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8 Spain: Ceuta and Melilla

  • Gérard Fernández Smith and Luis Escoriza Morera
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Manual of Romance Languages in Africa
This chapter is in the book Manual of Romance Languages in Africa

Abstract

Ceuta and Melilla are two of the very few communities in which Spanish endures in the African continent. The fact that these cities are a part of the Spanish state entails that Spanish is the only official language in both territories. The use of Spanish reveals dialectal features that are shared by other southern zones of the Iberian Peninsula, where most of the inhabitants of Ceuta and Melilla originally come from. A larger group of the population, who has Spanish as their native language, coexists with different ethnic groups that speak other African languages. Such a situation causes interesting language contact phenomena and has also fostered official pleas for the recognition of those other languages within the public domain, since Spanish is the only subject of language policy in both communities.

Abstract

Ceuta and Melilla are two of the very few communities in which Spanish endures in the African continent. The fact that these cities are a part of the Spanish state entails that Spanish is the only official language in both territories. The use of Spanish reveals dialectal features that are shared by other southern zones of the Iberian Peninsula, where most of the inhabitants of Ceuta and Melilla originally come from. A larger group of the population, who has Spanish as their native language, coexists with different ethnic groups that speak other African languages. Such a situation causes interesting language contact phenomena and has also fostered official pleas for the recognition of those other languages within the public domain, since Spanish is the only subject of language policy in both communities.

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