopian Semitic languages.
© MMXXIII Rich X Search. We shall prevail. All rights reserved. Rich X Search