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14 Mauritania

  • Catherine Taine-Cheikh
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Manual of Romance Languages in Africa
This chapter is in the book Manual of Romance Languages in Africa

Abstract

The use and status of the French language in Mauritania evolved considerably during the twentieth century. The peak was in the 1960s and 1970s, when Mauritania became independent and French was granted official language status. In 1991, thirty years after independence, French lost this status, with Arabic becoming the only official language in this multilingual Muslim country, where only part of the population has a variety of Arabic as their first language. French nonetheless continues to play an important role in public life and, for some, in private life as well. Its presence can be seen in particular in education, in the media and in borrowings by Mauritanian languages. Conversely, one notes the influence of local languages and realities on the French spoken in Mauritania.

Abstract

The use and status of the French language in Mauritania evolved considerably during the twentieth century. The peak was in the 1960s and 1970s, when Mauritania became independent and French was granted official language status. In 1991, thirty years after independence, French lost this status, with Arabic becoming the only official language in this multilingual Muslim country, where only part of the population has a variety of Arabic as their first language. French nonetheless continues to play an important role in public life and, for some, in private life as well. Its presence can be seen in particular in education, in the media and in borrowings by Mauritanian languages. Conversely, one notes the influence of local languages and realities on the French spoken in Mauritania.

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