```php ```{"id":12214,"date":"2018-02-28T07:57:45","date_gmt":"2018-02-28T07:57:45","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.wapatranslations.com\/?p=12214"},"modified":"2018-09-13T13:48:51","modified_gmt":"2018-09-13T13:48:51","slug":"history-of-afrikaans","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.wapatranslations.com\/fi\/history-of-afrikaans\/","title":{"rendered":"African Languages and Short History of Afrikaans"},"content":{"rendered":"
Afrikaans is one of the notable languages on the African continent, particularly spoken by Afrikaners in South Africa and Namibia, including others in Zimbabwe and Botswana. Here is a short history of Afrikaans.<\/p>\n
It is richly formed from elements of German, Malay, Portuguese, Bantu and Khoisa languages but is heavily based on Dutch as well.<\/p>\n
There are many speculations about the history of Afrikaans, however, it is believed that the earliest Dutch, who occupied the ancient South Africa in the early 17th<\/sup> century, would have settled down in the southern part of Africa with some form of their culture adopted by the locals.<\/p>\n A fraction of the Dutch culture that was adopted was Afrikaans which began to flourish with the establishment of Apartheid in the pre-independent South Africa. This is not to say that Afrikaans is purely Dutch, but that over 90% of Afrikaans vocabulary is rooted in Dutch words.<\/p>\n From the 18th<\/sup> to early 20th<\/sup> century, Afrikaans started to take shape from the European Dutch to become a distinct language tapping from the beauty of languages such as Malay and Portuguese among others. Despite being regarded in proper Dutch as an uncivilized or incorrect form of Dutch, socio-linguists and researchers have regarded Afrikaans as a language with more regular grammar and spelling when compared with the European Dutch.<\/p>\n