Amharic

Description

Amharic is the official language of Ethiopia spoken by fourteen million native Amharas and by approximately eighteen million of the other ethnic groups in Ethiopia. Besides its national importance, it has also gained recognition in the US since 1985. In the list of languages important for scientific research and national interest, the US Department of Education listed Amharic as one of the 169 critical languages.

Amharic belongs to the southern branch of Hemeto-Semitic languages which is also referred to as Afrasian. From the five branches of the Afrasian group, Amharic belongs to the southern peripheral Semitic family of languages. It originated from Geez (or Ethiopic) which was extensively used in north Ethiopia since the first millennium A.D. Among the languages related to Geez that are spoken in the central and northern highlands of Ethiopia include: North Ethiopic (Tigre, Tigrinya); Central Ethiopic (Amharic, Gurage, Argoba, Gafat Harari...etc.). The other branch of Afrasian spoken in Ethiopia is the Cushitic which includes among others: Oromo, Somali, Agew, Sidama, Afar, Kafa. Modern Amharic has a Cushitic substratum.

(Source: African Studies Center, University of Pennsylvania)

Instructor

Yohannes Hailu