Tourists page Investors page Immigrants page Citizens page South Africans Abroad page Home page Mon, 22 Mar 2010
Essential Information
  About South Africa
  South Africa map
  SA photo galleries
  SA web directory
  Site map
Public Services
  Advice for citizens
       Government services
       Consumer services
     more  Your rights
       Education
       Health
  Advice for foreigners
  South Africans abroad
Doing business
  Economy
  Investing in South Africa
  Trade with South Africa
  Trends & Growth
  Business news
Plan a trip
  Holiday experiences
  Smart travel tips
What's happening
  News and features
  Arts and entertainment
  Conferences and expos
  Sport

Weather

South African Weather Service


Quick forecasts
SA Weather Service

SA Web Directory
SA Web Directory

Mapping the best sites in SA cyberspace - goSouthAfrica

South Africa Map
South African Map

Find your way
on our interactive
macro-to-micro South Africa map



Dictionaries for all 11 languages
Shaun Benton

10 June 2005

It's official: there are now bilingual dictionaries for all of South Africa's 11 official languages.

The chief executive officer of the Pan South African Language Board (PanSALB), Cynthia Marivate, told Parliament's portfolio committee on arts and culture on Tuesday that the "minority languages" of isiNdebele, siSwati, Xitsonga and Tshivenda now had their own bilingual dictionaries.

"Ten years down the line, all official languages have a formal dictionary," Marivate said.

Previously, only the more widely spoken indigenous languages of isiZulu, isiXhosa, Sepedi, Sesotho and Setswana had bilingual dictionaries. English and Afrikaans have long had both monolingual and bilingual dictionaries.

Marivate said that producing comprehensive monolingual dictionaries, a key aim of PanSALB's national lexicography units, remains an ambition for the department, but added that by 2050 multilingual dictionaries for the indigenous languages would have doubled in size.

She also said that electronic dictionaries - or e-dictionaries - of South Africa's indigenous languages will soon be available for schools to download.

Khoe and San languages
Marivate told the parliamentary committee that, due to capacity problems, the Khoe and San languages were under-represented on PanSALB's national language bodies - but said one key achievement was the recording of the N|u language of the Khomani San.

According to PanSALB's Angie Netshiheni, Khoe speakers insisted, during research conducted in 2001-2002, that the word be spelt "Khoe" and not "Khoi" as was previously the case.

One of the world's most endangered languages, N|u was recorded from one of the last surviving N|u speakers in the Northern Cape.

Marivate said the related Khoe and San languages of !Xam and Koranna still needed to be recorded.

No to tsotsitaal
Finally, Marivate responded to a concern raised by a committee member that some young South Africans, encouraged by a popular radio station, were touting for a youthful slang known as tsotsitaal (gangster language) or isicamto to be recognised as an official language.

Marivate said there was "no way" that PanSALB would ever approve of tsotsitaal becoming South Africa's 12th official language.

Source: BuaNews

Print this page Send this article to a friend



  • Own-language schooling, for free
  • Boosting mother tongue literature
  • Googling South Africa
  • isiZulu news site a world first
  • W Cape's trilingual govt gateway
  • Cultural, religious & linguistic rights
  • Pan South African Language Board
  • SA words spice up OED
  • The languages of South Africa
  • SA English is lekker, bru!
  •  Translate.org
  •  PanSALB
  •  Department of Arts and Culture


  • South African Tourism Wines of South Africa Proudly South African South Africa Government Online South African Broadcasting Corporation Department of Trade and Industry South Africa
    Tourists | Investors | Immigrants | Citizens | South Africans Abroad Home | Site Map | South Africa Map | SA Web Directory
    Design, contents, site maintenance: Big Media Publishers (Pty) Limited
    Queries about the site? Contact the webmaster
    Published for the International Marketing Council of South Africa.
    Reliance on the information this website contains is at your own risk.
    Please read our Terms and Conditions of Use.