- Tsotsitaal
language
name=Tsotsitaal
familycolor=Creole
states=South Africa
speakers=
fam1=Creole language
fam2=Afrikaans Creole
iso1=
iso2=
iso3=fly
lc1=
ld1=
notice=nonoticeTsotsitaal, or isiCamtho, is a variety of languages mainly spoken in the townships of
Gauteng province inSouth Africa , such asSoweto . It is apidgin , or rather a diverse combination of several South African languages, such as Zulu,Sesotho , Tswana andAfrikaans . Tsotsitaal is also influenced by the English and some of the other languages spoken in the multilingual country (such as Italian,Swahili , etc.). Widely spoken in urban areas, it emerged as a language, some would argue, that helped to facilitate communication between speakers of different languages. Although originally associated with the criminal subculture ("tsotsi" refers to an urban thug), its recognition has spread with the popularity ofkwaito music. [The Languages of South Africa http://64.233.169.104/search?q=cache:Yq_LFuXrlk0J:www.southafrica.info/ess_info/sa_glance/demographics/language.htm+tsotsi+taal&hl=es&ct=clnk&cd=2&gl=us ]"Tsotsi" is a
Sesotho slang word for a "thug" or "robber" (possibly from the verb "ho tsotsa" "to sharpen" — whose meaning has been modified in modern times to include "to con") and "taal" is theAfrikaans word for "language". The alternative name, "isiCamtho", comes from Zulu and is a combination of the class 7 prefix isi- (here representing language — seegrammatical gender andSesotho nouns ) with a derivation of "ukucamtha", which means "to chat".In music
After the abolition of apartheid in
South Africa in 1994,Kwaito , already a popular music form in South Africa, and its artists came to embrace the use of Tsotsitaal in its lyrical content. Because of its reputation as associated with urban thugs and the criminal subculture, Tsotsitaal, or isiCamtho is seen by many as a South African form ofgangsta slang. [Mhlambi, T. "Kwaitofabulous: The Study of a South African Urban Genre". Journal of the Musical Arts in Africa Vol 1 (2004): 116-127 ] With the advent of rising middle-class and elite Blacks in South Africa after apartheid and the significance of gold to the South African history and culture, the attitudes prevalent inKwaito music appropriate gold to notions of success and wealth. Because of its urban nature and form, Tsotsitaal came to be emblematic of the attitudes of post-Apartheid South African black poor youth that were largely apolitical, concerned mainly with a representation of success and wealth. [Steingo, G. "South African Music After Apartheid: The "Party Politic" and the Appropriation of Gold as a Sign of Success". Popular Music and Society, July 2005. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2822/is_3_28/ai_n15648564 ]Township Culture
Tsostitaal is arguably the most mutual form of communicaton amongst South African youths. Tsotsitaal is wide spread around the country has made it easy for youths, from different townships of the country to be able to communicate as it is a common spoken language in all 9 provencies of the country for example the word "hola," derived from the the Spanish greeting, is a common greeting word around the country.
ee also
*"
Tsotsi ", winner of the 2005 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Filmources
External links
* [http://www.sahistory.org.za/pages/artsmediaculture/arts/performance/music/kwaito.htm Kwaito, an isiCamtho song style]
* [http://www.english.und.ac.za/English%202B/SPOKEN%20WORD%20POETRY%20-%202005.htm some isiCamtho poetry]
* [http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=fly Ethnologue report on Tsotsitaal]
* [http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=cmt Ethnologue report on (isi)Camtho, Iscamtho]
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